Business

China suspends some Aussie timber imports

Canberra’s outspoken stance on Chinese human rights issues is ‘root cause’ of trade tensions, hints Beijing

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 13 Nov 2020 2:10PM

China suspends some Aussie timber imports
China says ‘hazardous insects’ have been detected in a recent timber shipment from the Australian state of Victoria. – Pixabay pic, November 13, 2020

BEIJING – China yesterday said it has suspended some timber imports from Australia, as tensions soar between the countries on a range of issues including trade, human rights and the coronavirus.

China – Australia’s biggest trade partner – has threatened an economic blowback since Canberra called for an inquiry into the Covid-19 pandemic, and has already suspended beef imports and launched a probe into the alleged dumping of Australian wines.

Yesterday, the Foreign Ministry here confirmed that customs officials have suspended imports of timber from the Australian state of Victoria from Wednesday, “to prevent the risks of plant disease”.

Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a press briefing that it was a legal, not political, decision, due to “hazardous insects” detected in a recent timber shipment from the state.

However, he went on to suggest that Australia’s outspoken stance on Chinese human rights issues is the “root cause” of current trade tensions, and accused Canberra of “violating the basic norms of international relations” with comments about rights in Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Taiwan.

“We hope Australia can... create favourable conditions for mutually beneficial bilateral cooperation in all fields,” said Wang.

He added that China also suspended timber imports from Queensland state from October 31, for the same reason.

Australian officials have demanded clarity on rumours of import bans on Australian coal, wine, beef, timber and barley.

Trade Minister Simon Birmingham last week said he has raised concerns with Chinese officials over several trade issues, including the increased testing of live rock lobsters that “came out of the blue” and a rumoured coal embargo – a business worth around US$10 billion (RM41.3 billion) a year. – AFP, November 13, 2020

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