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<![CDATA[As China-EU summit ends, Premier Li Keqiang vows reforms: 'When we say it, we have got to do it']>

At the end of its annual summit meeting with the European Union on Tuesday, China vowed to boost trade ties with the EU by providing a "level playing field" for their businesses, while Chinese Premier Li Keqiang flatly denied claims that Beijing was behind any sort of industrial espionage that had raised the concerns of EU member nations.

In a diplomatic win for China, EU leaders departed from recent confrontational statements and did not make any references to China as a "systemic rival", or call its trade practices "unfair".

For the EU, China's agreement to broaden market access, oppose forced technology transfer and cooperate on World Trade Organisation reform regarding industrial subsidies was regarded as progress.

At the meeting in Brussels, China and the EU also agreed to forge synergies between China's "Belt and Road Initiative" (BRI) and the EU's own Connecting Europe and Asia programme, which hopes to increase connectivity between Europe and Asia, as well as its planned Trans-European Transport Networks set of road, rail, air and water systems.

From left, European Council President Donald Tusk, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker at the EU-China Summit on Tuesday in Brussels. Photo: Xinhua

The two sides managed to draft a joint statement, despite earlier suggestions that EU leaders might walk away from negotiations amid a tougher European stance on China's business practices.

Harmony is essential, if hard to come by these days: The EU is China's biggest trading partner, and China is the EU's second-biggest partner " after the United States.

The increased frictions also came as Beijing continues to negotiate a trade deal with the United States, which has urged its EU allies to take a stronger stand against China on trade, technology and security fronts " even as Washington has had trade clashes of its own with the EU.

China's EU envoy to Europe: plot your own path, not Washington's

Speaking alongside European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and the European Council President Donald Tusk in Brussels on Tuesday, Li said that China would sign a long-overdue investment deal with the EU "by the end of next year, or earlier".

EU representatives have previously complained that China had made such assurances for years while enacting few actual reforms. But the premier stressed that the laying out of deadlines for the changes he agreed to showed Beijing's intention of making good.

"When we say it, we have got to do it. When we do it, there will be achievements," he said.

Tusk described the negotiations as "difficult but ultimately fruitful", adding: "We managed to agree on a joint statement which sets the direction for our partnership based on reciprocity."

Premier Li insists Beijing supports united EU amid 'divide and rule' fears

The summit came amid heightened EU scepticism about China's economic might and its intentions, with companies such as telecoms giant Huawei Technologies " which has been accused of sharing information with the Chinese government " facing more scrutiny as they attempt to expand their European presence.

He added: "The Chinese government has never requested, let alone imposed any laws or regulations requiring, Chinese enterprises overseas to infringe on intellectual properties, commercial interests or personal privacy " or to conduct eavesdropping.

"This is not the Chinese people's way of doing things."

Li called on Europe to treat Chinese companies equally.

Why Beijing is on a mission to quell Brussels' fears about China

The two sides managed to draft an eleventh-hour joint statement after the 21st summit between the two sides, despite earlier suggestions that Europe might walk away from negotiations amid a tougher European stance on China's business practices.

A key aspect of Li's statement is his guarantee about giving EU businesses further access to China markets; among the sectors Beijing has previously discussed are telecommunications, educational and medical services.

China also agreed that "there should not be forced transfer of technology", according to the joint statement.

On industrial subsidies, Li insisted that any discussions with EU would have to "be based on WTO rules" with reference to China's own situations.

"Some subsidies we handed out were for the unemployed workers so that they wouldn't lose life support. They were not for the sake of [boosting] business competitiveness," Li said.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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