China warns Britain against ‘interfering’ as James Cleverly raises human rights, Taiwan and Hong Kong during first visit by a Foreign Secretary in five years

China has warned the UK against ‘interfering’ as James Cleverly raised human rights, Taiwan and Hong Kong on a visit to the country.

The Foreign Secretary ended a five-year diplomatic freeze by travelling to Beijing yesterday, holding talks with senior figures.

There is speculation that the discussions are a precursor to a face-to-face meeting between Rishi Sunak and Xi Jinping face at the G20 summit in India next week.  

However, the Chinese authorities gave a sharp response when asked about Mr Cleverly making ‘tough’ representations on the treatment of minorities, political oppression and aggressive foreign policy. 

Foreign Minister spokesman Wang Wenbin said: ‘Affairs relating to Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet are China’s internal affairs, where other countries have no right to interfere.’ 

Some Conservatives are also angry about ministers cosying up to China, comparing the approach to ‘appeasement’.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, left, and Chinese Vice President Han Zheng met at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing yesterday

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, left, and Chinese Vice President Han Zheng met at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing yesterday

Mr Cleverly ended a five-year freeze in relations by travelling to Beijing for talks with senior officials from the ruling communist party (pictured with counterpart Wang Yi)

Mr Cleverly ended a five-year freeze in relations by travelling to Beijing for talks with senior officials from the ruling communist party (pictured with counterpart Wang Yi)

Mr Cleverly ended a five-year freeze in relations by travelling to Beijing for talks with senior officials from the ruling communist party (pictured with counterpart Wang Yi)

Following face-to-face talks with vice president Han Zheng, Mr Cleverly said: ‘Some people think I shouldn’t be here, but it is more important than ever that we engage.’

The Foreign Secretary said he had had ‘tough conversations’ with the Chinese leadership and insisted he was ‘clear-eyed’ about Beijing’s agenda. 

‘We are not going to change China overnight’, Mr Cleverly said.

The Foreign Office said that Mr Cleverly tackled Mr Han and foreign affairs minister Wang Yi over a range of contentious issues, including human rights, Taiwan, the sanctioning of British MPs and China’s ‘malign cyber activity’.

The one-day trip was the first visit to Beijing by a senior British minister for five years.

A decade ago, David Cameron and George Osborne pioneered a new ‘Golden Era’ in relations which turned a blind eye to some of China’s excesses in return for enhanced trade co-operation.

But relations have been in the deep freeze following Beijing’s crackdown on Hong Kong and its conduct during the pandemic.

Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith warned that Mr Cleverly’s visit ‘smells terribly’ of 1930s-style ‘appeasement’ and questioned the value of it.

Sir Iain, one of a number of MPs sanctioned by Beijing for speaking out against its human rights abuses, said: ‘I don’t understand why he’s there. 

‘This is a country that has committed genocide in Xinxiang, they are threatening Taiwan, they have locked up British citizen Jimmy Lai on trumped-up charges in Hong Kong, they are spying on us and stealing our secrets.’

Alicia Kearns, Tory chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee, said Mr Cleverly should balance the visit with a trip to Taiwan to show that the UK had not abandoned the island state which is under threat of invasion. 

She said: ‘It is imperative [he] steadfastly and vocally stand by Taiwan and make clear we will uphold its right to self-determination.

‘This commitment aligns not only with British values but also serves as a poignant message to autocratic regimes worldwide that sovereignty cannot be attained through violence or coercion.’

Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk