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China urges 'respect' in Rio case | China urges 'respect' in Rio case |
(about 8 hours later) | |
Beijing has called on Australia to "respect" its legal system, as it probes allegations of bribery by employees at mining firm Rio Tinto. | Beijing has called on Australia to "respect" its legal system, as it probes allegations of bribery by employees at mining firm Rio Tinto. |
Chinese official Liu Jieyi urged Canberra not to interfere after the arrest of Australian national Stern Hu and three Chinese colleagues at Rio. | |
They are accused of using bribery to obtain state secrets - souring relations between the two countries. | They are accused of using bribery to obtain state secrets - souring relations between the two countries. |
Rio denies the allegations and no charges have yet been laid. | Rio denies the allegations and no charges have yet been laid. |
The facts of the case would constitute a violation of Australian laws if they were to happen in Australia, said Liu Jieyi. | |
"The Chinese government respects the independent judiciary of the Australian judicial system. I think we would expect that the same from other countries," he added. | "The Chinese government respects the independent judiciary of the Australian judicial system. I think we would expect that the same from other countries," he added. |
"By dealing with this case, we are really establishing or we are really trying to establish a good environment for all companies in China - foreign companies operating in China and local Chinese companies." | "By dealing with this case, we are really establishing or we are really trying to establish a good environment for all companies in China - foreign companies operating in China and local Chinese companies." |
Trading partner | Trading partner |
Last month, the Australian trade minister, Simon Crean, warned that business relations with China could be damaged if the case of the detained Rio Tinto workers was not handled appropriately. | Last month, the Australian trade minister, Simon Crean, warned that business relations with China could be damaged if the case of the detained Rio Tinto workers was not handled appropriately. |
Australian opposition politicians have complained that the arrest may be in retaliation for the collapse in June of Rio's proposed deal with Chinese state-owned firm Chinalco. | Australian opposition politicians have complained that the arrest may be in retaliation for the collapse in June of Rio's proposed deal with Chinese state-owned firm Chinalco. |
Rio scrapped a $19.5bn (£11.8bn) investment by Chinalco in favour of a tie-up with fellow Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton. Rio Tinto is now finalising a deal with BHP to merge their iron ore operations in Western Australia. | Rio scrapped a $19.5bn (£11.8bn) investment by Chinalco in favour of a tie-up with fellow Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton. Rio Tinto is now finalising a deal with BHP to merge their iron ore operations in Western Australia. |
However, Mr Crean did not believe that the two incidents were related | However, Mr Crean did not believe that the two incidents were related |
China is Australia's biggest trade partner, worth $53bn in 2008. Of this, $14bn came from iron ore exports, powered by Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton. | China is Australia's biggest trade partner, worth $53bn in 2008. Of this, $14bn came from iron ore exports, powered by Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton. |
The world's fastest-growing economy, China consumes more than half the globally-traded iron ore. China needs Australia's resources and Australia needs Chinese demand. | The world's fastest-growing economy, China consumes more than half the globally-traded iron ore. China needs Australia's resources and Australia needs Chinese demand. |
It has been thanks to the robust Chinese demand for its natural resources that Australia has so far managed to avoid falling into a recession. | It has been thanks to the robust Chinese demand for its natural resources that Australia has so far managed to avoid falling into a recession. |
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