China, Papua New Guinea discuss free-trade deal

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THE JAKARTA POST – China and Papua New Guinea held talks on a free-trade deal on Friday, as Beijing’s foreign minister wrapped up a landmark tour of the Pacific Islands with a stop in the resource-rich nation.

Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister James Marape said discussions in the capital Port Moresby had focussed on economic cooperation and a long-mooted trade agreement.

China is already a major investor in Papua New Guinea and buys much of the country’s gas, minerals, timber and other resources. Beijing is vying with Australia to be Papua New Guinea’s leading trading partner.

Marape said he wants to shift the economy away from primary materials to more lucrative finished products.

He has invited more Chinese investment and said work was ongoing on a trade deal. “China and Papua New Guinea officials are going through tidying Chinese-PNG free-trade arrangements,” Marape told journalists.

“The specifics of the free-trade arrangement are being finalised as we go through, so that Papua New Guinea interests are not suppressed or harmed, but maintained and in fact augmented,” he said.

His comments come as China, Australia and other Western allies race for influence across the Pacific Islands.

The vast but sparsely populated region is home to vital shipping channels and – because of its location near areas where the Chinese and US militaries operate – seen as strategically important.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has criss-crossed the South Pacific for more than a week, pressing the case for a greater role by Beijing in regional security.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi with Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister James Marape after their meeting in Port Moresby. PHOTO: AFP