Macron Begins China Tour as Tensions Over Ukraine War, Trade Persist
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French President Emmanuel Macron has landed in Beijing to start a three-day state visit, where trade and the war in Ukraine are set to take center stage.
Upon arrival at the Capital International Airport on the evening of Dec. 3, Macron and his wife Brigitte were greeted by Wang Yi, China’s top diplomat, according to videos released by China’s state media.
Macron is accompanied by a delegation of senior French officials, including Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot, alongside a group of business leaders such as Henri Poupart-Lafarge, the CEO of French train giant Alstom.
China’s customs data showed that, in the first ten months of this year, exports to the EU exceeded its imports by $241.6 billion—a 19 percent increase compared to the same period last year. Specifically, the trade surplus with France stood at $10.6 billion in the January-October period, a nearly 31 percent increase from the same period last year.
In addition to trade, the war in Ukraine is also expected to be on Macron’s agenda. Before departing for Beijing, Macron reaffirmed France’s long-standing support for Ukraine after hosting the visiting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Paris on Dec. 1.

On late Dec. 3, the two countries’ top diplomats had a meeting in Beijing, during which they exchanged views on the Ukraine crisis, among other issues, according to both sides.
Wang also laid out Beijing’s position regarding the Japanese prime minister’s recent remarks on Taiwan, which his ministry opposed. Wang told Barrot he hoped France would support China’s position, according to the ministry.
During the visit, Macron is set to sit down with CCP leader Xi Jinping and discuss “major international and regional hotspot issues,” according to China’s foreign ministry.
Macron will also meet with Premier Li Qiang and Zhao Leji, head of the National People’s Congress, the country’s rubber-stamp legislature, the foreign ministry said on Dec. 1.
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Rights advocates have asked Macron to voice human rights concerns with Xi and other CCP leaders when their meetings start in Beijing on Dec. 4.
Human Rights Watch, in a Dec. 3 statement, noted the regime has increasingly extended oppressive campaign beyond China’s borders, seeking to suppress criticism and enforce ideological control in foreign countries like France.
“Macron should stop trying to justify France’s silence on rights and make clear that the Chinese government’s repression affects many core French and EU interests, and that China needs to reverse course to maintain strong relations.”
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