World

China angered by Australian call for international inquiry into coronavirus origin

China accused Australia of "petty tricks" on Wednesday in an intensifying dispute over Canberra's push for an international inquiry into the coronavirus outbreak that could affect diplomatic and economic ties between the countries.

PM Scott Morrison said last week he'd call for both an inquiry and to give WHO more powers to investigate

Australia says it's 'sensible' to conduct an inquiry into the spread of COVID-19

5 years ago
Duration 0:55
'The implications and impacts of this are extraordinary,' says Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

China accused Australia of "petty tricks" on Wednesday in an intensifying dispute over Canberra's push for an international inquiry into the coronavirus outbreak that could affect diplomatic and economic ties between the countries.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said his proposed inquiry into how the coronavirus developed and spread would not be targeted at China, but was needed given COVID-19 has killed more than 200,000 people and shut down much of the global economy.

"Now, it would seem entirely reasonable and sensible that the world would want to have an independent assessment of how this all occurred, so we can learn the lessons and prevent it from happening again," he said.

Australian government ministers have repeatedly said China, the country's largest trade partner, was threatening "economic coercion" after its ambassador, Cheng Jingye, said this week that Chinese consumers could boycott Australian products and universities because of the calls for the inquiry.

The head of Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) called Cheng to express concern. The Chinese embassy then released a statement detailing what it said was discussed on the call, prompting another rebuke from DFAT.

On Wednesday, the Chinese embassy returned fire, saying on its website that details of the call had first been "obviously leaked by some Australian officials" and it needed to set the record straight.

"The Embassy of China doesn't play petty tricks, this is not our tradition. But if others do, we have to reciprocate," an embassy spokesperson said in the statement.

Australia accused of 'malicious campaign'

Chinese state media has fiercely rounded on Morrison, with Australian studies scholar Chen Hong writing in the Global Times tabloid on Wednesday that Australia was "spearheading" a "malicious campaign to frame and incriminate China."

And Hu Xijin, the editor in chief of the paper that is affiliated to the Beijing-controlled People's Daily newspaper, said on Chinese social media that Australia was always making trouble.

"It is a bit like chewing gum stuck on the sole of China's shoes. Sometimes you have to find a stone to rub it off," Hu wrote.

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New Zealand, which also has China as its largest trading partner, on Wednesday sided with neighbouring Australia in supporting an inquiry into the pandemic.

"It's very hard to conceive of there not being a desire by every country in the world, including the country of origin, for an investigation to find out how this happened," Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters said.

Australia's call for an inquiry has so far only received lukewarm support more widely, with France and the United Kingdom saying it was not the right time to focus on an inquiry.

U.S. President Donald Trump has said China could have stopped the coronavirus before it swept the globe and that his administration was conducting "serious investigations" into what happened.

Mike Pompeo, his secretary of state, said at his weekly press briefing on Wednesday that he was astonished at the latest comments from Beijing.

"Overnight I saw comments from the Chinese foreign ministry talking about coercive activity with respect to Australia, who had the 'temerity' to ask for an investigation," said Pompeo. "Who in the world wouldn't want an investigation of how this happened to the world?"

In an earlier interview Wednesday, Pompeo said the U.S. remains worried about laboratories in China and the world needs to get to the bottom of how the novel coronavirus began.

"I can tell you there were real concerns about the labs inside of China," Pompeo said in an interview with Fox News. "I'm still concerned that the Chinese Communist Party is not telling us about all of what's taking place in all of the labs."

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