German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Friday that the rights and freedoms of Hong Kong residents should be protected, adding that a solution to the Chinese city's political crisis can only be garnered through dialogue while violence should be avoided.
Merkel met with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang after arriving in Beijing in the morning. She will dine with President Xi Jinping in the evening.
The German leader faces the challenge of balancing human rights concerns and economic discussions with one of Germany's largest trading partners.
"I indicated during the talks that the rights and freedoms agreed upon in Hong Kong's Basic Law should be safeguarded," Merkel said during a joint news briefing with Li.
The Basic Law is Hong Kong's de facto constitution, which promises the semi-autonomous Chinese city certain democratic rights not afforded to the mainland.
Merkel added that political dialogue not violence is the path toward a resolution.
China was Germany's biggest single trading partner last year, with trade totaling 199 billion euros ($218 billion). The relationship is important to Europe's largest economy, particularly as Germany is considered likely to enter a technical recession in the current quarter.
Germany long had amicable relations with Beijing because its exporters ran a surplus supplying Chinese factories with equipment and components. But those ties increasingly are strained over German complaints about market access and Chinese technology policy.
Beijing tried without success to recruit Germany as an ally in its tariff war with President Donald Trump. While Merkel's government has echoed U.S. complaints, it objects to Trump's tactics, which he has also used against Europe.
Merkel is in Beijing with a high-ranking German business delegation that includes executives in the auto, financial services and transport industries. In recent years, German companies have been unhappy about being barred from acquiring most Chinese assets at a time when China's companies have been on a global buying spree.
The economic ties make it harder for Merkel to satisfy a U.S. diplomat and activists who have urged her to raise human rights issues such as China's treatment of ethnic minorities in Tibet and Xinjiang, as well as the three months of pro-democracy demonstrations that have roiled Hong Kong.
Richard Grenell, the U.S. ambassador to Germany, said Thursday that China's "willful disregard of its commitments" to Hong Kong and human rights violations in Xinjiang show that its ruling Communist Party "stands against the values Germany cherishes."
On the question of what Merkel might say about Hong Kong, a senior German official said the talks with Xi and Li will be conducted "comprehensively in terms of thematic breadth, and open and friendly in terms of tone with a readiness to express criticism where we think things are worthy of criticism."
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