Australia Reports No Progress on China Trade Sanctions

File Photo: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during the opening of Raytheon Australia's Center for Joint Integration in Adelaide, Australia, March 31, 2021. (AP Photo)
File Photo: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during the opening of Raytheon Australia's Center for Joint Integration in Adelaide, Australia, March 31, 2021. (AP Photo)
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Australia Reports No Progress on China Trade Sanctions

File Photo: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during the opening of Raytheon Australia's Center for Joint Integration in Adelaide, Australia, March 31, 2021. (AP Photo)
File Photo: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks during the opening of Raytheon Australia's Center for Joint Integration in Adelaide, Australia, March 31, 2021. (AP Photo)

Australia vowed Saturday to stand up for itself in dealing with China, after reporting no breakthroughs in high-level talks where it pressed Beijing to drop punitive trade sanctions.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese described a meeting between the two countries' foreign ministers the previous day -- the first since 2019 -- as "just a first step".

"We should cooperate where we can. But we will stand up for Australian values where we must," the prime minister said at a news conference.

China -- Australia's biggest trading partner -- imposed tariffs and disrupted more than a dozen key industries, including wine, barley and coal, as relations deteriorated over the past two years, AFP said.

Canberra had irked Beijing by calling for an independent probe into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic and by banning telecom giant Huawei from taking part in the construction of Australia's 5G network.

Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong said she raised the trade spat on Friday when she met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on the sidelines of a Group of 20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia.

It "remains the government's position those trade blockages should be removed," the minister said in Bali.

China had responded during the talks by stating its "well-known" position and perspective on the dispute, she said.

Wong said she had also raised the cases of journalist Cheng Lei and democracy activist Yang Hengjun, Australian citizens detained in China.

"I think all of these issues will take some time," she said. "There is a path we are walking. And we will take one step at a time in the interest of the country."

Wong said Australia and China had gained much through their economic and people-to-people ties.

"We do have our differences," she said, adding, however: "We believe it is in the interest of both countries for the relationship to be stabilised."



Romania Scrambles Fighter Jets Second Time This Week over Breach of Airspace

Two Romanian military jet pilots fly their F16 Falcons during a demo flight following the opening ceremony for the European F-16 Training Center, held at the 86th Air Base "Lieutenant Aviator Gheorghe Mociornita", in Borcea, Romania, 13 November 2023. (EPA)
Two Romanian military jet pilots fly their F16 Falcons during a demo flight following the opening ceremony for the European F-16 Training Center, held at the 86th Air Base "Lieutenant Aviator Gheorghe Mociornita", in Borcea, Romania, 13 November 2023. (EPA)
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Romania Scrambles Fighter Jets Second Time This Week over Breach of Airspace

Two Romanian military jet pilots fly their F16 Falcons during a demo flight following the opening ceremony for the European F-16 Training Center, held at the 86th Air Base "Lieutenant Aviator Gheorghe Mociornita", in Borcea, Romania, 13 November 2023. (EPA)
Two Romanian military jet pilots fly their F16 Falcons during a demo flight following the opening ceremony for the European F-16 Training Center, held at the 86th Air Base "Lieutenant Aviator Gheorghe Mociornita", in Borcea, Romania, 13 November 2023. (EPA)

Romania raised fighter jets early on Saturday for the second time this week after an unidentified object breached its airspace by the Black Sea, the Ministry of Defense said.

The small object was detected over the Black Sea moving toward Romania, a European Union and NATO member, at around 2:30 a.m, the ministry said in a statement.

Romania shares a 650-kilometer (400-mile) border with Ukraine and has previously complained over Russian drones entering its airspace as Moscow attacks Ukrainian targets along the Black Sea and Danube River. Fragments of Russian drones have also been repeatedly found on Romanian territory near the Ukrainian border.

Two F-18 jets of the Spanish Air Force and two F-16s of the Romanian Air Force were dispatched but did not spot the target, which disappeared from the radar, the ministry said.

Two Spanish F-18s and two Romanian F-16s also were dispatched on Thursday in a similar incident.