
China's Premier Li Qiang warns global trade frictions are rising, urges cooperation at Summer Davos
TIANJIN, June 25 — Chinese Premier Li Qiang warned on Wednesday that global trade tensions were 'intensifying' as he addressed the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum in the northern city of Tianjin.
Officials including Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong are attending this week's gathering in the port city, which is known colloquially as the 'Summer Davos'.
Li said the global economy was 'undergoing profound changes' -- a thinly veiled reference to swingeing tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump.
'Protectionist measures are significantly increasing and global economic and trade frictions are intensifying,' Li added.
'The global economy is deeply integrated and no country can grow or prosper alone,' Li said.
'In times when the global economy faces difficulties, what we need is not the law of the jungle where the weak fall prey to the strong, but cooperation and mutual success for a win-win outcome,' Li said.
Beijing's number two official also painted a bullish picture of the Chinese economy, the world's second-largest, which has been beset by slowing growth and a lull in consumer spending.
'China's economy continues to grow steadily, providing strong support for the accelerated recovery of the global economy,' he said.
Beijing, he added, was 'stepping up our efforts to implement the strategy of expanding domestic demand'.
This was 'promoting China's growth into a major consumption powerhouse based on the solid foundation of a major manufacturing powerhouse'. — AFP
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Malay Mail
4 hours ago
- Malay Mail
Can Xi, Trump, Khamenei, and Anwar get along? Yes — If the world rediscovers strategic civility — Phar Kim Beng
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Four leaders, four civilizational trajectories Xi Jinping leads a China determined to reclaim its historical stature through the revival of Confucian governance principles, Party supremacy, and economic statecraft. China's global posture is one of confidence—sometimes defiant, but often methodical. Donald Trump, back in office, rules through disruption. His foreign policy may seem erratic, but there is a pattern: transactionalism, spectacle, and a preference for leverage over long-term entanglements. While he loathes multilateralism, he is not instinctively drawn to war either. He wants deals—big, visible, and beneficial to domestic constituencies. Ayatollah Khamenei, presiding over a beleaguered but resilient Islamic Republic, blends revolutionary theology with geopolitical pragmatism. Despite decades of sanctions and confrontation, Tehran has always kept a channel open for diplomacy—when treated with dignity. 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Yes, Xi, Trump, Khamenei, and Anwar can get along—if the rest of us choose convening over coercion, civility over confrontation, and realism rooted in respect. * Phar Kim Beng is Professor of Asean Studies at the International Islamic University Malaysia and a former Head Teaching Fellow at Harvard University. ** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.


Malay Mail
4 hours ago
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Free Malaysia Today
9 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
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