
French President Emmanuel Macron begins his multi-day state visit to the People's Republic of China on Wednesday.
The French leader not only wants to visit the Forbidden City in Beijing, but will also meet Chinese state and party leaders on Thursday.
China's Foreign Office said President Xi Jinping wants to discuss Sino-French relations and important international issues with Macron, without giving further details.
The Élysée Palace said France wants to urge China to pursue a more balanced trade policy. Europeans regularly criticize China for unfairly competing with European products through state subsidies for electric cars, steel and solar panels.
Regarding the struggle to end the war in Ukraine, Macron will also ask China to use its influence on Russia to bring about a ceasefire.
On Friday, Macron plans to visit a dam in Chengdu in Sichuan province before returning to France.
This is Macron's fourth visit to China and follows Xi Jinping's trip to Europe last year, during which he stopped in France.
Beijing says that France is China's third most important trading partner in the EU.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
From Specialist to Proficient Picture taker: Individual Triumphs - 2
The hunt for dark matter: a trivia quiz - 3
Make your choice for a definitive Christmas getaway destination! - 4
'We need everyone,' wounded reservist urges Knesset panel to advance haredi draft law - 5
UN mission says no evidence Hezbollah rearming in southern Lebanon
A coup too far: Why Benin's rebel soldiers failed where others in the region succeeded
This Week In Space podcast: Episode 189 — Privatizing Orbit
This St Nick Truly Can Advise How To Drink And Hack Your Headache
When fake data is a good thing – how synthetic data trains AI to solve real problems
Supreme Court case about ‘crisis pregnancy centers’ highlights debate over truthful advertising standards
Top 20 Compelling Business Books for Progress
From Representative to Business visionary: Private issue Victories
Twins were the norm for our ancient primate ancestors − one baby at a time had evolutionary advantages
Why screening for the deadliest cancer in the U.S. misses most cases













