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Australia-China relations need a reset, and Malcolm Turnbull has to lead the way

James Laurenceson says the Australian prime minister’s rhetoric has worsened tensions with China, even as various stakeholders voice their objections to the deteriorating relationship

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Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has only been prepared to concede there is “a degree of tension” in the relationship with China. Illustration: Craig Stephens
Australia-China relations need a reset. But this is unlikely as long as the Australian prime minister himself remains a stumbling block. 
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This month, Geoff Raby, a former Australian ambassador to China, said that things haven’t been this bad since 1989, when the Chinese government crushed student-led protests in Beijing. 
Responding to such claims, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull was only prepared to concede there’s “a degree of tension in the relationship”. 
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No Australian government minister has visited mainland China this year. And, despite China buying one third of Australia’s exports, its foreign minister, Julie Bishop, hasn’t set foot there in more than two years. It is still not clear when, or perhaps even if, Australia Week in China, the country’s premier trade and investment promotion event, will go ahead in 2018. And any hopes of a China-Australia Free Trade Agreement 2.0 coming out of the review clauses that were built into the original and hugely successful 2015 deal, are close to zero. 
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