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Montevideo, September 21st 2024 - 11:35 UTC

 

 

Trump: US economic pressure helping Hong Kong protestors; steeper tariffs on Chinese goods “are on” as of this Sunday

Saturday, August 31st 2019 - 09:20 UTC
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“Because of what I'm doing with trade that's really keeping down the temperature,” Trump said at the White House “Because of what I'm doing with trade that's really keeping down the temperature,” Trump said at the White House
“Because of what I'm doing with trade that's really keeping down the temperature,” Trump said at the White House “Because of what I'm doing with trade that's really keeping down the temperature,” Trump said at the White House

US economic pressure on China was responsible for preventing the authorities from carrying out a harsher crackdown against demonstrators in Hong Kong, US President Donald Trump told reporters on Friday.

“Because of what I'm doing with trade that's really keeping down the temperature,” he said at the White House.

Trump's tough line - and his claim that events in Hong Kong are linked to the trade war - follows his insistence over the last week that Chinese negotiators are keener than ever to strike a deal.

However, despite repeated hints that high-level communications have been reopened on the standoff, White House officials have sparked skepticism by failing to provide details of those reported talks.

His comments on Hong Kong could touch political nerves in China, which bristles at anything it sees as outside interference in the restive city.

Asked if he saw a connection between the way the Chinese respond to the unrest and the difficulties their economy faces under US pressure, Trump said: “I do, I do.”

“If it weren't for the trade talks Hong Kong would be in much more trouble,” he said, reiterating a call for Beijing to “handle it in a humane fashion.”

Trump's call fell on the same day prominent Hong Kong activists including three activists were arrested in a protest crackdown - a move described by rights groups as a well-worn tactic deployed by China to suffocate dissent ahead of major political events.

President Trump also confirmed that steep new tariffs on Chinese goods will kick in on Sunday.

“They're on,” Trump said, two days before the levies on billions of dollars' worth of Chinese imports are set to rise in the latest escalation of the trade war between the world's two biggest economies.

His confirmation that the new tariffs will go ahead underlines the reality that the two sides remain at loggerheads.

Trump earlier this month had called for 10% tariffs on US$300 billion in goods to take effect Sep 1 and Dec 15. Then Beijing retaliated by targeting US$75 billion in US exports and Trump announced that the new tariffs would instead hit 15%.

Also, existing 25 per cent duties on US$250 billion worth of Chinese products will rise to 30 per cent starting Oct 1.

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