China chides Berlin for ‘microphone diplomacy’ – DW – 11/04/2025

Skip next section China criticizes Berlin over ‘microphone diplomacy’

November 4, 2025

China criticizes Berlin over ‘microphone diplomacy’

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi has urged Germany to avoid making temporary disagreements appear public after Berlin postponed a planned visit by German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul.

According to Beijing, Wang told Wadephul in a phone call that Germany should refrain from “unfounded accusations that contradict the facts.” He said both countries should build a “more stable and sustainable political framework” to keep relations on the right track.

“China and Germany should create a more stable and sustainable political framework to ensure that bilateral relations always stay on the right track,” Wang said.

Wadephul and Wang had also agreed that the visit should be rescheduled “soon,” the German Foreign Office spokesperson added. China had also reaffirmed its invitation to Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) and extended an additional invitation to President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

The phone call had initially been described in cordial terms. A German Foreign Office spokesperson had previously said that Wadephul and Wang had agreed in their phone call that “stable German-Chinese relations are of great interest to both countries.”

At the end of October, the Foreign Office had postponed Wadephul’s planned trip to China shortly before departure. The reason given was that the Chinese hosts had not confirmed any appointments for Wadephul other than the meeting with Wang. The Foreign Office expressed regret over this and pointed to a number of topics on which the German government would have liked to engage in dialogue with China — such as trade disputes, rare earth metals and relations with Russia.

https://p.dw.com/p/532e2

Skip next section Welcome to our coverage

November 4, 2025

Welcome to our coverage

The statue of Beethoven in central Bonn
Cloudy weather is not uncommon here in Bonn during the colder days [FILE: Jan 14, 2020]Image: Oliver Berg/dpa/picture alliance

Guten Tag from DW’s newsroom in a cloudy Bonn and Danke Schön for joining us for the latest Germany news.

In diplomatic news, China has urged Germany to avoid making disagreements public after Berlin postponed Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul’s planned visit.

Beijing said Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Wadephul that Germany should refrain from “unfounded accusations.” 

Berlin had delayed the trip after Beijing confirmed no meetings beyond the one with Wang, citing the need for broader talks.

Follow here for this and the other latest stories that Germany is talking about throughout the day.

https://p.dw.com/p/532Q3

Source link

Visited 3 times, 3 visit(s) today

Related Article

In Delhi, a week after cloud seeding trails, the air quality which although saw marginal improvement today with the overall AQI recorded at 228 at 9 am, it still remained under the ‘poor’ category. (Vipin Kumar/Hindustan Times)

As Delhi breathes ‘poor’ air, China offers help to tackle pollution crisis

As Delhi continues to grapple with ‘poor’ Air Quality Index (AQI), China on Wednesday offered to help India battle its severe air pollution crisis, especially in the national capital and its surrounding areas. In Delhi, a week after cloud seeding trails, the air quality which although saw marginal improvement today with the overall AQI recorded

1cr con on doc: Lens on China, Cambodia links

1cr con on doc: Lens on China, Cambodia links | Mumbai News

Navi Mumbai: Seven members of a gang have been arrested by Navi Mumbai cyber police for cheating a 40-year-old orthopaedic surgeon from Kharghar of Rs 1.1 crore after luring him into investing in fake shares online over two months. They claimed that the masterminds were in China and Cambodia. Police said the defrauded money was

China offers to help tech companies solve ‘major AI problem’ but on one condition

China offers to help tech companies solve ‘major AI problem’ but on one condition

China is reportedly offering a solution to every AI company’s biggest problem – soaring energy bills. The country’s government is reportedly increasing financial incentives for data centres, offering tech companies subsidies that cut their energy bills by up to half. The move is a direct effort to boost China’s homegrown semiconductor industry and sustain its

Buildings are seen along Miami Beach in Florida. A US appeals court on Tuesday cleared the way for Florida to enforce a law restricting real estate and land purchases by Chinese citizens. Photo: Shutterstock

Florida ban on Chinese-owned property, sea goddess ceremony concern: SCMP daily highlights

Catch up on some of SCMP’s biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing. 1. Nexperia fallout: chip spat reignites EU debate over Chinese investments The saga of Netherlands-based and Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia, caught up in broader geopolitical tensions between the United States and

Could Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP rebound last?

Could Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP rebound last?

Bitcoin (BTC) is holding above $100,000 at the time of writing on Wednesday, following a knee-jerk bounce after two consecutive days of declines. BTC corrected below $99,000 on Tuesday as risk-off sentiment continued to spread across the cryptocurrency market.  Recovery has become elusive, especially as investors remain on the sidelines due to macroeconomic uncertainty and

Soybeans, corn ease after rally; spotlight on US-China talks — TradingView News

Soybeans regain ground as China-U.S. truce assessed — TradingView News

By Naveen Thukral and Gus Trompiz Chicago soybeans rose on Wednesday to recover some of the previous session’s losses, as Beijing’s confirmation that it was cutting tariffs on U.S. farm goods put attention back on a trade truce between the countries. Gains remained capped by the lack of large Chinese purchases of U.S. crops since

Customers at a Luckin Coffee Inc. store in Shanghai on November 22, 2024.

Starbucks once seemed unstoppable in China. Its US owner is now giving up control

Beijing/Hong Kong  —  Nearly three decades ago, Starbucks opened its first outlet in China with much fanfare, involving a troupe performing a traditional “golden lion” dance and eager customers trying cappuccinos made with steaming espresso machines. The entry of the American brand helped spur the rise of a thriving coffee culture among the burgeoning middle