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Wednesday, July 12, 2000, updated at 10:42(GMT+8)
Business  

China Woos European Investors

Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji wooed potential European investors on Tuesday with pledges to honour World Trade Organisation (WTO) principles and further reform the country's state-owned enterprises.

Zhu told business leaders at a conference in Brussel there should be "no doubt" China would observe WTO rules. He said a series of measures had been adopted to ensure they would be faithfully implemented.

"No matter when China (becomes a full WTO member), it will continue to press ahead with reform and continue to cooperate with others," he said through an interpreter.

In May the EU struck a bilateral deal with Beijing that removed the last major obstacle to China's 14-year quest to join the WTO.

Zhu promised continued reform of state-owned enterprises, saying China's aim was to restructure them with a view to future stock market listings.

He said China was ready to facilitate investment efforts by improving legislation such as to protect property rights.

Ending a six-nation European tour to promote bilateral trade on the 25th anniversary of formal ties, Zhu said development of information technology would be at the centre of China's next five-year-plan.

He repeated an invitation to the business community to visit China, invest in its economy and cooperate with their Chinese counterparts.

Zhu drew attention to a coordination agency set up to deal with complaints from foreign investors.

"To my knowledge this would represent a very effective monitoring mechanism," he said.




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Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji wooed potential European investors on Tuesday with pledges to honour World Trade Organisation (WTO) principles and further reform the country's state-owned enterprises.

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