Jumat, 20 November 2020

Families of jailed Saudis appeal to world ahead of G20 - CNA

WASHINGTON: Families of imprisoned Saudis appealed on Friday (Nov 20) for the world to speak up as the kingdom hosts the Group of 20 summit, saying that challenging the kingdom's international reputation was crucial to winning their freedom.

As leaders of the world's largest economies prepared for talks Saturday that have gone virtual due to the Covid-19 pandemic, activists staged a "counter-summit" in hopes of throwing a spotlight on the ultra-conservative kingdom's human rights record.

PEN America, the literary group that defends free expression, called the online forum amid continued outrage over the 2018 murder of Washington Post contributor Jamal Khashoggi, who was strangled and dismembered inside Saudi Arabia's Istanbul consulate.

"All of our relatives are in danger. They are facing the threat of what Jamal Khashoggi has seen on a daily basis," said Areej al-Sadhan, who says her brother, Abdulrahman al-Sadhan, was picked by up Saudi secret police in March 2018.

"Your voices are going to help keep them safe," she said.

Abdulrahman al-Sadhan was seized in the Riyadh office of the Red Crescent humanitarian group, where he worked, after he voiced opinions on human rights and social justice on an anonymous Twitter account, according to the family.

Areej al-Sadhan, who lives in California, says she has faced shadowy threats since speaking about her brother, including a warning she was going to be "thrown into the sewer system."

One of the most prominent Saudis in custody is 31-year-old Loujain al-Hathloul, a key figure in the campaign to allow Saudi women to drive who was arrested in May 2018 weeks before the kingdom lifted its ban on female drivers.

She has been on a hunger strike since Oct 26 when her parents visited her and found her to be "very weak and hopeless," said her sister, Lina al-Hathoul.

"We should not underestimate the power we have with our voices," Lina, who has lived in Europe for several years, told the counter-summit.

"Even one word asking about political prisoners and prisoners of conscience - saying their names, making sure they're not forgotten - really is something that could save them."

Jailed Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul, who has campaigned for women's right to drive,
Jailed Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul, who has campaigned for women's right to drive, appears in an undated picture on her Facebook page AFP/-

CHANGE EXPECTED UNDER BIDEN

Outgoing US President Donald Trump has aligned himself closely with Saudi Arabia, hailing its purchases of US weapons and hostility toward US adversary Iran.

Trump said of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that he "saved his ass" after a US Senate resolution, which followed a CIA briefing, found the powerful young royal responsible for Khashoggi's killing.

Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat, told the counter-summit that he expected President-elect Joe Biden to address human rights in Saudi Arabia and the kingdom's support for a brand of Islam that "forms the building blocks of global extremist movements."

"It is past time for us to recognize that Saudi Arabia is a deeply imperfect ally and that our priorities in this relationship have been long skewed in a way that, I argue, is not to the advantage of the United States in the long run," Murphy said.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets in February 2020 with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets in February 2020 with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who ha cultivated close relations with US President Donald Trump AFP/ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

Dozens of Democratic lawmakers had urged the Trump administration to boycott the G20, seeing it as part of efforts for Saudi Arabia to rebrand itself without meaningful reforms.

Instead, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will visit in person hours after the virtual summit.

Safa al-Ahmad, acting director of the Saudi rights group ALQST, said the kingdom's outreach efforts, such as inviting Western musicians, have been geared entirely at improving its public image abroad without reform at home.

"There is a limit to the hypocrisy and the gaslighting of the Saudi government. The reality is very, very different from what the government continues to claim."

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2020-11-20 23:05:50Z
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Trump joins APEC summit as China counters US protectionism - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: US President Donald Trump attended an online Asia-Pacific summit Friday (Nov 20) even as he challenged his election defeat, while China's Xi Jinping used the forum to counter American protectionism.

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) gathering, held virtually this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, brings together leaders from 21 Pacific Rim economies, accounting for about 60 per cent of global GDP.

China - which came into the summit days after scoring a huge trade pact victory - has become the main driving force behind the grouping after the United States began withdrawing from multilateral bodies during Trump's presidency.

READ: Asia-Pacific nations sign world's largest trade pact RCEP

READ: Xi touts China's huge economy as base of free trade in APEC speech

But Trump made the surprise decision to take part in this year's event, after not participating at APEC since 2017, and appeared on Friday alongside other leaders via video link.

All of the leaders except one had an official APEC backdrop on their screens, which was blue and featured the enormous, green-domed Malaysian prime minister's office.

The exception was Trump, who appeared with a beige background under the US presidential seal.

A source involved in arranging the summit said Trump refused to use the official backdrop.

He delivered a speech to fellow leaders during the two-hour event, but it was not open to the media.

Analysts said Trump likely decided to appear at APEC this year to present himself as presidential as he pursues legal challenges against election winner Joe Biden.

His appearance was all the more striking as the United States broke with tradition by failing to send a representative to deliver a public speech at the forum ahead of Friday's official summit.

Trump's turn away from multilateral groupings like APEC has left the floor open for China to write the Asia-Pacific's rules of commerce, and Xi used his speech at Friday's summit to launch a strident defence of free trade.

"It is important that the Asia-Pacific should remain the bellwether in safeguarding peace and stability, upholding multilateralism, and fostering an open world economy," he said, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.

"Free and open trade and investment cannot be achieved overnight."

READ: Signing of RCEP agreement 'the bright spot' in a challenging year - Chan Chun Sing

READ: What is the RCEP trade deal?

His remarks will raise eyebrows however in capitals where Beijing has been accused of blocking trade amid diplomatic rows, and using its enormous economy as a bargaining chip to strongarm weaker rivals.

Xi also said the China would also consider joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership - a giant regional free trade pact that had once been championed by the United States under Barack Obama but then abandoned by Trump.

This year's APEC gathering came a week after China and 14 other Asia-Pacific countries signed another free trade pact, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which will be the world's biggest.

READ: US being left behind after Asia forms world's biggest trade bloc RCEP: US Chamber

Commentary: RCEP a huge victory in tough times

The deal, which excludes the US, has been viewed as a major coup for China and further evidence that Beijing is setting the agenda for global commerce as Washington retreats.

Signatories hope RCEP will help their virus-hit economies on the road to recovery, and many leaders at the APEC forum warned against turning inwards in response to the pandemic.

"We need to trade and invest our way out of the current economic downturn," Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said in his opening remarks at Friday's summit.

"We must come together and work constructively towards navigating the region along a path of robust, inclusive and sustainable economic recovery and growth."

At the end of the summit, the leaders released a joint declaration that pledged their determination to work together to recover from the pandemic.

Even agreeing a statement was progress compared with the leaders' previous summit in 2018, when they were unable to hammer out a joint communique due to escalating tensions between the US and China on trade.

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2020-11-20 17:26:15Z
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Trump to meet Michigan lawmakers as he seeks to overturn defeat - CNA

WASHINGTON, DC: President Donald Trump will meet with Republican leaders from Michigan at the White House on Friday (Nov 20) as his campaign pursues an increasingly desperate bid to overturn the Nov 3 election result following a series of courtroom defeats.

The Trump campaign's latest strategy, as described by three people familiar with the plan, is to convince Republican-controlled legislatures in battleground states won by Biden, such as Michigan, to undermine the results.

"The entire election frankly in all the swing states should be overturned and the legislatures should make sure that the electors are selected for Trump," Sidney Powell, one of Trump's lawyers, told Fox Business television on Thursday.

President-elect Joe Biden, a Democrat, won the election and is preparing to take office on Jan 20, but Trump, a Republican, has refused to concede and is searching for a way to invalidate the results, claiming widespread voter fraud.

READ: Trump's election power play: Persuade Republican legislators to do what US voters did not

The Trump team is focusing on Michigan and Pennsylvania for now, but even if both those states flipped to the president he would need another state to overturn its vote to surpass Biden in the Electoral College.

Michigan's state legislative leaders, Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey and House Speaker Lee Chatfield, both Republicans, will visit the White House at Trump's request, according to a source in Michigan.

The two lawmakers will listen to what the president has to say, the source said. Shirkey told a Michigan news outlet earlier this week that the legislature would not appoint a second slate of electors.

"It's incredibly dangerous that they are even entertaining the conversation," Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, told MSNBC. 

"This is an embarrassment to the state."

SOUNDING THE ALARM

Biden, meanwhile, is due on Friday to meet Democratic leaders in Congress, House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer after spending most of the week with advisers planning his administration.

Nationally, Biden won nearly 6 million more votes than Trump, a difference of 3.8 percentage points. But the outcome of the election is determined in the Electoral College, where each state's electoral votes, based largely on population, are typically awarded to the winner of a state's popular vote.

READ: Georgia confirms Biden's victory in state as it completes hand audit of ballots

READ: Wisconsin to hold partial vote recount as fuming Trump denies defeat

Biden leads by 306 electoral votes to Trump's 232 as states work to certify their results at least six days before the Electoral College convenes on Dec 14.

Legal experts have sounded the alarm at the notion of a sitting president seeking to undermine the will of the voters, though they have expressed skepticism that a state legislature could lawfully substitute its own electors.

Trump's lawyers are seeking to take the power of appointing electors away from state governors and secretaries of state and give it to friendly state lawmakers from his party, saying the US Constitution gives legislatures the ultimate authority.

Reaching out to state officials represents a shift in Trump's attempts to overturn the result after his campaign failed to muster evidence to support the president's claims of widespread voter fraud.

Election officials have said they saw no evidence of any major irregularities.

'TOTALLY IRRESPONSIBLE'

Trump's attempts to reverse the outcome via lawsuits and recounts have met with little success.

A hand recount of Georgia's roughly 5 million votes wrapped up on Thursday, affirming Biden's victory there, while judges in three states rejected bids by the Trump campaign to challenge vote counts.

Despite the setbacks, the Trump campaign has not abandoned its legal efforts.

Rudy Giuliani, the president's personal lawyer, said on Thursday he planned to file more lawsuits, accusing Democrats of masterminding a "national conspiracy" to steal the election, though he offered no evidence to support the claim.

Biden called Trump's attempts "totally irresponsible" on Thursday, though he has expressed little concern they will succeed in preventing him from taking office on Jan 20.

Biden has spent the week putting together his team. His incoming chief of staff, Ron Klain, told CNN on Thursday that Biden would announce more White House officials on Friday, after naming several senior staff members earlier this week.

Biden said on Thursday he had selected a treasury secretary and could announce his pick as soon as next week.

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2020-11-20 11:53:33Z
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Joe Biden turns 78, will be oldest serving US president - CNA

WASHINGTON: United States President-elect Joe Biden turned 78 on Friday (Nov 20). In exactly two months, he'll take the reins of a politically fractured nation facing the worst public health crisis in a century, high unemployment and a reckoning on racial injustice.

As he wrestles with those issues, Biden will be attempting to accomplish another feat: Demonstrate to Americans that age is but a number and he's up to the job.

Biden will be sworn in as the oldest president in the nation’s history, displacing Ronald Reagan, who left the White House in 1989 when he was 77 years and 349 days old.

The age and health of both Biden and President Donald Trump - less than four years Biden’s junior - loomed throughout a race that was decided by a younger and more diverse electorate and at a moment when the nation is facing no shortage of issues of consequence.

Out of the gate, Biden will be keen to demonstrate he's got the vigour to serve.

“It’s crucial that he and his staff put himself in the position early in his presidency where he can express what he wants with a crispness that's not always been his strength," said Ross Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers University who has advised legislators from both parties.

“He has got to build up credibility with the American people that he’s physically and mentally up to the job.”

Biden Birthday
In this Dec 13, 1972, file photo, the newly elected Democratic senator from Delaware, Joe Biden, is shown on Capitol Hill in Washington. President-elect Biden turned 78 on Friday, Nov 20, 2020. (File photo: AP)

Throughout the campaign, Trump, 74, didn’t miss a chance to highlight Biden’s gaffes and argue that the Democrat lacked the mental acuity to lead the nation.

Both critics and some backers of Biden worried that he was sending the wrong message about his stamina by keeping a relatively light public schedule while Trump barnstormed battleground states. Biden attributed his light schedule to being cautious during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Some of Biden’s rivals in the Democratic primary also made a case on age - while skipping Trump’s vitriol - by raising the question of whether someone of Biden’s and Trump’s generation was the right person to lead a nation dealing with issues like climate change and racial inequality.

READ: Biden chides Trump for lack of cooperation on COVID-19 vaccine

Brian Ott, a Missouri State University communications professor who studies presidential rhetoric, said Biden was hardly impressive as a campaigner, but has proven far more effective with his public remarks since Election Day.

Ott said Biden's victory speech was poignant, and his empathy showed in a virtual discussion that he held earlier this week with frontline healthcare workers.

The president-elect’s experience - a combination of age and nearly 50 years in politics - conveys more clearly through the prism of governing than the chaos of campaigning, he said.

“The rhetoric of governing, unlike the rhetoric of campaigning, is collaborative rather than adversarial,” Ott said.

Biden Birthday
In this Nov 6, 2020, file photo, then Democratic presidential candidate former vice president Joe Biden arrives with his running mate Senator Kamala Harris to speak in Wilmington, Delaware. President-elect Biden turned 78 on Friday, Nov 20. (File photo: AP/Carolyn Kaster)

Biden’s relatively advanced age also puts a greater premium on the quality of his staff, Baker said. His choice of Senator Kamala Harris, nearly 20 years younger than him, as his running mate effectively acknowledged his age issue. 

Biden has described himself as a transitional president but hasn’t ruled out running for a second term.

“He’s well served in making it known from day one that she’s ready to go,” Baker said of Harris. “She’s got to be in the images coming out of the White House. They also need to, in terms of their messaging, highlight her inclusion in whatever the important issue or debate is going on in the White House.”

Biden, in a September interview with CNN, promised to be “totally transparent” about all facets of his health if elected, but he hasn’t said how he'll do that.

READ: Commentary: It’s engagement not containment of China that Joe Biden will focus on

The campaign has made the case that Biden isn’t your average septuagenarian.

His physician, Dr Kevin O’Connor, in a medical report released by the campaign in December, described Biden as “healthy, vigorous ... fit to successfully execute the duties of the Presidency, to include those as Chief Executive, Head of State and Commander in Chief”.

O’Connor reported that Biden works out five days a week. The president-elect told supporters that during the pandemic he has relied on home workouts involving a Peloton bike, treadmill and weights.

In 1988, Biden suffered two life-threatening brain aneurysms, an experience that he wrote in his memoir shaped him into the “kind of man I want to be”.

O’Connor also noted in his report that Biden has an irregular heartbeat, but it has not required any medication or other treatment. He also had his gall bladder removed in 2003.

Biden Birthday
President-elect Joe Biden rides a bike at Cape Henlopen State Park in Lewes, Delaware, on Nov 14, 2020. President-elect Biden turned 78 on Friday, Nov 20. (File photo: AP/Alex Brandon)

A September article by a group of researchers in the Journal on Active Aging concluded that both Biden and Trump are “super-agers” and are likely to outlive their American contemporaries and maintain their health beyond the end of the next presidential term.

Some of Biden's White House predecessors left behind breadcrumbs about the dos and don'ts of demonstrating presidential vigour, said Edward Frantz, a presidential historian at the University of Indianapolis.

Reagan made sure the public saw him chopping wood and riding horses. 

Trump, after being diagnosed with the coronavirus, quickly returned to a busy campaign schedule - holding dozens of crowded rallies in battleground states in the final weeks of the campaign.

Those events flouted COVID-19 guidelines on social distancing, wearing masks and avoiding large gatherings.

In 1841, William Harrison, 68, attempted to show off his vigour by delivering a lengthy inaugural address without a coat or hat. 

Weeks later, Harrison, then the oldest president elected in US history, developed a cold that turned into pneumonia that would kill him just a month into his presidency.

It’s disputed whether Harrison’s illness was related to his inaugural address.

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2020-11-20 10:27:22Z
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Hong Kong closes more schools as COVID-19 situation turns 'severe', health minister says - CNA

HONG KONG: Hong Kong has suspended in-person classes for lower primary school students after the city’s top health official said the COVID-19 situation in the city was rapidly deteriorating.

Classes for Primary 1 to 3 students will be suspended for two weeks from Monday (Nov 23). The suspension comes more than a week after kindergartens were ordered to close following an outbreak of upper respiratory tract infections.

Hong Kong confirmed 26 new coronavirus infections on Friday, 21 of which are local cases.

“I would appeal to people to stop all unnecessary gathering activities because the situation is severe now in Hong Kong,” Hong Kong's Secretary for Food and Health Professor Sophia Chan said.

Hong Kong is due to launch an air travel bubble with Singapore on Sunday.

Currently, the air travel bubble remains on track, although it could be suspended according to the agreement between Singapore and Hong Kong if the seven-day moving average for unlinked coronavirus infections exceeds five in either city.

Prof Chan said Hong Kong has "probably entered into a new wave of cases", citing experts and information from the Centre for Health Protection.

"But of course we are now doing our best, and before this severe situation started, in the past week, we have already tightened many of our measures, including border control measures, quarantine measures, hotel regulation measures, and also some of the social distancing measures," she said.

Prof Chan added that Hong Kong has ramped up its testing capacity and set up four community testing centres, adding that the government would continue to tighten measures. 

She said that Hong Kong must "do more at different junctures, different points" when it comes to border control measures.

For those coming into Hong Kong, pre-departure COVID-19 tests are required and flights are also stopped if there are more confirmed cases. Testing measures have also been tightened at the airport and "everybody has to be tested at the airport", said Prof Chan.

People returning to Hong Kong, except those from mainland China, are required to be quarantined at hotels rather than at home.

"We will look into the science and the quarantine period to see how best we can actually be more 'water tight' in these measures," she added.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-11-20 08:37:30Z
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Kamis, 19 November 2020

Xi touts China's huge economy as base of free trade in APEC speech - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: President Xi Jinping hailed China as the pivot point for global free trade Thursday, vowing to keep its "super-sized" economy open for business and warning against protectionism as the world battles the COVID-19 pandemic.

Buoyed by the signing of the world's largest trade pact over the weekend, Xi said the Asia-Pacific is the "forerunner driving global growth" in a world hit by "multiple challenges."

He vowed "openness" to trade and rejected any possibility of the "decoupling" of China's economy, in his only nod to the hostile trade policy of US President Donald Trump's administration, which has battered China with tariffs and tech restrictions.

Xi was speaking at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, held online this year because of the pandemic, which brings together 21 Pacific Rim countries, accounting for about 60 percent of global GDP.

It was not immediately clear if Trump, wounded by his election loss to Joe Biden, would take part in the two-day gathering or send a high-level delegate in his place.

In a speech that veered into triumphalism over China's economic "resilience and vitality" in bouncing back from the virus, which first emerged in the central city of Wuhan, Xi warned countries who insist on trade barriers would suffer self-inflicted wounds.

"Openness enables a country to move forward while seclusion holds it back," he said.

"China will actively cooperate with all countries, regions and enterprises that want to do so. We will continue to hold high the banner of openness and co-operation."

TRADE AGENDA

But Xi's rhetoric may raise eyebrows in capitals where China has either restricted trade or used its giant economy as a bargaining chip in wider geopolitical disputes.

Australian exports of beef, wine and barley to China - their biggest market - have been restricted, as a diplomatic rumble over the origins of the pandemic as well as accusations of espionage hammer relations.

The APEC summit comes a week after China and 14 other Asia-Pacific countries signed the world's largest free-trade deal.

Commentary: RCEP a huge victory in tough times

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which excludes the US, is viewed as a major coup for China and further evidence that Beijing is setting the agenda for global commerce as Washington retreats.

RCEP's rival was the Trans-Pacific Partnership - championed by former US president Barack Obama - but Trump withdrew from it and the pact has now been replaced by a watered-down alternative that the United States has not joined.

Xi had no direct words for President-elect Biden, whose ascension to office next year, while still clouded by Trump's refusal to concede defeat, is expected to see a more nuanced extension of Washington's current China policy.

Biden has been strident on China's human rights record, from its treatment of Uighur Muslims in the restive Xinjiang region to Hong Kong's democracy movement.

READ: Trump to represent US at this week's virtual APEC summit, official says

READ: US being left behind after Asia forms world's biggest trade bloc RCEP: US Chamber

But some at the APEC forum were optimistic the incoming US president would engage more with international groupings.

"I think that (a Biden administration) will be more supportive of the WTO (World Trade Organization), and of APEC," Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said.

"I hope that there will be a more constructive approach - one where countries work together, rather than against one another."

The US turned away from multilateral bodies during Trump's tenure as he pushed his "America First" agenda, while APEC gatherings were overshadowed by US-China trade tensions.

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2020-11-20 04:55:05Z
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Xi touts China's huge economy as base of free trade in APEC speech - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: President Xi Jinping hailed China as the pivot point for global free trade Thursday, vowing to keep its "super-sized" economy open for business and warning against protectionism as the world battles the COVID-19 pandemic.

Buoyed by the signing of the world's largest trade pact over the weekend, Xi said the Asia-Pacific is the "forerunner driving global growth" in a world hit by "multiple challenges."

He vowed "openness" to trade and rejected any possibility of the "decoupling" of China's economy, in his only nod to the hostile trade policy of US President Donald Trump's administration, which has battered China with tariffs and tech restrictions.

Xi was speaking at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, held online this year because of the pandemic, which brings together 21 Pacific Rim countries, accounting for about 60 percent of global GDP.

It was not immediately clear if Trump, wounded by his election loss to Joe Biden, would take part in the two-day gathering or send a high-level delegate in his place.

In a speech that veered into triumphalism over China's economic "resilience and vitality" in bouncing back from the virus, which first emerged in the central city of Wuhan, Xi warned countries who insist on trade barriers would suffer self-inflicted wounds.

"Openness enables a country to move forward while seclusion holds it back," he said.

"China will actively cooperate with all countries, regions and enterprises that want to do so. We will continue to hold high the banner of openness and co-operation."

TRADE AGENDA

But Xi's rhetoric may raise eyebrows in capitals where China has either restricted trade or used its giant economy as a bargaining chip in wider geopolitical disputes.

Australian exports of beef, wine and barley to China - their biggest market - have been restricted, as a diplomatic rumble over the origins of the pandemic as well as accusations of espionage hammer relations.

The APEC summit comes a week after China and 14 other Asia-Pacific countries signed the world's largest free-trade deal.

Commentary: RCEP a huge victory in tough times

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which excludes the US, is viewed as a major coup for China and further evidence that Beijing is setting the agenda for global commerce as Washington retreats.

RCEP's rival was the Trans-Pacific Partnership - championed by former US president Barack Obama - but Trump withdrew from it and the pact has now been replaced by a watered-down alternative that the United States has not joined.

Xi had no direct words for President-elect Biden, whose ascension to office next year, while still clouded by Trump's refusal to concede defeat, is expected to see a more nuanced extension of Washington's current China policy.

Biden has been strident on China's human rights record, from its treatment of Uighur Muslims in the restive Xinjiang region to Hong Kong's democracy movement.

READ: Trump to represent US at this week's virtual APEC summit, official says

READ: US being left behind after Asia forms world's biggest trade bloc RCEP: US Chamber

But some at the APEC forum were optimistic the incoming US president would engage more with international groupings.

"I think that (a Biden administration) will be more supportive of the WTO (World Trade Organization), and of APEC," Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said.

"I hope that there will be a more constructive approach - one where countries work together, rather than against one another."

The US turned away from multilateral bodies during Trump's tenure as he pushed his "America First" agenda, while APEC gatherings were overshadowed by US-China trade tensions.

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2020-11-20 03:24:58Z
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