France summons China’s envoy over insults, threats to French MPs

“The words of the Chinese Embassy in France and the actions against European elected officials, researchers and diplomats are inadmissible,’ Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian wrote on Twitter on Monday. “I requested that the Chinese ambassador be summoned to remind him firmly of these messages.”

The United States, the European Union, Britain and Canada imposed sanctions on Chinese officials on Monday for human rights abuses in Xinjiang, in the first such coordinated Western action against Beijing under new U.S President Joe Biden.

China’s ambassador Lu Shaye had already been summoned by the French foreign ministry last April over posts and tweets by the embassy defending Beijing’s response to the pandemic and criticising the West’s handling of the outbreak.

Lu, an envoy known for his aggressive and outspoken comments on the embassy’s Twitter account, has targeted several people recently including Antoine Bondaz, a China specialist at the Paris-based Foundation for Strategic Research (FRS) think-tank.

Starting on Friday, he derided Bondaz as a “small-time hoodlum,” a “crazed hyena” and “ideological troll” with “anti-Chinese” stances after he complained about Chinese pressure on French lawmakers hoping to visit Taiwan.

The foreign ministry said it would remind Lu of “the elementary rules as set out by the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations … the embassy is requested to conform strictly with them.”

Earlier on Monday, the Chinese embassy said the EU sanctions were based on lies and misinformation, which was an interference in China’s internal affairs. However, the embassy wrote in a Tweet that the ambassador would go to the foreign ministry on Tuesday to discuss the EU sanctions and questions linked to Taiwan.

The French foreign ministry said it would also summon the ambassador to protest the decision by the Chinese Foreign Ministry to sanction several European nationals, including French Member of the European Parliament Raphaël Glucksmann.

“It is not by attacking academic freedom, freedom of expression and fundamental democratic freedoms that China will respond to the legitimate concerns of the European Union, nor that it will foster dialogue with the 27” countries in the EU, ministry spokeswoman Agnes von der Muhll told reporters in a daily briefing.

Source : Reuters