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China's Li urges fair investor treatment in Italy
Chinese Premier Li Qiang urged Italy to ensure fair treatment for Chinese investors and pledged to deepen two-way trade and investment cooperation, aiming for balanced growth, Xinhua reported.
- On November 22, 2025, Chinese Premier Li Qiang met Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni at the G20 summit in Johannesburg, pressing Italy for a fair, transparent, and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese investors.
- Chinese officials framed the talks as part of efforts to deepen bilateral engagement, with Beijing pledging to promote two-way openness and Italy welcoming more Chinese enterprises amid their 55th anniversary of diplomatic relations.
- Li pledged greater market access for Italian firms via the China International Import Expo and urged deeper connectivity and people-to-people exchanges in tourism, education and travel.
- Meloni's office said the leaders agreed on maintaining constructive dialogue across areas of common interest, while Italy stressed a level playing field for companies and secure global supply chains, signalling readiness to enhance coordination on multilateral platforms.
- The meeting framed wider cooperation even amid trade-management tensions in Europe; Italy supported European Commission 2024 tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles while China offered to strengthen ties within the United Nations and the G20.
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17 Articles
17 Articles
China wants to further strengthen economic cooperation with Italy and welcomes Italian companies that want to enter the Chinese market. Chinese Premier Li Qiang told Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni this at the G20 summit in Johannesburg, South Africa.
·Amsterdam, Netherlands
Read Full ArticleChina's Li urges fair investor treatment in Italy
Chinese Premier Li Qiang welcomed increased participation from Italian companies in the Chinese market and expressed hope for a fair and non-discriminatory environment for Chinese investors in Italy, the state-run Xinhua news agency said on Sunday.
·United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources17
Leaning Left4Leaning Right4Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution40% Left, 40% Right
Bias Distribution
- 40% of the sources lean Left, 40% of the sources lean Right
40% Right
L 40%
C 20%
R 40%
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