Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2005-10-13-Speech-4-106"

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"en.20051013.27.4-106"2
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". One could write a great deal on the question of relations, in particular trade relations, between the different countries comprising the EU and China, a country with a population of some 1.3 billion. The report does boast some balanced points, such as establishing ‘trade links with China in a spirit of cooperation and complementarity, while ensuring that the two parties can maintain and develop harmoniously their industrial, agricultural and service sectors in order to guarantee the best possible living standards for all their inhabitants’. Ultimately, however, it descends into a justification for capitalism and the liberalisation of trade relations within the framework of the World Trade Organisation. Hence the demands of ‘opening up the markets’, in particular the liberalisation of the ‘financial markets’, the reform of the ‘economic system’ – in other words, the installation of capitalism – and the ‘acceptance of the European legal and economic system’. Hence the acceptance of all of the EU’s duplicity – which enjoys the agreement of Portugal’s Socialist Party Government – when it comes to the textiles and clothing sector, pandering to the interests of the large distributors and importers. This is unacceptable."@en1

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