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While China stays on sidelines, pace of in-person international diplomacy quickens

Some of Europe and Asia's most powerful leaders are clocking thousands of air miles in a flurry of diplomatic activity, but there has been one major absentee: China.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has not left the country since the coronavirus pandemic began in early 2020 and now, with the country fighting its worst Covid-19 outbreaks yet, is left watching from the sidelines as Europe steps up its engagement with Asian rivals India and Japan.

The whirlwind of diplomacy "is the result of political and economic rationales combined", said a senior EU official. "These [rationales] have long been there, but with the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine they have become more pressing."

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It has gathered momentum since last month's EU-China summit, held by video link, and viewed in European capitals as a disaster. European leaders failed to convince Beijing to use its influence to stall Russia's war on Ukraine, or to address other grievances over trade, human rights and economic coercion.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel hold talks with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (right) and his delegation on Thursday in Tokyo. Photo: ZUMA Press Wire/dpa alt=European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel hold talks with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (right) and his delegation on Thursday in Tokyo. Photo: ZUMA Press Wire/dpa>

Observers say China's absence from top-level, face-to-face diplomacy could exacerbate these divisions.

"Chinese leadership's absence from in-person meetings increases the risk of Beijing suffering from an echo-chamber effect and further losing touch with reality in the EU, which makes it even harder to navigate an already complicated relationship," said Grzegorz Stec, a Brussels-based analyst of EU-China relations at the German think tank Merics.

It also opens the door for China's rivals.

On May 6, Italian Foreign Affairs Minister Luigi Di Maio finished a three-day visit to India, where he met counterpart S. Jaishankar and Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal.

This was the first time in 10 years an Italian foreign minister had travelled to India, after two Italian marines fatally shot a pair of Indian fishermen off the coast of Kerala in 2012, starting a legal saga that strained bilateral relations.