UK foreign secretary to visit China and India to discuss global issues

    UK foreign secretary to visit China and India to discuss global issues


    British Foreign Secretary, Yvette Cooper

    British Foreign Secretary, Yvette Cooper
    | Photo Credit:
    VLADISLAV CULIOMZA

    British foreign minister
    Yvette Cooper will travel to ​China on Monday, and then onwards
    to India ⁠later in the week, with the visits to focus on global
    issues from the Strait of Hormuz and the Russia-Ukraine war to
    the recent ‌Ebola outbreak.

    Cooper will meet her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi and Chinese
    Vice President Han Zheng on ‌June 2, before travelling to the
    southern tech hub of ‌Shenzhen ⁠for a programme focussed on
    science and technology ⁠a day later, the government said.

    The plans, announced on Sunday, come after Reuters reported
    last month on the visit, citing three sources.

    Prime Minister Keir ​Starmer and Chinese leader ‌Xi Jinping
    hailed a reset in ties during the British leader’s visit to
    China in January, pledging greater cooperation on trade,
    investment and technology to the mutual benefit of both
    countries.

    TRIP ‌TO FOCUS ON TACKLING GLOBAL CHALLENGES

    Starmer, who is ​battling some of the worst popularity
    ratings of any leader at home, was the first British prime
    minister ⁠to visit China in eight years, with his centre-left
    Labour government making improving relations with China a
    priority.

    Cooper’s travel to China ‌and India – the world’s
    second-largest and sixth-largest economies – comes at a time of
    heightened geopolitical tensions, soaring oil prices following
    the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, and as Britain struggles with
    sluggish economic growth.

    She is expected to be in India on June 4 where she is due to
    meet External Affairs Minister ‌S. Jaishankar as well as
    entrepreneurs, academics and government partners who are
    delivering ​on the UK-India Vision 2035 initiative.

    The two countries signed a free trade deal last year that
    was ⁠aimed at boosting bilateral trade and improving market
    access across sectors. ⁠But India’s trade secretary Rajesh
    Agrawal said last month that its implementation had hit a hurdle
    over London’s ‌new steel import curbs.

    The British government said Cooper’s upcoming engagements
    “with these two major powers are expected to ​be focused on
    tackling the most significant global challenges”.

    Published on May 31, 2026



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