Xi also sat down with Japan’s premier Sanae Takaichi for the first time since she was appointed last month.
She said she told Xi that she wanted a “strategic and mutually beneficial relationship between Japan and China”.
But she told reporters that she also raised a number of thorny issues with the Chinese leader, saying that it was “important for us to engage in direct, candid dialogue”.
The Chinese leader now turns his attention to the South Korean President in what will be their first sit-down meeting since Lee’s election in June.
LEE TO ‘REASSURE’ BEIJING
Seoul has long trodden a fine line between top trading partner China and defence guarantor the United States.
Relations with China soured in 2016 after Seoul agreed to deploy the US-made THAAD missile defence system.
Beijing hit back with sweeping economic retaliation, restricting South Korean businesses and banning group tours.
Cultural spats – including China’s claims over the origins of the Korean staple dish Kimchi – have also soured public opinion against Beijing.
“Public opinion matters in foreign policy,” Gi-Wook Shin, a Korea expert and sociology professor at Stanford University, told AFP.
“Public perception of China in South Korea is highly negative. I suppose the Chinese view of South Korea is not favourable either,” he said.
South Korea – which this week also agreed a multi-billion dollar economic deal with the United States – remains heavily dependent on trade with its vast Asian neighbour.
Lee will likely try to “reassure Beijing that South Korea’s alignment with the United States does not preclude pragmatic economic engagement with China,” Seong-Hyon Lee, a scholar at the Harvard University Asia Center.
The South Korean leader is keen to “seek a measure of economic stability and a more predictable floor in bilateral relations,” he told AFP.
Also hanging over relations are Beijing’s close ties with North Korea, which remains technically at war with the South.
Lee plans to raise the issue of “denuclearisation” with the Chinese leader, as well as broader peace efforts on the peninsula, Seoul’s presidential office said.
Ahead of Lee and Xi’s meeting, Pyongyang dismissed Seoul’s hopes for denuclearisation as a “pipedream” which “can never be realised even if it talks about it a thousand times”.
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/east-asia/xi-jinping-china-lee-jae-myung-south-korea-apec-5439226

