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China accuses the US of bullying in pushing for tariffs on Russian oil purchases

China accuses the US of bullying in pushing for tariffs on Russian oil purchases

China accuses the United States "unilaterally bullying" for calling on allies imposing tariffs on China because of its purchase of Russian crude oil. This is fueling tensions at a meeting between Chinese and U.S. officials in Spain, where they are trying to resolve their trade disputes.

China has rejected Washington's demand that the Group of Seven countries and NATO countries impose a secondary tariff on Chinese imports due to its purchase of Russian crude oil, China’s commerce ministry announced on Monday. It called it "a textbook example of unilateral bullying, economic coercion, and economic intimidation".

On Monday, officials from China and the U.S. began a second round of talks in Madrid. They are seeking to find common ground over issues such as tariffs and a U.S. request that Chinese owner Bytedance divest from TikTok.

China's regulator of the market said on Monday that a preliminary investigation had found that U.S. chipmaker Nvidia violated China's antimonopoly laws.

Trade relations between the two largest economies in the world have soured despite a fragile truce on tariffs reached in May, which was extended in August. This truce prevented tariffs on goods of each other from reaching levels in excess of three digits.

Negotiators on both sides are still tackling a number of difficult issues, including the U.S.'s curbs on tech and chip exports; China's support of Russia; and what Washington views as inadequate efforts to stop the flow of precursors chemicals for fentanyl in the U.S.

The Chinese Ministry urged the U.S. in its statement to be "prudent" with words and actions and to resolve differences through dialogue. Reporting by Liz Lee and Yukun Zhu; Editing by Aidan Lewis, Christina Fincher and Beijing Newsroom

(source: Reuters)