China files WTO complaint over latest US tariffs

China's President Xi Jinping makes a statement following the signing of bilateral agreements with Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, in Brasilia, Brazil November 20, 2024. REUTERS/Adriano Machado/File Photo
China has filed a complaint with the World
Trade Organization over bruising tariffs imposed by Washington, Beijing's
commerce ministry announced Wednesday, accusing US President Donald Trump of
engaging in "bullying" tactics.
Trump's latest salvo of tariffs came into
force Wednesday, hitting China the hardest and bringing levies against the
world's second-largest economy to 104%.
In retaliation, Beijing hiked its own
tariffs on American goods to 84%, up from an initial 34%, propelling the
tit-for-tat standoff to new levels.
Beijing has called for the world to unite
against Trump's aggressive trade policy, and warned that it intends to
"fight it to the end".
Calling the snowballing rounds of tariffs
unleashed on China since February "a grave mistake", a spokesperson
for the commerce ministry said the cumulative measures highlight "the
unilateral bullying nature of the US actions".
"China has initiated proceedings before
the WTO's dispute settlement mechanism", he said, according to state news
agency Xinhua.
Beijing "will firmly safeguard its
legitimate rights and interests in accordance with the WTO rules, and
resolutely uphold the multilateral trading system and the international
economic and trade order," he added.
A number of countries have begun filing complaints
with the World Trade Organization charging that the steep tariffs imposed by
Trump violate international trade rules.
But the WTO's room for manoeuvre is limited and its dispute settlement system has been weakened over the years, including by Washington blocking the appointment of new judges.
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