Trudeau joins APEC leaders in stressing free trade amid tensions with China
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau joined counterparts from both sides of the Pacific on Friday to sign a declaration focusing on free trade and digital innovation as a means to economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The communiqué from the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation leaders’ summit — its first joint statement in three years — sought common ground on the fraught issues of free-flowing commerce and telecommunications networks. It comes amid Canada’s tensions with China and the much bigger dispute between Beijing and Washington.
The 21 APEC leaders stressed “co-ordinated action” on the pandemic at the meeting, hosted by Malaysia but held online because of the virus. They extended the sentiment of co-operation to international business, with signatories pledging “free, open, fair, non-discriminatory … predictable trade.”
The so-called Kuala Lumpur Declaration also underscored “necessary reform” at the World Trade Organization, a process Canada has led among a handful of WTO members known as the Ottawa Group.


