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China says Panama ties should not be subject to third-party interference, Xinhua reports

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 1:13 AM

HONG KONG, May 27 (Reuters) – China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Beijing was ready to deepen practical cooperation with Panama and urged ​the Central American country to safeguard Chinese ‌firms’ rights during a meeting with Panamanian Foreign Minister Javier Martínez-Acha, China’s official news agency Xinhua reported.

Wang, who met Acha on the sidelines of a United Nations Security Council meeting ‌in ​New York, said China-Panama ties ⁠should not be subject ⁠to third-party interference, Xinhua reported, a reference to U.S. pressure over Chinese-linked infrastructure near the Panama Canal, which handles 5% of global maritime trade.

The ​meeting comes after months of tension over the future of two key container terminals at Balboa ⁠and Cristobal, located near ⁠the Pacific and Atlantic entrances to the ​canal but operated separately from the waterway itself.

In late ​January, Panama’s Supreme Court declared unconstitutional the legal ‌framework underpinning a 1997 concession — and a 2021 extension — that allowed Panama Ports Company, a subsidiary of Hong Kong-listed CK Hutchison, to operate the ⁠terminals.

China and Hong Kong authorities have said they oppose the ruling against CK Hutchison’s port concessions, calling it an “act ⁠of bad ‌faith.”

The cancellation followed U.S. pressure to ⁠curb Chinese influence around the canal.

CK Hutchison, ​which ‌operated the ports for nearly 30 ​years, has ⁠accused Panamanian authorities of unlawfully seizing property and launched an international arbitration case against the country, claiming damages of more than $2 billion.

(Reporting by the Beijing newsroom; Writing by Farah Master; Editing by Christian Schmollinger ​and Kate Mayberry)