• ElHexo [comrade/them]
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      569 months ago

      There’s no information about that, so presumably given the slant of the article it was an innocuous invitation.

      I have tried to find any other references but haven’t.

      It is not unusual for members of parliament to be invited to other countries, so information needed would include:

      • who specifically invited AfD
      • was this invite open to other parliamentarians
      • what was the nature of their ‘invite’
      • was this part of a broader diplomatic program (such as China’s invites to EU representatives and diplomats to tour Xinjiang)

      China would deal with AfD just like they deal with left, right, far right and theocratic governments and absolute monarchies all over the world.

      • TBooneChickens [any]
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        199 months ago

        That’s all fair, but framing the sequence of events as entirely unilateral action by the AfD is just as slanted as the article, and we’re better than that.

        • ElHexo [comrade/them]
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          419 months ago

          It is almost entirely unilateral action by AfD though.

          A better article would make AfD look even more perverse by highlighting a key plant of Xi Jinping thought is “ecological civilisation”, that China invests heavily in renewables and is building a $1 billion factory in Hungary (from memory) to gain more European green market share.

          It could also seek comment from Chinese officials, or even AfD (I didn’t see that but might have missed it?)

    • @zephyreks@lemmy.ca
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      309 months ago

      I mean… It’s not like there’s not a standing invitation for Germany’s current government. Is building diplomatic ties not permissible if the party isn’t currently in power?

      Better fucking tell the Republicans to get out of Canadian politics, then.