The UK’s Foreign Office has decided to cut its funding to the Great Britain–China Centre (GBCC), it emerged on Thursday.
The Spectator magazine quoted a statement from the Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office (FCDO), which confirmed the decision, citing financial reasons.
The GBCC later confirmed that it has not received formal notification of the decision.
Established in 1974, the GBCC is a non-departmental public body sponsored by the FCDO that works to strengthen the UK–China relationship by brokering dialogues between the British government; Parliament; and legal, judicial, and academic sectors with their Chinese counterparts.
The GBCC has primarily been funded through the Official Development Assistance from the FCDO, the European Union, and bilateral donors, and through corporate sponsorship.
The report also said the grant would cover 61 percent of the GBCC’s budgeted core operating costs, with the rest to be covered by “earnings from externally funded projects and sponsorship and if necessary from reserves.”
“Due to the current fiscal climate, including reductions to Official Development Assistance, we have made the decision to end FCDO grant-in-aid funding to the GBCC,” the FCDO was quoted as saying.
“We are rebalancing the aid budget to give the UK more control over how exactly the budget is spent on our key priorities supporting women and girls, honest and reliable investment, and delivering humanitarian aid,” it added.
In an email to The Epoch Times on July 4, the GBCC said it had not received any formal notification that says the FCDO funding has been stopped or when it will stop.
Speaking at the NATO summit in Madrid on Wednesday, Truss said Beijing is in danger of making the same mistake that Russian President Vladimir Putin made in Ukraine.
She warned that the economic and military rise of China over the last 40 years will reach a gridlock unless the ruling regime plays “by the rules.”
The FCDO didn’t respond to The Epoch Times’ request for comment.