Macron and Xi's Guangzhou rendezvous a sign of China's enthusiasm for French leader, analysts say

In a bid to reset ties with Europe, Beijing is expected to launch a charm offensive to woo French President Emmanuel Macron, who landed in the Chinese capital on Wednesday afternoon for a three-day state visit.

Chinse observers said a rare meeting between Macron and Chinese President Xi Jinping to be held outside the capital city on Friday highlighted Beijing's enthusiasm towards the French leader and his attempt to carve his own "third way" of handling China without being confrontational.

Speaking upon his arrival in Beijing on Wednesday, the French president indicated France would seek engagement with China, especially in commercial areas.

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"We must not disassociate ourselves, separate ourselves from China," Macron said, adding that France would "commit proactively to continue to have a commercial relationship with China".

Macron also said China "had a major role" to play in finding an end to the Ukraine war, according to a report by Agence France-Presse.

After an official meeting and a state dinner with Xi on Thursday, Macron will travel to the southern city of Guangzhou on Friday, where the two are expected to have another sit-down and a private dinner.

Guangzhou is the provincial capital of Guangdong, an export powerhouse and one of China's most affluent regions.

Macron will also meet Chinese investors and answer questions from some 1,000 Chinese students at Sun Yat-sen University.

French officials said preparations had been "smoother and friendlier" than Macron's previous China trips, according to Bloomberg.

Meanwhile, China's state-controlled media has hailed his excursion to the southern metropolis as proof of close ties between Beijing and Paris.

"Macron's meeting with Xi in Guangzhou underlines the importance both sides have attached to this visit," said Cui Hongjian, director of European studies at the China Institute of International Studies, a think tank affiliated with the foreign ministry.

It is rare for Xi to meet foreign dignitaries outside Beijing.

Xi and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had their first two-day "informal summit" in Wuhan in April 2018, including at least four one-on-one meetings, soon after a border stand-off between the two countries.

Also in 2018, Xi and Russian President Vladimir Putin took a high-speed train to Tianjin, the northern municipality neighbouring Beijing, and watched an ice hockey game together.