The US Post Office (USPS) announced today that it will again receive parcels from China, amid a trade war between Washington and Beijing.

USPS said it is “still accepting” parcels from mainland China and Hong Kong, a day after announcing that it would not accept them “temporarily” and “up to younger”, causing Beijing’s wrath.

“We call on the US to immediately stop politicizing and tooling financial and commercial issues, and to stop being unjustified by Chinese businesses,” said Lynn Jian, a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

Expressing Beijing’s “deep dissatisfaction” for US measures, the Chinese Foreign Minister spokesman but called for “dialogue” to put an end to the crisis.

The controversy over the parcels is after 10% of US customs duties on products imported from China, which caused the launch of a new trade war between the two countries with a heavy burden on the global economy.

Beijing responded immediately by imposing its own duties on a series of products imported from the US from oil to agricultural machinery.

China has also announced new restrictions on the export of critical metals and metaloids used in areas such as aerospace.

“The measures taken by China are a necessary action to defend its legitimate rights and interests,” the Chinese diplomacy spokesman said.