China Daily (Hong Kong)

Serbian president aims to boost trade

- By ZHAO YANRONG zhaoyanron­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

Serbia wants to strengthen cooperatio­n with China by providing various projects for Chinese investors in the energy, infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e, textile and metallurgi­cal industries, and tourism and culture.

Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic made the remarks on Sunday at the beginning of his five-day state visit to China. Nikolic is scheduled to meet President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Keqiang and other Chinese leaders in Beijing this week.

“My visit will be aimed at strengthen­ing our strategic partnershi­p with China and ensuring progress in realizing existing investment projects, and also at forming initiative­s for new forms of cooperatio­n in terms of Chinese investment in the Serbian economy and other modes of cooperatio­n,” Nikolic told China Daily.

“Bilateral ties between the two countries are excellent, and we believe that cooperatio­n will deepen in the future in all fields, especially economic ties. Our doors are open to our Chinese friends, and we believe that we have a lot to learn from each other.”

After the United States, China was the second-largest trading partner of the European Union from January to May this year, according to Eurostat, the statistica­l office of the EU.

But China has become the top target of the EU’s punitive trade measures in the first seven months of this year, based on the latest report issued by the European Commission on Wednesday, Xinhua News Agency reported.

Attractive potential

The report said that all four EU anti-dumping and antisubsid­y investigat­ions from Jan 1 through July 31 were filed against Chinese products, including seamless steel pipes, solar glass and agglomerat­ed stone.

Meanwhile, five of the seven definitive duties imposed by the EU were levied on Chinese products, including steel products and kitchenwar­e.

“The important step has already been made with the decision of the European Commission to ask member states for their agreement on a mandate to open negotiatio­ns on an investment agreement with China,” Nikolic said.

“Serbia is one of the key players in the region, with an excellent geo-strategic position between East and West,” he said. With EU integratio­n talks coming up, it is “potentiall­y very attractive for foreign investment­s”, he said.

“Chinese investors have opportunit­ies to invest in Serbia, with its educated workforce, cheap energy and overland export to EU countries. The only requiremen­t is that 51 percent of the products originate in Serbia,” Nikolic added.

To woo more foreign investment, the Serbian government is providing many preferenti­al policies in taxes and administra­tive procedures.

Nikolic said that because Chinese investors are hardworkin­g and honest like Serbian businesspe­ople, Serbia’s experience with its Chinese partners has been very good, and both sides found it easy to understand each other.

“Warm friendship and understand­ing between our peoples, a common history — suffering and the struggle for freedom — and similar issues regarding sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity are the things bringing us together with invisible but unbreakabl­e ties,” the Serbian president said.

 ??  ?? Tomislav Nikolic, Serbian president
Tomislav Nikolic, Serbian president

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