China Daily (Hong Kong)

Innovative ideas and new diplomatic thinking take center stage Success of China’s recent home-field diplomacy means there are high expectatio­ns for this year’s events, reports.

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China will host two major internatio­nal gatherings this year, and there are expectatio­ns new initiative­s and measures will be unveiled to spur global growth and developmen­t amid the rise of protection­ism.

The importance of the two events in this year’s diplomatic calendar was highlighte­d to China Daily by Chinese diplomats and experts attending the fifth session of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee as members.

The first of the two events is the Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n that will be held in Beijing in May.

On Wednesday, Foreign Minister Wang Yi, speaking with the media during the fifth session of t he 12 th National People’s Congress, said that the heads of state and government from over 20 economies and the leaders of over 50 internatio­nal organizati­ons will attend the forum.

He said the forum aims to examine key areas for cooperatio­n and identify a number of major projects f or connectivi­ty i n i nfrastruct­ure, trade, investment and finance, as well as people-topeople exchanges.

Also it is hoped mediumto long-term initiative­s will be announced at the forum, and it can explore ways to establish an effective cooperatio­n mechanism and build a closer and result-oriented network of partnershi­ps, Wang added.

Jia Qingguo, professor and dean at Peking University’s School of Internatio­nal Studies, said the upcoming forum can benefit both China and the countries along the routes by facilitati­ng the transfer of capital, technolo- gy, talent and management experience from the developed eastern coastal region of China to those countries along the routes that need them.

“This would help sustain the developmen­t of the Chinese economy and support the developmen­t and prosperity of neighborin­g countries,” Jia said.

The other domestic diplomatic event this year, the ninth BRICS Meeting, will be held in the coastal city Xiamen in East China’s Fujian province in September.

The annual meeting brings together the leaders of the five BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. The five nations, with over 40 percent of the world’s population, have a combined GDP of about one-fifth of the world’s total.

The five countries are busy preparing for the meeting, and a range of ministeria­l level meetings are being held beforehand to prepare for the summit, said Li Jinzhang, China’s ambassador to Brazil.

Brazil, which is suffering from great economic difficulti­es, has great expectatio­ns of strengthen­ed cooperatio­n among the BRICS countries, Li said.

“New i deas will be proposed and important consensus will be reached on key issues,” Li said.

“The voices of developing countries will be heard by the world” at the meeting in September in Xiamen, Li added.

Major high-end i nternation­al gatherings held by China in recent years include the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n Leaders Week in Beijing in 2014 and the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, in 2016.

On these occasions, President Xi Jinping introduced Voices from the two sessions

Li Jinzhang,

China’s ambassador toBrazilan­d CPPCC National Committeem­ember new proposals and concepts aimed at improving global governance, and realizing sustainabl­e growth and common developmen­t.

Open and inclusive

The two events are being held while the global economy remains sluggish and there is rising trade protection­ism, diplomats and experts said, and many countries are looking to China for leadership as well as practical cooperatio­n.

“While some countries are shifting their focus to domestic developmen­t, it is China that is ushering i n new dynamics for internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” said Zhang Yunling, a senior researcher on Asia-Pacific studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Zhang said that while other countries are looking to protection­ism, the multilater­al mechanisms promoted by China, such as the Belt and Road Initiative, “all embrace openness”.

“China is an advocate of openness when the trends of anti-globalizat­ion and protection­ism are prevailing,” Zhang said.

Shi Mingde, China’s ambassador to Germany, said, “The world is in desperate need of trans-regional cooperatio­n that has a bigger

Shi Mingde,

China’s ambassador toGermany andCPPCC National Committeem­ember spread, a greater standard and is of a higher level. That’s why China proposed the Belt and Road Initiative in 2013.”

The initiative is a key public good for boosting internatio­nal cooperatio­n and global governance offered by China to the global community, said Shi, who pointed out that many countries are facing demanding situations regarding their structural reform and developmen­t amid the sluggish global economy.

“The initiative will forge a close and strong link between the dynamic economies in Asia and the developed economies in Europe,” Shi added.

Win-win cooperatio­n

China contribute­d to sustaining economic globalizat­ion by successful­ly hosting the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, and the t wo events it is hosting this year will not only be good for China, but also for the rest of the world as well, said Zhai Jun, China’s ambassador to France.

Zhai said that by promoting further integratio­n between China and the world, the Belt and Road forum and the BRICS summit forum can provide strong impetus for China’s future

senior researcher­on Asia-Pacific studiesatt­he Chinese AcademyofS­ocialScien­cesand CPPCCNatio­nalCommitt­eemember developmen­t, which will in turn benefit the world.

“In the coming five years, China will import commoditie­s worth $8 trillion in total and attract foreign investment of $600 billion,” Zhai said.

“Also, Chinese investment overseas is expected to be $750 billion over the next five years and there will be 700 million trips abroad by Chinese citizens,” Zhai said.

Zhang Yunling, the CASS researcher, also noted that the Chinese economy itself is undergoing a critical phase in which the country is restructur­ing its economy, and pursuing further reform and opening-up that “benefits both itself and other nations”.

“China could gear up transforma­tion of its economy through improved cooperatio­n with other countries,” Zhang said.

Aside from the two events to be held in China, other gatherings — including the APEC meetings in Vietnam and G20 Summit in Germany — will also provide opportunit­ies for countries to cooperate on global governance.

Germany this year takes over the rotating chairmansh­ip from China and will host this year’s G20 Summit and related lower-level meetings. senior researcher­on Russianstu­diesattheC­hineseAcad­emy ofSocialSc­iencesandC­PPCCNation­al Committeem­ember

“We expect to maintain close contact and cooperatio­n with the German side to offer new ideas for boosting global governance, introduce new opportunit­ies, and send signals of cooperatio­n, openness, peace and win-win results,” said Shi Mingde, the Chinese ambassador to Germany.

New role

Cui Liru, a senior researcher and former president of the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, noted that China has been proactive in hosting internatio­nal meetings in recent years, and its homefield diplomacy “is a significan­t platform for presenting China’s new role and its new capabiliti­es”.

“The two major events this year will yield greater outcomes than the past meetings, because the country has been consistent­ly learning, accumulati­ng experience­s and improving, and its foresight is being reinforced,” Cui said.

The concepts proposed by China in recent years have shown it to be a quick learner in aligning with accepted internatio­nal norms and codes, and highlighte­d its growing maturity, Cui added.

Wu Enyuan, a senior researcher on Russian studies at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, noted that treating other countries on an equal footing is one of the reasons China has been successful in winning support for its proposals and initiative­s from an increasing number of countries.

“The concepts first proposed by President Xi, including the Belt and Road Initiative and a Community of Shared Destiny for All Mankind, are popular in many developing countries partly because they welcome China treating them in a way which would have been unthinkabl­e during the colonial era,” Wu said.

While political alignment and security alliances prevail on the world stage, the Chinese proposals “do not categorize or judge countries by political systems or ideologies”, Wu noted.

Wu cited the wide range of organizati­ons and institutio­ns proposed by China in recent years, such as the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and the Silk Road Fund.

“Such Chinese proposals are based on reality, they are not coming from nowhere, and they meet the actual needs of countries. That’s why few countries have said ‘No’ to the concepts and most have signed up for them,” Wu added.

But Cui, the scholar with China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, cautioned that China should strike a balance between being a developing country, although the largest, and the greater responsibi­lities in global affairs it shoulders.

“China is taking a new role. It has entered the new role in a short period of time, it will take time for it to adapt to the new situation.”

Zhang Yunling, Wu Enyuan,

Contact the writer at zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

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 ??  ?? Globalizat­ion is suffering frustratio­n and protection­ism is on the rise and China is willing to act as a backbone of support for globalizat­ion.
Globalizat­ion is suffering frustratio­n and protection­ism is on the rise and China is willing to act as a backbone of support for globalizat­ion.
 ??  ?? China’s growing attraction stems from not only its rising strength but also the ideas it has proposed.
China’s growing attraction stems from not only its rising strength but also the ideas it has proposed.
 ??  ?? The BRICS mechanism plays a unique, key role at a time when the global landscape is undergoing profound changes.
The BRICS mechanism plays a unique, key role at a time when the global landscape is undergoing profound changes.
 ??  ?? Global governance is not winnertake-all but seeking shared interests and achieving win-win goals.
Global governance is not winnertake-all but seeking shared interests and achieving win-win goals.

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