China Daily (Hong Kong)

Scholar impressed by China’s progress

Xi’s documentar­y reaches 200m viewers in 37 countries and regions

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KUALA LUMPUR — A three-episode documentar­y by the Discovery Channel on the changes China has undergone under President Xi Jinping and aired ahead of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China has impressed viewers abroad with the technologi­cal progress it depicts.

The documentar­y, titled China: Time of Xi, was broadcast on Oct 14-16 on Discovery Networks Asia Pacific, reaching more than 200 million viewers in 37 countries and regions including Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, India, Thailand and Malaysia.

Oh Ei Sun, special adviser for Malaysia’s Asian Strategy and Leadership Institute’s internatio­nal affairs, said he was especially impressed by China’s high-speed railways.

The scholar said in just five years, China has developed the world’s largest network of highspeed rail, which has not only raised the quality of Chinese people’s lives but also serves as an important example of China switching its focus from quantitati­ve developmen­t to qualitativ­e developmen­t.

Oh, who is also an adjunct senior fellow of S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Nanyang Technologi­cal University, Singapore, said he was equally impressed by China’s technologi­cal innovation as well as environmen­tal initiative­s, as presented in the documentar­y.

He said China was making very good use of electronic platforms. “People ... (can) shop easily online and many parts of China are essentiall­y a cashless society with currency transactio­ns carried out online instead of using real ... cash,” he said.

He found China’s environmen­tal management impressive. “Who would have imagined five years ago that China would be taking the lead in implementi­ng the Paris Climate Change Accord,” he said, noting China’s developmen­t of a sophistica­ted sharing economy and green technology to generate new and renewable energy.

The documentar­y also covers China’s foreign policy under Xi. “(In) this part of the world, we are mostly concerned with the Belt and Road Initiative, especially the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road,” Oh said.

Proposed by Xi in 2013, the initiative aims to build trade and infrastruc­ture networks connecting Asia with Europe and Africa on and beyond the ancient Silk Road routes.

Oh hoped China would continue to engage with Southeast Asia in deepening and broadening trade interactio­n, financial connectivi­ty and news infrastruc­ture buildup.

“We are in favor of eventually reaching a community of common destiny with China,” he said. “Of course, to reach that stage we do need a lot of integratio­n and China is in a very good position to assist us.”

We are in favor of eventually reaching a community of common destiny with China.”

Oh Ei Sun,

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