China Daily (Hong Kong)

Connection between leaders elevates Tajikistan relations

- By REN QI renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

The meetings between the heads of state has helped lift the relationsh­ip between China and Tajikistan to a higher level, according to the ambassador of Tajikistan to China.

Chinese President Xi Jinping met his Tajik counterpar­t Emomali Rahmon three times in 2017 — at the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on Summit in Astana, Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n in Beijing and BRICS Summit in Xiamen, Fujian province.

The two government­s signed a program for cooperatio­n under the Belt and Road Initiative during Xi’s meeting with Rahmon in Xiamen in September, according to Parviz Davlatzoda, the top Tajik diplomat in China.

The meetings between Xi and Rahmon contribute­d to a higher level of trust and cooperatio­n between the two countries on security, economic and humanitari­an fields and better coordinate­d strategic collaborat­ion and interactio­n.

They also helped elevate bilateral relations to a higher level of comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, the ambassador said.

Tajikistan was the first country to sign a memorandum with China about the joint constructi­on of the Belt and Road Initiative in 2014. The country expects the joint program to be able to facilitate its own economic growth.

Davlatzoda believed that the bilateral relationsh­ip was friendly and beneficial to both sides.

“The trade between Tajikistan and China was about $980.5 million in the first nine months in 2017, and it exceeded $1 billion by the end of the year,” he said.

Davlatzoda said he was convinced the pace of constructi­ve relations between the two countries will be maintained in 2018, and this relationsh­ip will be filled with a number of political and economic events.

Ding Peihua, a researcher at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of Internatio­nal Relations, said the Belt and Road Initiative is of tremendous significan­ce to Tajikistan and other Central Asian countries.

“These countries, most of which are landlocked, were eager to have a better developmen­t after their independen­ce, and the Belt and Road Initiative has offered them opportunit­ies,” he said.

Yang Cheng, professor of the School of Internatio­nal Relations and Public Affairs at Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University, said cooperatin­g with the world’s second largest economy plays a significan­t role to sustain developmen­t in Tajikistan.

He said the initiative is basically an internatio­nal platform of both bilateral and multilater­al cooperatio­n with the principle of achieving shared growth through discussion and collaborat­ion.

“Therefore, in the initiative, China will value the interests of the Central Asian partner and share benefits of it,” Yang said.

Li Jianmin, a researcher at the Institute of Russian, Eastern European and Central Asian studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, agreed, saying that infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, industrial­ization and improvemen­t of living standards have attracted Central Asian countries to join the initiative.

Li said China has become the largest investment country to Central Asia thanks to the initiative.

 ??  ?? Parviz Davlatzoda, Tajik ambassador to China
Parviz Davlatzoda, Tajik ambassador to China

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