China Daily (Hong Kong)

Australian state signs cooperatio­n agreement on Belt, Road Initiative

- By MO JINGXI mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

China welcomed on Monday the signing of a cooperatio­n agreement on jointly building the Belt and Road by the Australian state of Victoria, the first Australian state to sign such a deal.

“The Victoria government has seized the opportunit­y,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said. “Deepening cooperatio­n with China will definitely bring more chances and benefits to the state.”

China is optimistic about the broad prospects of mutually beneficial cooperatio­n with Victoria, Lu said at a regular news conference in Beijing.

On Thursday, Cheng Jingye, Chinese ambassador to Australia, and Daniel Andrews, the premier of Victoria, witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing on joint constructi­on of the Belt and Road between the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the State of Victoria.

According to the embassy website in Australia, Cheng spoke highly of the importance that Andrews and the state placed on cooperatio­n with China as well as Victoria’s participat­ion in the initiative.

In the past five years, the BRI has become a major platform of internatio­nal cooperatio­n in which China shares its developmen­t opportunit­ies with other countries and helps achieve common prosperity, Cheng said.

Victoria has taken the initiative in Australia in BRI cooperatio­n, and this will provide an impetus for pushing forward Victoria’s cooperatio­n with China, he added.

The move by Victoria, which wants to capitalize on the state’s expertise in big infrastruc­ture projects to help companies benefit from the initiative, is the latest sign that Australia’s states are going it alone in forging closer business ties to China, the Australian Financial Review said in an article published on its website on Friday.

“In four years, we have more than tripled Victoria’s share of Chinese investment in Australia and nearly doubled our exports to China. We said we’d reboot our relationsh­ip with China and we’re getting it done,” Andrews was quoted by the publicatio­n as saying.

In another developmen­t, the University of Technology Sydney’s Australia-China Relations Institute published a report, Do the Claims Stack Up? Australia Talks China, on Monday.

The report analyzed the latest outbreaks in Australia of fear of China and concluded that in each case the evidence is divorced from the claims found in headlines, news reports and opinion pieces. It revealed just how common it has become to view China as a threat and a source of angst and panic.

“If this were to become a habit in the way that Australia talks — and thinks — about China, it ... would be contrary to Australia’s national interest,” it said.

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