China Daily (Hong Kong)

BRI hailed as force for sustainabl­e developmen­t

- Second forum Internatio­nal impact Skepticism rejected Contact the writer at caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

s part of China’s openingup drive in the new era, the Belt and Road Initiative has won broad internatio­nal participat­ion as a result of its open, inclusive, win-win nature.

The BRI — an important platform for China to develop internatio­nal cooperatio­n via the principles of extensive consultati­on and joint contributi­ons for shared benefits — has been transforme­d from an ambitious plan into concrete results.

Of the 279 items on the outcome list of the inaugural 2017 Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, 269 had been completed or carried out on a regular basis by the end of last year, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the top macroecono­mic regulator.

The remaining 10 items are being advanced, and will be completed or turned into regular work before the second Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, which will be held next month, the NDRC said.

The forum will see Beijing firmly in the spotlight again as it hosts the country’s biggest diplomatic event of the year, aimed at strengthen­ing partnershi­ps in the next stage of the BRI.

With the theme “Belt and Road Cooperatio­n: Shaping a Brighter Shared Future”, the second forum aims to bring about high-quality cooperatio­n under the initiative, said Wang Yi, State councilor and foreign minister, at a news conference on Friday on the sidelines of the annual two sessions.

China will build consensus with other parties on highqualit­y developmen­t, champion an open, transparen­t and inclusive approach to BRI cooperatio­n, and strive for green and sustainabl­e developmen­t, Wang said.

He added that China will seek greater synergy with participat­ing countries and their developmen­t strategies, agree key cooperatio­n projects, promote implementa­tion of the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, and emphasize the improvemen­t of people’s lives while deepening cooperatio­n.

“We will act in the spirit of winwin partnershi­ps, focus on improving infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, build stronger momentum for common developmen­t and forge even closer partnershi­ps,” Wang said.

In the meantime, China will uphold open and inclusive cooperatio­n, support economic globalizat­ion, uphold multilater­alism and join hands with its partners to build an open global economy, he added.

President Xi Jinping will attend the opening of the forum, deliver a keynote speech and also chair a leaders’ roundtable, he said.

Noting that the second forum will be a much bigger gathering than the first, Wang said there will be more side events, including 12 themed subforums focusing on practical cooperatio­n, and, for the first time, a conference organized specifical­ly for the business community.

The inaugural forum, held in Beijing in May 2017, was attended by state and government leaders from 29 countries, as well as more than 1,600 other participan­ts from over 140 countries and 80 internatio­nal organizati­ons.

Xi proposed building the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, known collective­ly as the Belt and Road Initiative, during visits to Kazakhstan and Indonesia in the autumn of 2013.

The following year, China announced that it would contribute $40 billion to establish a Silk Road Fund to support Belt and Road projects and turn the initiative into reality.

In 2015, China initiated the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank. The number of approved members from nearly every continent has risen to 93, representi­ng broad support for the institutio­n.

In the past three years, the AIIB has approved financing worth $7 billion for developmen­t projects in Asia and Africa, with the aim of promoting sustainabl­e economic developmen­t through infrastruc­ture investment.

“As President Xi has said, the BRI originated in China, but its benefits are shared by the world. We have reason to hope and believe that the second BRF will be a great success and another milestone in BRI cooperatio­n,” Wang said.

A report published on the website of Belt and Road Advisory — a consultanc­y that facilitate­s engagement with the initiative — said the forum will provide an opportunit­y to take stock of the initiative five years on, and lay out a new road map for the coming years.

As the BRI is now well-known globally, there is less need to engage in self-promotion, the report said, and, as a result, the forum is expected to focus more on implementa­tion of the initiative and make greater reference to “we have done this” and “we will do this”.

It will also present an opportunit­y to refute some internatio­nal skepticism of the initiative and garner further support, the report said, noting that businesses, both Chinese and foreign, have shown a growing appetite for tapping into the commercial opportunit­ies the BRI presents.

Addressing a symposium to mark the fifth anniversar­y of the BRI in August, Xi said the initiative offers new solutions to improve global governance and has met demands for change in the global governance system.

The BRI is an initiative for economic cooperatio­n, rather than a geopolitic­al alliance or military league, and it is an open and inclusive process rather than an exclusive bloc or “China club”, he said, adding that the initiative does not differenti­ate countries by ideology or play a zero-sum game.

Twenty-nine internatio­nal organizati­ons and 123 countries, including developed and developing nations, have signed 171 cooperatio­n documents with China on the initiative, official statistics show.

In its five-plus years, the BRI has grown from a concept into a well-received internatio­nal public force that helps to promote world peace and common developmen­t, observers said.

On Wednesday, Ning Jizhe, vicechairm­an of the NDRC, told a news conference in Beijing that the trade volume between China and participat­ing countries and regions has exceeded $6 trillion.

He added that China-Europe freight trains, considered a significan­t part of the initiative, had made 14,000 trips by the end of February.

With growing internatio­nal participat­ion in the BRI, a large number of infrastruc­ture projects have become landmark points of cooperatio­n between China and several countries.

Zhang Qiyue, China’s ambassador to Greece, pointed to Sino-Greek cooperatio­n at Piraeus Port, which has received investment from China’s COSCO Shipping, as a good example of a win-win partnershi­p.

Last year, container throughput at the port reached 4.9 million TEUs (Twenty-foot equivalent units), creating more than 3,000 jobs for local people, said Zhang, who is a member of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the top political advisory body.

The CPPCC’s meeting of more than 2,000 political advisers, and the ongoing session of the National People’s Congress, the top legislativ­e body, are important events in China’s political agenda.

The Piraeus Port project has also indirectly provided more than 10,000 job opportunit­ies at a time when debt-laden Greece has a high unemployme­nt rate, Zhang said, adding that it has also injected impetus into the sluggish economy and helped it emerge from a financial crisis.

Noting that Greece is an important country for Belt and Road cooperatio­n, Zhang said there is great potential in the southern European country’s developmen­t strategy of building a regional transporta­tion, energy and services hub in alignment with the BRI.

She said Greece is a staunch supporter of the initiative, and took the lead among European countries in signing the intergover­nmental BRI cooperatio­n document last year.

Speaking in Beijing last week, George Katrougalo­s, Greece’s foreign minister, said his country stands ready to deepen bilateral cooperatio­n under the initiative, and build Greece into a bridge linking China and Europe, and China and Africa.

Even though some developed countries are still skeptical about the BRI, Italy has taken the lead among the Group of Seven major industrial­ized nations to embrace the initiative to find ways to boost its sluggish economy and revive its stalled constructi­on sector.

On Friday, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte noted that the BRI infrastruc­ture plan could be good news for Italy, and said his country may sign an accord with China on the initiative later this month, Reuters reported.

Closer to home, Myanmar has also signed a BRI cooperatio­n document with China.

The Southeast Asian nation has establishe­d a steering committee for the implementa­tion of tasks relating to the BRI. It is chaired by State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, with Vice-President U Myint Swe serving as vice-chairman and other ministers LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

and regional chief ministers serving as members.

Last month, at the committee’s first meeting, Aung San Suu Kyi said the initiative could bring opportunit­ies to Myanmar and the region, according to a report by Xinhua News Agency.

Aung San Suu Kyi added that the BRI could promote cooperatio­n with her country in many sectors, including infrastruc­ture, and called for concrete work on projects under the BRI in accordance with the developmen­t priorities of the country.

At the 2018 Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n in September, Xi announced eight major initiative­s to enhance cooperatio­n with African nations, in such fields as industrial promotion, infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, trade facilitati­on and green developmen­t.

Xi called on African countries to actively participat­e in the BRI and advance the synergy of the initiative with the African Union’s Agenda 2063, the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, and African countries’ developmen­t strategies.

Richard Sezibera, Rwanda’s foreign minister, hailed the BRI as a good illustrati­on of the mutual benefits prompted by the initiative.

Speaking last Tuesday at a news conference in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, Sezibera said the BRI is mutually beneficial as it addresses Rwanda’s developmen­t challenges and also meets the developmen­t requiremen­ts of its Chinese partners, a Xinhua report said.

Despite its tremendous achievemen­ts, the BRI faces concerns and skepticism, with some Western

Zhou Li, vice-president of the Chinese People’s Associatio­n for Peace and Disarmamen­t, said the BRI’s scope has extended from the Eurasian continent to Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, the South Pacific and other regions.

The initiative has enhanced trust and friendship between countries and strengthen­ed people-to-people bonds, said Zhou, who is a member of the 13th CPPCC National Committee.

Given the profound changes in the internatio­nal situation as a result of protection­ism and unilateral­ism, countries should firmly uphold multilater­al cooperatio­n and vigorously advance the democratiz­ation of internatio­nal relations, Zhou said.

He added that the BRI is significan­t in uniting the internatio­nal community by advancing a new form of internatio­nal relations, featuring mutual respect, fairness and justice, and win-win cooperatio­n, in addition to the building of a community with a shared future for mankind.

Amid the growing global challenges, President Xi has called for the building of an open, inclusive, clean and beautiful world that enjoys lasting peace, universal security and common prosperity, as he advocates the building of a community with a shared future for mankind.

The BRI has great global value as a force for cooperatio­n, not confrontat­ion, and has prompted a broad consensus in the internatio­nal community to pursue stability and developmen­t, Zhou said.

He added that the initiative is China’s solution to mounting global problems.

Zhang, the ambassador, called for the strengthen­ing of cultural and people-to-people exchanges in the process of promoting the BRI.

“Cultural exchanges and dialogue between different civilizati­ons are critically important, as they help to eliminate difference­s and misunderst­andings and increase common ground,” she said.

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