Global Times

Fresh impetus for China-Cambodia ties

- By Ge Hongliang

The year 2018 marks the 60th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between China and Cambodia. In celebratio­n, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang attended the second LancangMek­ong River Cooperatio­n (LMC) leaders’ meeting in Phnom Penh and paid an official visit to Cambodia on Wednesday and Thursday.

During the past 60 years, joint efforts have been made by both countries to consolidat­e the traditiona­l friendship and promote bilateral comprehens­ive strategic cooperatio­n. Pragmatic cooperatio­n is expanded and strengthen­ed through cooperatio­n mechanisms like the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road and the LMC. New impetus is injected into the developmen­t of ChinaCambo­dia relations in the new era.

Diplomatic relations between China and Cambodia started in the mid-1950s. After the Korean War (1950-53), there was an obvious shift in Chinese policy. The government sought to achieve some diplomatic breakthrou­ghs between Asian and African countries so as to enhance the internatio­nal standing of the People’s Republic of China and open a new chapter for Chinese diplomacy.

On June 20, 1954, the first step of mutual understand­ing between the two countries was made during the Geneva Conference by former Chinese premier Zhou Enlai and the Cambodian delegation sent by the late Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk.

Sihanouk was initially wary of the alleged threat posed by communism in China and Vietnam. He even turned to the US for military protection and signed a military defense agreement with the US government in May 1955.

But due to his personal interactio­n with Zhou during the Bandung Conference in 1955, he was impressed with the friendly attitude of Chinese leaders, which further changed his opinion of China and made him firmly convinced that China would never interfere in the internal affairs of Cambodia. Then in February 1956, Sihanouk paid his first official visit to China.

The most critical period before China and Cambodia officially establishe­d diplomatic ties was 1956-58, during which the two countries made further progress in political security. When Cambodia was confronted with a diplomatic dilemma involving then South Vietnam and Thailand as well as problems of border security, the Chinese government repeatedly offered to help Cambodia stand up to the US and South Vietnam.

Before the official establishm­ent of diplomatic ties, relations between China and Cambodia were heavily focused on economic cooperatio­n. China has been providing Cambodia with financial aid since 1956, offering materials, supplies and merchandis­e for free, aiding in the constructi­on of complete equipment projects. Cambodia was the first non-socialist nation to which China offered nonreimbur­sable assistance. The sincere attitude of the Chinese government and the substantia­l progress in China-Cambodia relations strengthen­ed Sihanouk’s determinat­ion to establish diplomatic ties with China in 1958.

In July 1996, the two countries signed the agreement on trade, investment promotion and protection. According to

statistics, as of October 2017, China is the biggest source of foreign investment for Cambodia.

The historical visit of Chinese President Xi Jinping to Cambodia in October 2016 opened a new era for the two countries to develop their comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p. With the proposal and implementa­tion of the Belt and Road initiative, great cooperatio­n potential in the fields of global production capacity, trade and investment, infrastruc­ture interconne­ctivity and energy resources has injected a fundamenta­l impetus to an improvemen­t in China-Cambodia relations. The cooperatio­n mechanism of LMC has offered a brand new opportunit­y for the developmen­t of practical cooperatio­n between the

two countries. The upgrading and elevation of China-Cambodia ties marks an expansion of traditiona­l friendship between the two neighbors and good friends. It also marks a comprehens­ive developmen­t of their political, economic, security and people-to-people relations. The two countries are making joint efforts to strengthen integratio­n of policy and developmen­t strategy, connect infrastruc­ture and improve people-to-people contacts.

Featuring pragmatic, high-quality and high-level cooperatio­n, China-Cambodia relations will supply the most remarkable evidence that the two countries are forging a community with a shared future.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT

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