Global Times

Belt and Road Initiative provides developmen­t opportunit­ies for South Pacific nations

- By Zhang Yongxing The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn Page Editor: liaixin@ globaltime­s.com.cn

The China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is opening a vast market and providing opportunit­ies of developmen­t for the world, particular­ly for the South Pacific region’s small island nations including Samoa, Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegao­i of Samoa has said.

In his family study in Apia, capital of Samoa, Tuilaepa, who just wrapped up a China trip for the World Economic Forum in Tianjin, told Xinhua that the initiative has a positive effect on promoting trade, tourism and culture, and that is why his country inked with China a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) of cooperatio­n for the initiative, aiming to strengthen the win-win cooperatio­n with China and build a closer partnershi­p between the two countries.

“I think that Samoa is the first of the South Pacific island nations to sign the initiative. For me, when we say something benefiting our country, we are always quick to make a decision,” he said proudly. “We support the BRI, and is willing to expand cooperatio­n with China in the fields such as trade, investment and tourism within the framework of the initiative.”

From his point of view, Samoa has obviously benefited from the initiative and seen a vast potential of cooperatio­n with China within the framework of the initiative.

Over the past years, on the basis of full respect for the will of the Samoan government and people for the social and economic developmen­t, China has provided assistance to Samoa in various fields and that all the assistance has been welcomed and has been highly appreciate­d by Samoa.

Samoa and China have establishe­d a close relationsh­ip of mutual trust and friendship based on the one-China principle since the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between the two countries 43 years ago, he said, adding that all China’s assistance to the island nation is “transparen­t, no any secret” and the assistance has really helped grow the country’s economy.

Tuilaepa slams the so-called China debt trap, saying that “we are fortunate to have grants from China. I think all the allegation [of the China debt trap] is based completely on misunderst­anding of the issues involved”. Meanwhile, the Samoan prime minister voiced his support to multilater­al trade cooperatio­n, saying that free trade has been accepted by the countries across the world.

“This is a world of free competitio­n and the smooth flow of trade is very important for all of us, including Samoa,” he said. “Now it seems that every country in the world wants to grow its economy. I want to ensure our Samoans to enjoy the benefits of free trade. In doing so, as a very small country, we need friends like China, we need partners and we need open markets.”

“In Tianjin’s World Economic Forum, what we talked about is open trade, free movement of goods, free movement of labor and free movement of technology. If you open up trade, world trade will be cheaper and all of us will benefit from it,” he said.

Regarding the Asian market and economy as now being “on the top of the world and the leaders of the internatio­nal trade,” he said that the future of the world lies with China and the Asia Pacific, and the biggest and most important market is China.

“If we look at the Pacific’s future, we can see the Pacific will be leaning more and more toward China. China, along with the rest of Asia, including India, South Korea and Japan, is the center of the world gravity, the center of business in the world’s future. I can see that as a country with a population of 1.3 billion, China’s economy is going to grow, grow and grow in the future because China has the most population and the vast market. And the Chinese people will produce goods of the best quality at the lowest possible price, so China can serve any market in the world,” he said.

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