Global Times

Myanmar ready to welcome President Xi

- By Li Xuanmin in Naypyidaw

Ahead of President Xi Jinping’s visit to Myanmar, residents of Yangon and analysts from China painted a promising picture of how the two Asian economies could further cement bilateral political trust, overcome unfair internatio­nal prejudice and defend multilater­alism against rising global hegemony.

Such a relationsh­ip should be an equal, mutually respectful and open partnershi­p based on the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e – jointly initiated by China, Myanmar and India 66 years ago – to “share the goods and bads” rather than an alliance that aims to confront the rise of other economies.

Xi is expected to pay a state visit to Myanmar from Friday to Saturday, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced. This marks Xi’s first state visit in 2020.

Driving around Naypyidaw, the country’s capital city, the Global Times

reporter noticed that welcome banners such as “Warm Welcome to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Myanmar” and “China-Myanmar friendly cooperatio­n to continue forward” lined the city’s main streets.

Residents appeared thrilled about the visit, happy to discuss their impression­s of China and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The Global Times reporter overheard several times locals thanking in restaurant­s about Xi’s visit.

Some had read the Burmese version of President Xi’s books, such as Xi’s Classical Quotes and Governance of China, as a way to understand their neighborin­g country.

“I’m excited after hearing the news,” Khin Maung Lynn, joint secretary of the Myanmar Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“This year will start significan­tly with the goodwill visit of Xi, which will surely bring our relationsh­ip to a higher level and make a good start for the new era of a closer and warmer friendship.”

Lynn said he hopes China could share with Myanmar its wisdom on poverty reduction, opening up its economy, good governance as well as anti-corruption drives.

In Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city, Chinese investment­s are ubiquitous, offering a vivid display of the stronger vitality of the relationsh­ip between

China and Myanmar.

In 1986, China Zhongtie MBEG aided constructi­on of the Yangon-Thanlyin Bridge, a railroad bridge that connects Yangon with Thanlyin town, marking one of the earliest Chinese projects in the city. Now in downtown areas, Beijing Constructi­on Engineer Group is renovating the Yangon National Theater, a project it once helped build.

A major BRI urban project, the 80-square-kilometer Yangon New City, is also under planning by China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company.

U kyaw Win, chairman of

Myanmar firm Shwe Than Lwin Group, told the Global Times on Wednesday that Xi’s state visit portrays China’s special emphasis on a “paukphaw” relationsh­ip with Myanmar.

Key anniversar­y

This year marks the 70th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between China and Myanmar.

Myanmar analysts and officials said that Xi’s visit, the first state visit to Myanmar by a Chinese president in 19 years, could further strengthen their comprehens­ive strategic cooperatio­n and consolidat­e bilateral political trust.

There are good foundation­s for both countries to further increase political trust, as they both face similar discrimina­tion from the outside world, mostly the Western world, for their political systems, according to observers.

“Some Westerners think in an arrogant way that their political system and values override those of China and Myanmar. Some even try to pressure the countries to accept their values, which draws strong objections from both,” Huang Jing, dean of the Institute on National and Regional Studies at Beijing

Language and Culture University, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

As such, China and Myanmar should work together to prove to the world their confidence in an independen­t and prosperous developmen­t path, according to Huang.

“China’s peaceful developmen­t and friendly neighborho­od diplomacy is benefiting its neighbors like Myanmar,” U Ko Hlaing, co-founder of Myanmar Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“It is natural that the two economies join hands based on the Five Principle of Peaceful Coexistenc­e to bring stability and peace to Asia and the world.”

The ongoing China and US trade war is entering its 22nd month, which has also weighed on the economy of Myanmar.

Huang noted that as China and Myanmar both called for a stable external environmen­t for their developmen­t, the two countries also share common interests to work together to tackle “America First” diplomacy and guard against unilateral­ism.

But unlike the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on-type alliance that serves US interests, Myanmar people described the ties between China and Myanmar as an inclusive and equal partnershi­p.

 ?? China National Petroleum Corporatio­n Photo: ?? Burmese employees of the China-Myanmar crude oil and gas pipeline project display their calligraph­y, which say“Happy Chinese Lunar New Year” and “Warm welcome for President Xi” on Wednesday, ahead of President Xi Jinping’s state visit to Myanmar which begins on Friday.
China National Petroleum Corporatio­n Photo: Burmese employees of the China-Myanmar crude oil and gas pipeline project display their calligraph­y, which say“Happy Chinese Lunar New Year” and “Warm welcome for President Xi” on Wednesday, ahead of President Xi Jinping’s state visit to Myanmar which begins on Friday.

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