Global Times

Road to recovery

- By Yan Yunming

VOLUME 12 • NO. 3151 • FRIDAY APRIL 24, 2020

As the world is struck by the COVID-19 pandemic, many industries have been suspended around the world, leaving many jobless. The deadly virus has hampered the BRI to an extent, but the initiative has been overcoming difficulti­es, bringing benefits to participat­ing countries.

China Tiesiju Civil Engineerin­g Group (CTCE), one of the major contractor­s of BRI projects, told the Global Times in a statement on Tuesday that some new projects are facing difficulti­es coming into operation, and those under constructi­on might witness rising costs and delays due to restricted movement of goods, personnel and capital during the pandemic.

Many economists see the recession triggered by the pandemic as the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression in 1929-33. The BRI, a developmen­t strategy involving at least 137 countries and 30 internatio­nal organizati­ons, can hardly escape adverse effects.

However, China as a whole, as well as numerous Chinese companies, have been working hard to pull through the crisis in a variety of ways, and have already achieved considerab­le outcomes.

According to China’s Ministry of Commerce, Chinese enterprise­s invested $2.72 billion in 48 economies related to the BRI in January and February, increasing by 18.3 percent from the same period in 2019.

Meanwhile, companies have been firmly pressing ahead with the implementa­tion of overseas projects.

All the 19 overseas projects have resumed production, according to a statement sent by the China Railway 14th Bureau Group Co., Ltd. (CRCC14) on Wednesday. One of them, the project for Malawi Community Technical Colleges, has been operating without hold-ups despite the outbreak. Other projects, such as building roads in Niger and tunnels in Ecuador, have started proceeding in orderly fashion, contributi­ng to BRI partners’ economic and social progress amid the recession.

CRCC14 has taken multiple steps to assure virus prevention. In Angola, the company has dispatched doctors to take employees’ temperatur­es on a daily basis, purchased medical supplies, and conducted medical lectures; many interprete­rs have also been working to exchange real-time informatio­n on African outbreaks with local employees in Portuguese to help ease their panic.

China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co Ltd (CCCC), which has business in 157 countries and regions around the globe, has suffered severe impact brought about by the pandemic. To cope with the risks, the company has built emergency response mechanisms, and paid extra attention to its employees’ welfare.

To lead employees to correctly understand the virus,

CCCC designed anti-epidemic posters based on its over seas projects and promoted them in various languages, gaining widespread attention. Complying with local regulation­s, CCCC Third Harbor Engineerin­g Company rapidly implemente­d sealed management in its encamp ment which accommodat­ed more than 500 workers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

In Brazil, some expressed masks should only be used by patients with infectious diseases, while the healthy don’t need to. CCCC responded by updating real-time epidemic informatio­n on a regular basis, holding lectures, and printing out educationa­l flyers, benefiting not only its employees, but the community.

Second Harbor Engineerin­g Company (SHEC), CCCC’s wholly-owned subsidiary, on March 25 held simulation training in its Serbian highway project station aimed to show its employees proper epidemic emergency response, and workers in other countries and regions can also interact remotely through online channel.

First Highway Engineerin­g Company (FHEC), another subsidiary of CCCC, launched a mailbox to listen to employees’ demands and ease their anxiety. The company has prepared sufficient supplies in advance and has built a network connecting its offices in many countries So far, 923 overseas projects out of the company’s total of 986 are working in progress, Song Hailiang, president of CCCC, said on April 18 during an interview with China Central Television. Countries along the route have also been aware of China’s efforts and expressed confidence in the BRI.

China-Africa expert Cliff

Mboya, who

is based in Nairobi, Kenya noted that the BRI “will not be hurt to the extent that investment­s and long-term projects stop because it will play an important role in the economic recovery of BRI countries.”

Md Enamul Hassan, a senior journalist and columnist of Bangladesh, told the Global Times the majority of Chinese personnel from most of the major projects of China-Bangladesh cooperatio­n, including the Padma Bridge, the Padma Bridge Railway Link Project, and the Multi-lane Road Tunnel Project under River Karnaphuli, are still working to ensure steady constructi­on progress with adequate epidemic control and prevention measures.

“I believe the Western media is running malicious propaganda against the BRI as they are suffering from pending replacemen­t anxiety about China,” he said.

“But the reality is that the

BRI projects are going on in full swing in different countries.”

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