BRI bolsters high-tech means serves as anti-pandemic corporation platform
In addition to helping boost economies abroad, the
BRI has been also serving as a cooperation platform for countries along the route to fight against the virus, and employ high-tech methods for public health.
As of April 3, CCCC had donated 2.8 million yuan ($395, 300) worth of medical materials to countries including Italy, Kenya and Malaysia. The company has also put forward its efforts in publicizing anti-virus knowledge.
The SHEC released a handbook on epidemic prevention in different languages including English, Serbian, Portuguese, Spanish, Thai, Vietnamese and Bengali, to help its local employees enhance understanding of the coronavirus.
FHEC worked with local schools and neighboring communities in Yaoundé, Cameroon to do anti-epidemic education; it also provided water carts with Ethiopian civil organizations to help disinfect streets.
CTCE provided timely support – including protective masks, disinfectant and hand sanitizer – to those countries where theirs BRI projects located, such as Mongolia. CRCC14 helped local employees and their families in Togo with basic knowledge about the virus.
Many enterprises have provided the recipient countries with high-tech support.
The CCCC invited medical experts from Wuhan to provide online guidance for employees overseas. Workers can also consult doctors at the ChinaJapan Friendship Hospital in Beijing via online platform.
China Electronic Technology Group Corp helped upgrade medical facilities in Sri Lanka, sending more than 2,000 sets of equipment to the country’s hospitals, People’s Daily reported.
All this is “driven by genuine concern and practical assistance” and “provides a win-win situation for China and the recipient countries,” said Mboya.
In Bangladesh, many Chinese companies have distributed food, medical equipment and other emergency supplies in different areas of the country. Hassan added, “I am always optimistic about the future of the BRI. Even during the ongoing global crisis, the initiative has raised my hope as many Chinese companies have provided timely support for the BRI nations.”
“We have been accustomed to witnessing silliness of some Western politicians and media who smear China. But we have been taken aback when we see them stooping to ridiculous lows to make China’s humanitarian assistance a propaganda tool during this hard time of humanity,” he said, blasting the Western media, and pointing out that China’s assistance through the BRI is purely out of humanitarian consideration, instead of the country’s own benefits.
Lan Qingxin, an assistant dean of Institute of International Economy, University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, told the Global Times said that “The BRI is an important channel for building a community of common health for mankind.”
“Amid the coronavirus pandemic, the China-proposed BRI has contributed enormously to enhancing mutual trust and building people-to-people bond between China and countries along the route. It will definitely remain as China’s key focus strategy in the future,” Lan said.