China Daily

Trade initiative is ‘direction of future’

Expert: Belt and Road strategy will be applauded years from now as visionary

- By TANG YUE in Xi’an tangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

The first US presidenti­al debate might have been the most-watched event around the globe on Monday night local time, with the expected protection­ist remarks made by candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

Yet, at the same time, across the Pacific Ocean, the Belt and Road Initiative, launched by China three years ago to foster economic ties, gained momentum as media from China and abroad expressed support.

“I know many people think the most important event today is the debate, which is going on right now,” Robert Kuhn, a US expert on China and a host on China Central Television, said on Tuesday at the media session of the Internatio­nal Seminar on the Belt and Road Initiative in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.

“However, looking back in 50 years or 100 years, I believe this is a more important event than the debate because it pushes forward an important initiative that is the direction of the future,” Kuhn said at the two-day seminar. China Daily is a co-organizer.

In 2013, President Xi Jinping proposed the Silk Road Economic Belt, which includes countries situated on the original Silk Road, passing through Central Asia, West Asia, the Middle East and Europe, as well as the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, which covers Southeast Asia, Oceania and North Africa.

By the end of June, China had signed cooperatio­n agreements with more than 30 countries regarding the initiative and is working with another 20 on capacity building projects in the manufactur­ing sector, according to a report by Renmin University of China.

“Some countries that start to turn inward, start to talk protection­ism, seem to be more skeptical about trade. This initiative is moving in the opposite direction. It promotes cooperatio­n and business across the border,” said Jason Eugene Subler, Greater China bureau chief of Reuters.

Some 100 media representa­tives from about 20 countries attended the seminar and reached a written consensus to be “a champion of the Silk Road Spirit”, referring friendship and cooperatio­n throughout history, and to be “an active supporter of the initiative”.

Wilson Flores, a columnist at the Philippine Star newspaper, said the initiative allows the media in participat­ing countries to better cooperate and to enrich the diversity of media voices, which has long been dominated by Western news organizati­ons.

“As we evolve into a more diverse and multipolar world, developing nations in Central Asia, Europe, Southeast Asia, Africa and other regions need to have our news perspectiv­es and voices heard.”

Kang Bing, deputy editor-inchief of China Daily, suggested that media organizati­ons along the route can jointly identify topics to cover, develop applicatio­ns together, co-produce microvideo­s and launch special columns, reports and web pages on the platform of other countries.

 ?? HUO YAN / CHINA DAILY ?? Robert Kuhn (right), a US expert on China and a host on China Central Television, speaks at the media session of the Internatio­nal Seminar on the Belt and Road Initiative in Xi’an, Shaanxi province on Tuesday.
HUO YAN / CHINA DAILY Robert Kuhn (right), a US expert on China and a host on China Central Television, speaks at the media session of the Internatio­nal Seminar on the Belt and Road Initiative in Xi’an, Shaanxi province on Tuesday.

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