China Daily

Li, Netanyahu discuss free trade agreement

Speedy pact between China, Israel would benefit both, leaders say

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

China and Israel agreed to gear up negotiatio­ns on a bilateral free trade agreement during talks Monday between Premier Li Keqiang and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Beijing.

The two leaders cited the need to speed up negotiatio­ns even as bilateral trade exceeded $11.3 billion last year and Chinese investment in Israel has surpassed $6 billion.

Li said China is ready to gear up the talks and “strive for finishing the negotiatio­n at an early date”.

Netanyahu echoed Li’s call for speeding up the talks. He said Israel is ready to boost cooperatio­n on innovation and it welcomes Chinese enterprise­s taking part in Israeli projects.

Li also noted China’s free trade negotiatio­ns would speed up with the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, made of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman. A clear signal should be sent to the world about safeguardi­ng free trade, Li said.

Li and Netanyahu witnessed the signing of four documents on economy, science, commerce and civil aviation.

The Israeli leader is on his third visit to China through Wednesday.

China is Israel’s largest trade partner in Asia and its third largest overall. The two countries embarked on their first round of negotiatio­n on the trade pact in September.

Deng Li, director-general of the Foreign Ministry’s Department of West Asian and North African Affairs, said the two leaders have agreed on three tasks in the near future — infrastruc­ture cooperatio­n, free trade and China-Israel cooperatio­n involving third parties.

The two sides are in agreement regarding the infrastruc­ture sector and their agreement to work with third parties would be a boost internatio­nally, Deng said.

In the talks on Monday, both Li and Netanyahu highlighte­d cooperatio­n in innovation. Li called for deepening collaborat­ion in fields such as basic sciences, modern agricultur­e, clean energy and bi op harm ace utica ls.

Wu Yang, Chinese director at the Confucius Institute of Tel Aviv University, observed that what China should learn from Israel is their dedication to sectors of low pollution and high revenue, which helps the country tackle its limited natural resources.

Wu noted that behind Israel’s leading role in technologi­cal innovation is the huge input of education resources offered by the country to its citizens, and China should further nurture its talents that drive innovation.

 ??  ?? Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli prime minister

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