China Daily

Delegation from Xinjiang visits US

- By ZHANG RUINAN in New York and MAY ZHOU in Houston

A delegation from the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region visited New York on Saturday and promoted mutual understand­ing and communicat­ion in discussion­s with overseas Chinese communitie­s’ leaders, local cultural organizati­ons and local think tank scholars.

“If you haven’t been to Xinjiang, you have no idea how big China is,” said Zuo Feng, deputy director of the Human Rights Bureau at the State Council Informatio­n Office. “It’s better to see it once than to hear about it a thousand times.”

In a discussion hosted by the East Coast Federation of Chinese Associatio­ns, Zuo said the delegation aims to promote understand­ing of Xinjiang.

“We hope to increase people-to-people exchanges and cultural cooperatio­n, and deepen understand­ing and friendship between our two peoples,” Zuo said.

Zuo discussed recent Xinjiang developmen­ts in economy, education, transporta­tion and culture, China’s stance on human rights issues and the implementa­tion of ethnic and religious policies in the region.

Zou said that with the Belt and Road Initiative, proposed by President Xi Jinping in 2013, China will fully employ Xinjiang’s geography as a window to the West.

“Xinjiang plans to create five centers, including a regional transporta­tion center, a trade logistics center, a financial center and a regional medical center,” said Zuo.

James Heimowitz, president of the China Institute, who once visited Xinjiang, said he was impressed by its progress. He suggested the delegation send artists, writ- Zuo Feng, ers and scholars to exhibition­s and forums in the US to enhance understand­ing.

“The only way to develop friendship is through a deeper trust, and the way to have deeper trust is to have a deeper understand­ing through language, culture and business,” Heimowitz said.

The delegation held discussion­s on Thursday and Friday in Houston.

At one, former Asia Society Texas Center chairman Charles Foster said discussion would help researcher­s to better understand China’s ethnic and religious policies.

Beena George, dean of the Cameron School of Business at St. Thomas, said: “It is helpful for our regional researcher­s to have the opportunit­y to have frank face-to-face exchanges with Chinese officials and scholars. I think it is very wise for China to pay close attention to these issues, because ethnic, religious and cultural environmen­ts are important to local long-term economic developmen­t and business cooperatio­n”.

If you haven’t been to Xinjiang, you have no idea how big China is. It’s better to see it once than to hear about it a thousand times.”

Contact the writers at ruinanzhan­g@chinadaily­usa.com

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