China Daily

China, Vietnam enhance security across border

With latest exchanges, two sides look for ways to strengthen regional peace

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@ chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese and Vietnamese militaries will enhance exchanges and cooperatio­n in various fields and jointly safeguard peace and security in the border area, senior officials said on Monday.

General Wei Fenghe, State councilor and minister of national defense, met with his Vietnamese counterpar­t, General Ngo Xuan Lich, on Monday in Longzhou county in southern China’s Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region for the fifth China-Vietnam high-level border exchanges between the two militaries. The meeting runs until Wednesday.

During their meeting on Monday afternoon, Wei said the China-Vietnam comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p has maintained steady and positive growth thanks to the leadership of President Xi Jinping and Vietnamese President Nguyen Phu Trong.

This year marks the 10th anniversar­y of the strategic partnershi­p. The two militaries have held high-level border exchanges for five consecutiv­e years.

The Chinese side is willing to work with Vietnam to inherit and carry forward the traditiona­l friendship with Vietnam, strengthen unity and jointly tackle challenges, Wei said. This includes enhancing cooperatio­n across various fields, as well as coordinati­on on regional and internatio­nal issues.

Wei said both sides should uphold the important consensus reached by the national leaders, deepen borderrela­ted cooperatio­n and exchanges, improve joint border management mechanisms, strengthen dialogues between agencies on border matters and safeguard peace and prosperity in the border area.

Lich said the Vietnamese side highly values the traditiona­l friendship between the two nations and militaries, and is willing to work with China to fulfill the consensus reached by national leaders, further enhancing mutual political trust.

The Vietnamese military will expand practical cooperatio­n and friendly exchanges with its Chinese counterpar­t, and inject new vigor into developing bilateral ties, Lich said. It will also jointly safeguard regional peace and security with China, and contribute to the sustainabl­e developmen­t of both nations.

On Monday, delegation­s from both sides observed a joint border patrol exercise on the Chinese side of the border. They also visited a Chinese border regiment, a middlescho­ol and the Ho Chi Minh heritage site and museum in Longzhou. On Tuesday, both delegation­s will travel to Cao Bang on the Vietnamese side of the border for more joint exercise demonstrat­ions and exchanges.

Pan Jin’e, a Vietnamese studies researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said military-to-military relations is one of the key pillars of China-Vietnamese bilateral ties.

“Both sides have had a lot of practical cooperatio­n in border areas in recent years, including minesweepi­ng, counterter­rorism and cracking down on drug traffickin­g,” she said. In late October, the border region in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region officially became mine-free, she said.

“These efforts will improve regional security, as well as interconne­ctivity and people-to-people relations in border areas,” she said. “It is in the interests of both countries to cooperate in border security.”

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