China Daily

Xi’s visit to take ties with Myanmar to new level

- The author is an expert on Myanmar issues. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

President Xi Jinping’s two-day state visit to Myanmar from Friday, his first foreign trip in 2020, will deepen bilateral relations and strengthen cooperatio­n. His visit to Myanmar has acquired added importance as 2020 marks the 70th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between the two countries.

At a meeting with Myanmar State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi on April 24, 2019, President Xi reiterated that the two countries have built a profound paukphaw (fraternal) friendship. Xi’s visit to Myanmar will therefore play an important role in helping the two countries build a community with a shared future.

Myanmar establishe­d diplomatic relations with China in 1950, a year after the founding of the People’s Republic of China, building bilateral relations based on mutual respect and trust. In the 1950s, Myanmar, China and India together proposed the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e, which has become a part of internatio­nal relations. In the 1960s, China and Myanmar set an example of how to resolve border issues left behind by history.

In 2009, Xi visited Myanmar as China’s vice-president. Two years later, China and Myanmar establishe­d a comprehens­ive strategic cooperativ­e partnershi­p.

In recent years, China-Myanmar cooperatio­n has deepened thanks partly to geographic­al factors including the fact that they share a 2,200-kilometer-long border and have a long history of peopleto-people exchanges.

Attaching great importance to bilateral relations, China and Myanmar have maintained regular and close high-level communicat­ion, which helped them to build mutual trust and promote economic cooperatio­n. In 2018, the two sides signed a memorandum of understand­ing to jointly build the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor. In December of the same year, Myanmar set up the Belt and Road guiding committee with Suu Kyi as chairperso­n to improve coordinati­on between Myanmar’s central government and provincial government­s on Belt and Road projects.

Myanmar’s strong support to the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative is a major reason for deepening China-Myanmar

cooperatio­n on Belt and Road projects, which in turn has promoted closer cooperatio­n between China and other ASEAN member states.

Xi’s visit will also strengthen ChinaMyanm­ar high-level communicat­ion that would help the two sides work out a blueprint for co-developmen­t and jointly building a community with a shared future, thus elevating China-Myanmar relations to a new level.

For the well-being of people of both countries, China and Myanmar, during Xi’s visit, will discuss how to improve connectivi­ty by jointly developing Belt and Road projects and building the CMEC. Also, work is likely to be expedited on several ongoing infrastruc­ture projects including the China-Myanmar economic cooperatio­n zone, cross-border railway, cross-border roads, and facilitati­on of customs clearance.

The two countries also have huge potential to boost trade and investment. China is Myanmar’s biggest trading partner and largest source of foreign capital. According to data from China’s Ministry of Commerce, from January to September 2019, the China-Myanmar trade volume was $13.54 billion, up by 17.9 percent year-on-year. Yet given the instabilit­y in some areas of Myanmar, and the complex compensati­on rules for demolition­s of structures, relocation of communitie­s and environmen­tal protection, Chinese enterprise­s operating in Myanmar need to optimize their investment and functionin­g.

People-to-people exchanges between China and Myanmar have grown considerab­ly, with China becoming the largest source of foreign tourists for Myanmar thanks to the more than 150 direct flights per week between the two countries. And the increasing number of Chinese tourists to Myanmar is generating a lot of tourism revenue and creating local jobs for Myanmar.

Also, Chinese civil aid and funding to Myanmar have increased. For instance, the China Foundation for Poverty Alleviatio­n now provides funds for the education of Myanmar children, Chinese vocational schools are helping train Myanmar students and Chinese experts are working with their Myanmar counterpar­ts to repair the quake-damaged Bagan Pagodas.

And, once complete, the CMEC can boost economic developmen­t in areas along the route, particular­ly those in the less-developed regions of western and northern Myanmar.

During his visit, Xi will also attend the celebratio­ns marking the 70th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of China-Myanmar diplomatic relations and other events including the opening ceremony of the China-Myanmar Culture and Tourism Year in 2020.

Thanks to the joint efforts of China and Myanmar and their solid foundation of cooperatio­n and coordinati­on, bilateral relations will enter a new era of deepening mutual trust, economic cooperatio­n and people-to-people exchanges, which will greatly contribute to regional developmen­t and prosperity.

People-to-people exchanges between China and Myanmar have grown considerab­ly, with China becoming the largest source of foreign tourists for Myanmar thanks to the more than 150 direct flights per week between the two countries. And the increasing number of Chinese tourists to Myanmar is generating a lot of tourism revenue and creating local jobs for Myanmar.

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