China Daily

Closer China-Hungary friendship expected

-

BUDAPEST — Experts from Hungary and China have discussed the latter’s decisive role in global connectivi­ty through the Belt and Road Initiative and have forecast deepening China-Hungary friendship through the BRI.

The talks took place in a seminar on Friday, Promoting High-quality Belt and Road Cooperatio­n, organized by the Xinhua Institute, a Chinese media-based think tank.

“The cooperatio­n between our countries is built on solid economic reasoning,” said Csaba Moldicz, head of the School of Internatio­nal Relations at the Mathias Corvinus Collegium in Budapest.

He praised Chinese companies, such as BYD and the battery maker Contempora­ry Amperex Technology, or CATL, for their role in modernizin­g Hungary’s automotive sector, a critical component of its economy.

“Investment­s from companies like BYD and CATL are exemplary of high-quality cooperatio­n, fitting both the strategies of Chinese firms and Hungary’s developmen­t strategies as well,” he said.

CATL has started to build a new factory in Debrecen in eastern Hungary, and BYD says it plans to build a new factory in Szeged in the country’s south. Both investment­s are worth billions of euros.

Many experts attending the seminar called for deeper bilateral friendship through joint efforts, especially within the BRI framework.

“The similariti­es in political philosophy between Hungary and China have led to stronger bilateral relations, with both nations striving for higher quality cooperatio­n based on mutual understand­ing and respect,” said Levente Horvath, director of the Eurasia Center of John von Neumann University in Kecskemet, Hungary.

Gergely Salat, a researcher at the Hungarian Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs in Budapest, highlighte­d the country’s keen participat­ion in the BRI. Hungary has listed connectivi­ty high on its official strategy, and China was the first big country that put connectivi­ty at the center of its foreign policy, Salat said.

Ferenc Banhidi, a professor at Pazmany Peter Catholic University in Budapest, spoke highly of Chinese digital companies such as Huawei and ZTE for their successful integratio­n into Hungary’s economy.

Zoltan Kiszelly, director of the Center of Political Analyses at the Szazadveg Foundation in Budapest, said the BRI represents a collective approach to tackling global challenges, transcendi­ng traditiona­l geopolitic­al rivalries.

It is a call for more collaborat­ion in an increasing­ly multipolar world, giving priority to shared success over individual gains, Kiszelly said.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A boy learns the dragon dance at a Chinese New Year celebratio­n in Budapest’s Chinatown on Feb 3.
XINHUA A boy learns the dragon dance at a Chinese New Year celebratio­n in Budapest’s Chinatown on Feb 3.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong