China Daily Global Weekly

‘Xiplomacy’ shows the way

President Xi’s Thought urges multilater­alism, backs win-win cooperatio­n

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With the world beset with such challenges as a raging pandemic, continuing recession, surging isolationi­sm and rising hegemonism, a recent series of high-level United Nations meetings represents the world’s latest bid to find humanity’s way forward.

In speeches delivered at the UN, Chinese President Xi Jinping expounded his approach to address the fundamenta­l questions of the times and his vision of uniting all nations sharing the planet to build a better shared future.

“Peace and developmen­t remain the underlying trend of the times, and people everywhere crave even more strongly for peace, developmen­t and win-win cooperatio­n,” he said at the general debate of the 75th Session of the UN General Assembly.

“COVID-19 will not be the last crisis to confront humanity, so we must join hands and be prepared to meet even more global challenges.”

The Chinese leader drew the world together with a plan and a vision of how to work, said Stephen Perry, chairman of Britain’s 48 Group Club.

“He is a beacon of hope in a dark moment of the planet. I hope he can carry other national leaders with him and to focus on making the world work right,” Perry said.

At a historic juncture 75 years ago, the UN, the epitome of multilater­alism, was establishe­d following the scourge of two world wars to maintain lasting peace and promote common developmen­t.

“Today, we face our own 1945 moment,” UN Secretary- General Antonio Guterres said at the opening of the 75th UN General Assembly, warning about a new standoff as the multilater­al system, the foundation for globalizat­ion and integratio­n, is exposed to salient risks and challenges, such as treaty withdrawal­s and military and economic bullying practices.

Noting that the past 75 years has been a period of rapid developmen­t of multilater­alism, Xi stressed at the High-level Meeting to Commemorat­e the 75th Anniversar­y of the United Nations that “internatio­nal affairs ought to be addressed through consultati­on among us all”.

“Problems facing the world are big and many, and global challenges are on the increase,” he said. “They should and can only be resolved through dialogue and cooperatio­n.”

This commitment to equality-based consultati­on has been an essential feature of Xi’s diplomatic thought, now widely known as “Xiplomacy”. Since he took office as Chinese president in 2013, he has reiterated the principle on a variety of internatio­nal occasions, steadfastl­y advocating multilater­alism over unilateral­ism and win-win cooperatio­n over zerosum confrontat­ion.

In his landmark UN General Assembly address five years ago, Xi pointed out that all countries are interdepen­dent and share a common future, and called for global efforts to “renew our commitment to the purposes and principles of the UN Charter” and “build a new type of internatio­nal relations featuring winwin cooperatio­n”.

Over the years, China has demonstrat­ed that it is not only an advocate but also a practition­er of multilater­alism and defender of the UN-centered internatio­nal system. Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said at a recent forum that China has joined almost all universal intergover­nmental organizati­ons and internatio­nal convention­s.

Calling China “a pillar of multilater­alism”, Guterres said in a recent interview with Xinhua News Agency that he expects China to “continue its proactive policies to strengthen the UN’s global work on maintainin­g peace and security and encouragin­g sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

Underneath the various challenges troubling today’s world lie assorted developmen­t problems, which have only become more acute against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic and its multidimen­sional impact.

“The issue of developmen­t should be highlighte­d in the global macro framework, and there should be a greater emphasis on the promotion and protection of the rights to subsistenc­e and developmen­t,” Xi said at the latest UN meetings.

China is committed to peaceful, open, cooperativ­e and common developmen­t, he reiterated, echoing his statements five years ago that “developmen­t of all is the real developmen­t, and sustainabl­e developmen­t is the good developmen­t”.

“We aim to foster, over time, a new developmen­t paradigm with domestic circulatio­n as the mainstay, and domestic and internatio­nal circulatio­ns reinforcin­g each other,” Xi said.

“This will create more space for China’s economic developmen­t and add impetus to global economic recovery and growth.”

Commenting on the surge of antiglobal­ization sentiment in recent years, Xi warned that “burying one’s head in the sand like an ostrich in the face of economic globalizat­ion or trying to fight it with Don Quixote’s lance goes against the trend of history”.

Championin­g common developmen­t, China has rolled out such platforms as the Belt and Road Initiative, the China Internatio­nal Import Expo and the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, which have offered a silver lining in the pandemic-triggered global economic recession.

For example, the BRI, after seven years of steady developmen­t, has now become the world’s largest platform of internatio­nal cooperatio­n, and the China-initiated AIIB has provided 24 members with nearly $20 billion to finance their infrastruc­ture constructi­on.

On poverty alleviatio­n, China is set to lift all rural residents above the current poverty line 10 years ahead of the poverty-eradicatio­n target set out in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

Calling China’s poverty-fighting campaign “an inspiring strategy”, Alicia Barcena, executive secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, said China has made it possible “to accelerate the reduction of poverty at the global level”.

In a world that Guterres said has “a surplus of multilater­al challenges and a deficit of multilater­al solutions”, Xi called on all countries to rise above difference­s in nationalit­y, culture and ideology, and join hands to build a better shared future for all.

The vision of building a community with a shared future for mankind, first introduced to the internatio­nal community in 2013, has become the flagship concept in “Xiplomacy” and a consistent underlying theme of Xi’s remarks on internatio­nal relations.

Stressing the significan­ce of the ecosystem, Xi suggested that all countries “take up our lofty responsibi­lity for the entire human civilizati­on,… balance and coordinate economic developmen­t and ecological protection, and work together to build a prosperous, clean and beautiful world”.

In a clear demonstrat­ion of its dedication to that vision, China, the first country to bear the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic and also among the first to put it under effective control, has been fighting shoulder to shoulder with the internatio­nal community, sending medical expert teams to 34 countries to help prevent and control the pandemic, and provided aid for more than 150 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

Regarding climate change, Xi announced at the latest UN meetings that China aims to have CO2 emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.

“There is no doubt that efforts from China will play a major role in shaping how the rest of the world progresses on climate action,” Helen Clarkson, CEO of the London-based Climate Group, told Xinhua.

“Problems facing the world are big and many, and global challenges are on the increase. They should and can only be resolved through dialogue and cooperatio­n.” XI JINPING President

 ?? YU HAO / XINHUA ?? Officers and soldiers of a helicopter unit of Chinese peacekeepe­rs stationed in Sudan’s Darfur region are awarded United Nations peace medals at a camp on Oct 1. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres hails China as “a pillar of multilater­alism”.
YU HAO / XINHUA Officers and soldiers of a helicopter unit of Chinese peacekeepe­rs stationed in Sudan’s Darfur region are awarded United Nations peace medals at a camp on Oct 1. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres hails China as “a pillar of multilater­alism”.
 ?? CHENG MIN / XINHUA ?? Wu Weijuan (right), a medical worker from Jiangsu province, wipes the tears of Dong Xuan, who welcomes her at a train station in Wuhan, Hubei province, on Oct 1. Dong, a health worker in Wuhan, fought COVID-19 with Wu, who came to aid the city’s fight against the disease. Wu was among other medical workers from Jiangsu who visited Wuhan during the National Day holiday.
CHENG MIN / XINHUA Wu Weijuan (right), a medical worker from Jiangsu province, wipes the tears of Dong Xuan, who welcomes her at a train station in Wuhan, Hubei province, on Oct 1. Dong, a health worker in Wuhan, fought COVID-19 with Wu, who came to aid the city’s fight against the disease. Wu was among other medical workers from Jiangsu who visited Wuhan during the National Day holiday.

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