China Daily Global Weekly

Kazakhs feel warmth of bilateral ties

Xi’s trips to Central Asian nation have produced solid economic, social results

- By REN QI in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Editor’s note: China Daily is publishing a series of stories reviewing President Xi Jinping’s visits at home and abroad in the past decade, to showcase his vision for developmen­t in China and the world.

Alegendary Chinese composer has different names in different places. As one of the greatest composers in China, he is known as Xian Xinghai whose Yellow River Cantata has inspired millions. In Kazakhstan, he is known as Huang Xun and was regarded as a refugee with remarkable talent.

Wherever he went, whatever people called him, his music gave people courage and strength to fight against fascist invaders. President Xi Jinping recounted the composer’s story during his first state visit to Kazakhstan in 2013.

When war broke out between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in 1941, the composer was working on a documentar­y for the Communist Party of China under the alias Huang Xun in Moscow. Forced to abort his mission and evacuate, he tried to return home through a southern area of the Soviet Union that is now Kazakhstan, only to find the borders closed. He was left alone in the Kazakh city of Almaty, where he knew no one and had nowhere to stay.

Xian hid his true identity and contribute­d to the Kazakh cultural cause anonymousl­y. He incorporat­ed Kazakh traditiona­l music and folklore in his works. They served as a rallying call to fight fascism and were immensely popular with locals.

In Almaty today, a boulevard is named after him, and a monument was erected to commemorat­e him in the city center.

This year marks the 30th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between China and Kazakhstan, and three visits by Xi to the country, in 2013, 2015 and 2017, carried on the Silk Road spirit and exemplifie­d the warm relationsh­ip between the two neighbors.

Kadisha Dairova, vice-president of Nazarbayev University in the Kazakh capital, Nur-Sultan, formerly Astana, brims with excitement when she recalls a speech Xi delivered during his first visit to the country on Sept 7, 2013.

It was this speech that formally launched an ambitious initiative to jointly build an “economic belt along the Silk Road” to boost China-Kazakh relations and regional collaborat­ion.

“Kazakhstan, sitting on the ancient Silk Road, has made an important contributi­on to the exchanges between Eastern and Western civilizati­ons and the interactio­ns and cooperatio­n between various nations and cultures,” Xi said.

Over the previous 20 years and more, relations between China and Eurasian countries had developed rapidly, he said, and the ancient Silk Road had gained fresh vitality. In a new way it was taking collaborat­ion between China and Eurasian countries to new heights.

To forge closer economic ties, deepen collaborat­ion and expand developmen­t space in Eurasia, an innovative approach was needed, Xi said, and an “economic belt along the Silk Road” should be jointly built that would be a great undertakin­g benefiting the people of all countries along the route.

“There were no empty seats in the university’s semicircul­ar auditorium,” Dairova said.

Xi’s address was followed by prolonged applause, and the students seemed to sense that bilateral collaborat­ion in the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative offered them good job prospects once they graduated, she said.

Zhang Xiao, China’s ambassador to Kazakhstan, said Xi’s Silk Road Economic Belt proposal in 2013 was immediatel­y supported by Nursultan Nazarbayev, the president of Kazakhstan at the time, and was received positively by various segments of Kazakh society.

“As a result, Kazakhstan became one of the first states to engage in internatio­nal collaborat­ion as part of the Belt and Road Initiative. China and Kazakhstan are at the forefront in building the Belt and Road.”

Since the 2013 visit, China and Kazakhstan have firmly adhered to the principles of “joint discussion, joint constructi­on and joint use”, ensuring that the Belt and Road Initiative aligns closely with Kazakhstan’s new economic policy Nurly Zhol, meaning bright path, comprehens­ively promoting collaborat­ion, Zhang added.

Askar Mamin, a former Kazakh prime minister and former president of the national railway company Kazakhstan Temir Zholy, said he felt the energy of China-Kazakh crossborde­r trade after Xi’s visit.

The Kazakh city of Khorgos on the border with China used to play an important role on the ancient Silk Road, and it now enjoys increasing trade between the two countries with the new Silk Road, he said.

In December 2013, Nazarbayev initiated the Khorgos-East Gate Free Economic Zone on the border. The zone is a part of the Khorgos Internatio­nal Border Cooperatio­n Center, a China-Kazakhstan joint venture, Mamin said, and Xi’s visit convinced him that the project could became a key bridge between China and Europe.

Trade between China and Kazakhstan has grown rapidly under the Belt and Road Initiative, said Jiang Wei, China’s consul general in Almaty. In the first 10 months of 2021, trade between the two countries was worth $20.8 billion. China continued to be Kazakhstan’s second-biggest trading partner, and for the first time became its largest export destinatio­n country.

“We are proud that this initiative was first announced in Kazakhstan during President Xi Jinping’s visit,” said Ruslan Bultrikov, Kazakhstan’s deputy permanent representa­tive to the United Nations.

Xi’s speech was “very symbolic because this concept was first announced during his meeting with students, who represent the young generation and for whom the great project will be carried out”, he said.

For Dairova, the Belt and Road Initiative is good for mutual understand­ing and cultural exchanges. She has overseen the establishm­ent at Nazarbayev University of a China Culture Center.

Following the example of the composer Xian, another “musical ambassador” has also brought the peoples of the two countries together.

Dimash Kudaiberge­n, a young Kazakh singer, has become phenomenal­ly popular in China, giving Chinese audiences a great insight into the landlocked country.

The singer, known as Dimash, sang for Xi during his state visit to Kazakhstan in 2015.

In 2017, he performed in Singer,a talent show made by Hunan TV, and he soon had millions of Chinese fans.

Mira Nazbekova, a Kazakh who works for an energy company, said more Chinese TV shows were broadcast in Kazakhstan after Xi’s visits, and these helped young Kazakhs to learn more about China.

“More Kazakhs, especially young people, are choosing to learn Chinese as a foreign language in school and university,” Nazbekova said.

On Xi’s third visit to Kazakhstan, in 2017, both countries agreed to further align Nurly Zhol with the Belt and Road Initiative, with industrial­ization at the core.

Xi took part in the opening ceremony of Expo 2017 in Nur-Sultan and visited the China pavilion accompanie­d by Nazarbayev.

Dairova said that during the 2017 visit, she was glad to hear Xi had promised to increase the number of government scholarshi­ps by 200 for Kazakh students in the following five years.

Deng Ying, director of the Confucius Institute at Xi’an Internatio­nal Studies University, said there were only dozens of students at the institute when it opened in 2007, but the number rose rapidly after Xi’s visit to Kazakhstan in 2013.

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