China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Visit seen as boost to Sino-Vietnam ties

- By AN BAIJIE in Beijing anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn

China and Vietnam should handle maritime disagreeme­nts through dialogues, President Xi Jinping said on Thursday as he calls for efforts to push bilateral relations to a new level.

In a meeting with Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang, who is making a fiveday state visit to China, Xi said the two countries should push forward maritime cooperatio­n, accumulate consensus gradually and broad en their common interests.

Quang will attend the Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n on Sunday and Monday.

Witnessed by the two presidents, China and Vietnam signed cooperativ­e documents in areas like diplomacy, technology, e-commerce, infrastruc­ture and education.

Xi said China and Vietnam should take advantage of the Belt and Road Forum to connect their developmen­t strategies.

Noting it is Quang’s first visit to China since becoming Vietnamese president, Xi said the visit could energize China-Vietnam relations.

Xi called on the two nations to strengthen coordinati­on to push forward cooperatio­n in all areas and bring practical benefits for the people of both countries.

Quang said the two countries should handle disagreeme­nts properly and continue to push forward with maritime cooperatio­n.

Vietnam is willing to expand cooperatio­n with China through people-to-people exchanges and in areas like economy and trade, agricultur­e, environmen­t, infrastruc­ture, tourism and security, he said.

Liu Zhenmin, vice-foreign minister, said that during their talks, the two presidents discussed the South China Sea “in a positive atmosphere”.

According to Liu, the two sides agreed to implement the consensus reached by the high-level leaders of the two countries, make continuous efforts to stabilize the South China Sea situation, and push forward negotiatio­n.

“The talks over the South China Sea issue are completely positive, without any discord,” he told reporters.

The two countries will enhance maritime cooperatio­n in “less sensitive areas”, such as joint scientific research and exploitati­on of the Beibu Gulf, he added.

While China remains the largest trading partner of Vietnam, Vietnam surpassed Malaysia last year to become the largest trading partner of China in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, two-way trade between China and Vietnam reached $87.8 billion in the first 11 months of 2016, up by 1.6 percent year-on-year.

In the same period, Vietnam’s export to China amounted to $32.96 billion, up by 20.8 percent year-onyear, and its trade deficit with China fell by 31 percent.

The talks over the South China Sea issue are completely positive, without any discord.” Liu Zhenmin, vice-foreign minister

 ?? JU PENG / XINHUA ?? President Xi Jinping and Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang (center) visit the photo exhibition Vietnam in Chinese Photograph­ers’ Eyes in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Thursday.
JU PENG / XINHUA President Xi Jinping and Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang (center) visit the photo exhibition Vietnam in Chinese Photograph­ers’ Eyes in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Thursday.

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