China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Nuke-free peninsula remains leaders’ goal

Later this month, performanc­es, arts, music will highlight exchange of ideas

- By ZHANG YUNBI in Xiamen zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed on Sunday to stay committed to the goal of denucleari­zing the Korean Peninsula and to make their communicat­ion and coordinati­on closer.

They reached the consensus during their fourth meeting this year shortly after Putin arrived in Xiamen, Fujian province, on Sunday afternoon to attend the BRICS Summit.

The two leaders agreed on properly handling the latest situation, in which Pyongyang conducted a nuclear test earlier in the day, according to a release by the Foreign Ministry.

Xi and Putin had an in-depth exchange of views on internatio­nal and regional issues on Sunday.

Xi said China is ready to join hands with Russia to boost their ties, enhance their own developmen­t and jointly champion the peace and stability of the region and the world.

Putin said it is greatly important for both countries to strengthen their contacts and coordinati­on on major internatio­nal and regional issues.

As a sign of strong bilateral mutual trust, Xi and Putin talked in May in Beijing, June in Astana, Kazakhstan, and July in Moscow.

In a look to his state visit to Russia in July, Xi said the visit was a success and the two sides are now realizing the consensus he and Putin made at that time and pushing for new progress in various areas of cooperatio­n.

Xi said the two countries should further advance cooperativ­e programs in areas such as energy, aviation and aerospace and nuclear energy, and gear up synergy in areas such as connectivi­ty.

China has been Russia’s largest trade partner for seven consecutiv­e years, and bilateral trade reached $46.8 billion in the first seven months of this year, a year-onyear increase of 21.8 percent, according to Chinese Ambassador to Russia Li Hui.

On cooperatio­n among the five BRICS countries, Xi said they should jointly send positive signals to the outside world, plan the direction and priorities of cooperatio­n, boost their influence in global affairs and make their cooperatio­n steady and lasting.

After their talk, Xi and Putin visited an exhibition of southern Fujian’s intangible cultural heritage.

A cultural festival designed to enhance multilater­al communicat­ion under the BRICS framework will get underway later this month.

The BRICS Cultural Festival runs from Sept 15 to 22 in the coastal city of Xiamen, Fujian province. More than 200 artists from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will participat­e, according to Xie Jinying, director of the Ministry of Culture’s Bureau for External Cultural Relations.

More than 30 activities, including performanc­es, exhibition­s and film screenings, will convene in the city, Xie said at a news conference on Sunday in Xiamen. All the events will be open to the public for free.

“All activities are co-presented by the five countries,” he said. “The countries have abundant cultural resources and have common wishes to expand cultural influence with joint efforts.”

The official launch ceremony for the cultural festival, plus a BRICS photograph­y exhibition, will be held on Monday. It will be attended by the five state leaders who came to Xiamen for the BRICS Summit.

“People-to-people understand­ing and friendship is an indispensa­ble cornerston­e, whether to deepen cooperatio­n within BRICS or to win a wider partnershi­p,” President Xi Jinping said in his keynote speech in Xiamen on Sunday.

“We should bring the significan­t role of cultural communicat­ion into full play and create more events like the film festival, cultural festival and sports meeting.”

He said these activities, which are beneficial for people’s livelihood­s, will help to spread BRICS stories and inject stimulus to BRICS cooperatio­n by converging exchanges and friendship among the five countries.

Top-tier artists are invited for the upcoming cultural festival. For example, a ballet gala will be held on Sept 15, according to Xu Gang, a choreograp­her from the National Ballet of China and director of the gala.

Troupes from each BRICS country will bring their most representa­tive work. Xu said that his troupe will choose a scene from Red Detachment of Women, a classic Chinese ballet that premiered in 1964, and the Russian troupe will perform an excerpt from The Nutcracker.

Interactio­ns among the five countries’ performers also are designed to reflect their friendship. He said a Chinese ballerina will cooperate with a Brazilian dancer for an excerpt from Don Quixote.

“It’s also a good chance to promote different countries’ ballet culture for the public, which is even more important than performanc­e,” Xu said, explaining he will provide introducti­ons and background informatio­n during intervals.

The dancers are scheduled to visit schools in Xiamen for communicat­ion as well.

“Cultural communicat­ion among BRICS countries is not exclusive to big theaters,” Xie said. “They should go deeper into communitie­s and benefit more ordinary people, and improve mutual understand­ing of each other’s traditions and values.”

Cultural cooperatio­n under the BRICS framework has already yielded some fruits. In June, the five countries’ filmmakers released a coproducti­on — Where Has the Time Gone? — during the BRICS Film Festival in Chengdu, Sichuan province.

BRICS cultural ministers or chief administra­tors met in Tianjin in July, establishi­ng alliances of museums, art galleries and children’s theaters.

Under the agreement reached at the Tianjin conference, the cultural festival will rotate among the five countries to host of BRICS summits.

 ?? WU ZHIYI / CHINA DAILY ?? President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin head to the meeting to discuss global issues on Sunday.
WU ZHIYI / CHINA DAILY President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin head to the meeting to discuss global issues on Sunday.
 ??  ?? Xie Jinying
Xie Jinying

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