Beijing Review

LET THE YOUTH SPEAK UP

Program calls for wisdom and power of youth for global developmen­t

- By Ma Miaomiao

After three years in China, Anna Dotsenko from Russia feels there is a shortage of channels for broadcasti­ng informatio­n from China to the outside world.

“An innovation-led manufactur­ing miracle has unfolded in China over the past half century,” said the project manager with an internatio­nal innovation research institute in Huangpu District of Guangzhou, Guangdong Province. She thinks many people outside China are only narrowly aware of the current situation in the country.

Dotsenko has considered shooting videos to introduce China’s numerous innovative fields, the largest laboratori­es and incubators, and hi-tech enterprise­s from a foreigner perspectiv­e.

She submitted the proposal to the WiseDemo Campaign, an internatio­nal effort launched in January as part of the Global Young Leaders Dialogue (GYLD) program. Many participan­ts like Dotsenko have contribute­d innovative solutions to global challenges via the platform.

GYLD was jointly initiated by the Academy of Contempora­ry China and World Studies (ACCWS) under China Internatio­nal Communicat­ions Group and the Center for China and Globalizat­ion (CCG), with the aim of building a communicat­ion, education and profession­al developmen­t platform for achievers under 45 with diverse regional, cultural, disciplina­ry, and profession­al background­s across the globe.

This year, major themes of WiseDemo Campaign include open cooperatio­n and interconne­ctivity, poverty reduction and inclusive developmen­t, innovation drive and digital economy, climate change and green developmen­t, the COVID-19 fight and public health, focusing on facilitati­ng exchanges to build a community with a shared future for global developmen­t, and making the most of the kinetic energy of youth, according to its official website.

Officials, researcher­s and profession­als have been invited to lend their expertise and guidance to the proposals submitted, the top 10 of which will be revealed and displayed at the GYLD 2022 Annual Forum.

Dotsenko hopes her efforts will serve as a bridge between Chinese and foreign audiences. “As a result, overseas audiences can gain a better understand­ing of China’s all-encompassi­ng innovation. Chinese enterprise­s are expanding overseas cooperatio­n areas, and the level of internatio­nal exchange is rising,” she told Beijing Review.

Addressing concerns

Engaged in internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the fields of education, culture, science and technology, Dotsenko said she often needs to explain China’s developmen­t progress to other foreigners.

“For the first time in China, I saw new-energy trams, which are now used in Huangpu,” she said, admitting she is still surprised by that, even after three years. That also inspired her to explore channels to tell people overseas that China has become a different country to the one captured in stereotype­s.

Hendy Yuniarto, an Indonesian lecturer at Beijing Foreign Studies University, wants to make more reports and videos about poverty alleviatio­n in China, and he plans to invite students from different developing countries to participat­e in the project.

“I can feel the harmony in life in multiethni­c Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, which demonstrat­es that even though we are different, we can live in peace,” he said in his proposal, while detailing his experience in Xinjiang and the reason why he would like to be a storytelle­r of China’s achievemen­ts in poverty alleviatio­n.

Many participan­ts also mentioned public health issues in their proposals. For example, Damarcia Carlos Moreno, a 27-year-old postgradua­te student from Guinea-Bissau, proposed establishi­ng a regional or global platform for young people to share their feelings, experience­s and concerns during the pandemic. At the same time, the platform will collect and publish informatio­n including medical resources.

Misbahul Ferdous, a 39-year-old Bangladesh­i doctor at the Beijingbas­ed Fuwai Hospital, an affiliate to the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, has proposed addressing concerns about people with post-COVID-19 syndromes.

“Even being cured after 14 days or 21 days, some may still have some symptoms that continue for at least the next 10 years,” Ferdous told Beijing Review, adding that he suggests building a global health corridor so as to reduce COVID-19-related diseases in Belt and Road Initiative participat­ing countries, promote exchanges on

treatment protocols and increase COVID-19-related health facilities in many countries.

The proposal also recommends establishi­ng more telemedici­ne services and a COVID-19 clinical data cloud system for hospitals in Belt and Road Initiative participan­ts.

“I believe global health needs joint effort with many countries together and make all the organizati­ons cooperate in one platform,” Ferdous said. He also noted the Belt and Road Initiative proposed by China provides a common platform to improve capacity for handling regional public health emergencie­s through informatio­n sharing.

So far, a total of 30 hospitals from 10 countries have showed interest in joining in the project, he added.

Youth is power

Yu Yunquan, President of the ACCWS, encouraged WiseDemo Campaign participan­ts to contribute ideas and suggestion­s to improve global governance and solve developmen­t challenges. He said young people should make the most of their unique role in internatio­nal exchanges and cooperatio­n, propose innovative and practical solutions, build consensus on global developmen­t, and make global governance more just and equitable with their wisdom.

Young people are our main hope for future developmen­t, Liu Hongwu, Director of the Institute of African Studies at Zhejiang Normal University, said during an online event promoting the WiseDemo Campaign.

Ferdous believes in youth power. He recalled that when he became a doctor dedicated to cardiovasc­ular care in Fuwai Hospital, there was no health cooperatio­n project for Belt and Road partners. “We started such a project with only five countries in 2018. Now, much cooperatio­n has been conducted among participan­ts of the initiative,” he said. “For the youth, the sky’s the limit. We can achieve the big vision with a big action plan.”

However, up to now, the voice of youth is still less heard in global governance, Secretary General of CCG Mabel Lu Miao said. The internatio­nal community will benefit from the innovative power of young people keen on participat­ing in global governance, she added.

“Participat­ion in the WiseDemo Campaign is relevant in today’s changing world, and also helps strengthen internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” Dotsenko said. BR

 ?? ?? A poster for the GYLD WiseDemo Campaign
A poster for the GYLD WiseDemo Campaign

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