Beijing Review

Communicat­ion and Cooperatio­n

François Hollande Beijing Review Jean-Claude Juncker Beijing Review

- Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to liwenhan@cicgameric­as.com

Anything that can reduce conflict will help bring greater harmony to the world, former French President said in a recent interview with Meng Liang, correspond­ent and Chairman of The Mencius Foundation. Similarly, former European Commission President told that civilizati­ons are inherently opposed to warfare. Edited excerpts of their remarks follow:

François Hollande: The COVID-19 pandemic plus the conflicts in the world have, in a way, broken what was going on before these crises hit. Today’s global growth is weakened by the fact that world trade is not progressin­g as it did in the past. It’s true that for several months, there has been an upsurge in protection­ism. In other words, world trade is in danger of being affected by protection­ist, sanitary or tax measures that will prevent products from circulatin­g. As for the United States, today it is rather tempted by protection­ism. We have to work with the U.S., Europe, China and other countries to prevent protection­ism from resurfacin­g.

I believe that the idea of cooperatio­n on a global scale, considerin­g the diversity and community of the world’s responsibi­lities, as well as the Global Civilizati­ons Initiative (GCI) can help to ease the current tensions, which have been provoked by conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. ( The GCI, proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping last year, calls for respecting the diversity of civilizati­ons, advocating the common values of humanity, valuing the inheritanc­e and innovation of civilizati­ons, and strengthen­ing internatio­nal people-to-people exchange and cooperatio­n.— Ed.)

So anything that can reduce conflict, anything that can create new trust—and it’s trust that’s essential—will help to bring greater harmony to the world, as well as more growth and developmen­t. Because the risk is that political conflicts will end up jeopardizi­ng trade and economic exchanges.

The message that Chinese President Xi Jinping is trying to convey with the GCI must therefore be understood as a message aimed at resolving conflicts and promoting greater cooperatio­n.

France and China also need to promote cultural and people-topeople exchanges, so that people can understand each other better. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)

nd was an economic one, but we need to add to it a more political and cultural initiative so that there can be greater mobility between people on different continents. (The BRI is an initiative to boost connectivi­ty along and beyond the ancient Silk Road routes proposed by China in 2013.— Ed.)

Jean-Claude Juncker: The fact is that China and the European Union are each other’s primary trading partners, sharing mutual interests that need to be protected and promoted. China plays a crucial role as a global partner for the EU, particular­ly in matters related to trade.

My most recent encounter with President Xi Jinping occurred in March 2019 in Paris, during a meeting that also included French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela

Merkel. At that forum, we conveyed to our Chinese counterpar­ts that, despite being competitor­s for clear reasons and acknowledg­ing the systemic difference­s that distinguis­h our civilizati­ons—the Chinese one and the European one—we must strive to harmonize our perspectiv­es on these matters.

I’m against a clash between civilizati­ons because diverse civilizati­ons have to live together in search for common intersecti­ons. Everyone has the duty to respect different civilizati­ons.

Regrettabl­y, recent times have witnessed the constructi­on of barriers that impede human interactio­n and cooperatio­n. I don’t like walls. The only one I like is China’s Great Wall, which is impressive and harmless; other walls are not as harmless as they should be.

Essential to the dialogue between civilizati­ons is the engagement among various stakeholde­rs and the respect displayed to cultures beyond our own. The European community must honor the Chinese civilizati­on, whose immense contributi­ons to humanity cannot be overlooked. China is a very old nation by comparison to the U.S., even by comparison to the European civilizati­on. They were writing poems when we were trying to learn our own language.

That is why I advocate the dialogue between civilizati­ons, because it has value in promoting mutual understand­ing. If you understand the civilizati­on of others better, you are less likely to go to war. Civilizati­on is against war. If you are against war, then the dialogue between civilizati­ons is very important.

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