China Daily

Meeting enhances cultural ties

- By WANG KAIHAO in Tianjin wangkaihao@ chinadaily.com.cn

BRICS countries will enhance cultural ties via new alliances of libraries, museums, art galleries and children’s theaters.

The combined efforts of national-level institutio­ns from China, Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa were announced at the meeting of BRICS ministers of culture in Tianjin on Thursday.

“People-to-people connectivi­ty is crucial for the developmen­t of the relationsh­ips among BRICS countries, and cultural exchanges are an important way to enhance such connection­s,” said Minister of Culture Luo Shugang. “More concrete cooperatio­n in cultural fields will better benefit ordinary people in the countries involved.”

For example, after the Alliance of Libraries is set up, the five countries will map out a series of substantia­l cooperativ­e projects concerning book preservati­on, document sharing and digital libraries.

Luo projected that cultural cooperatio­n within the framework of BRICS will focus on fields including art performanc­es, protection of cultural relics and developmen­t of the creative industry.

Mahesh Sharma, Indian minister of culture, said that the promotion of global economic partnershi­ps and internatio­nalpeace and stability are

Luo Shugang, minister of culture

key pillars of BRICS, and intercultu­ral dialogue is the social foundation for cooperatio­n.

More personnel exchange programs and training courses in the field of fine art will be setup, and BR I CS art museum forums and fine arts exhibition­s will be held every three years.

Vladimir Medinsky, Russian minister of culture, said that cinematic cooperatio­n can play a pivotal role.

“We can thus discover more shared values,” he said. “We also have some different values, but such coproducti­on can help to enrich each other’s culture.”

Delegates from the five countries signed a detailed five-year action plan for the implementa­tion of the Agreement between the Government­s of BRICS States on Cooperatio­n in the Field of Culture, which was first agreed upon at a previous meeting in Russia in 2015.

In the area of cultural relic protection, BRICS countries will “jointly research the means to protect shared and trans-boundary cultural properties, and the possibilit­ies of nominating these properties to be considered for inclusion in UNESCO’s World Heritage List”, according to the action plan.

The parties will sign agreements on the prevention of illicit traffickin­g of cultural properties and monitoring their import and export, while cooperatio­n among commercial sectors in the cultural industry, including animation, gastronomy and fashion, will be encouraged, it said.

Xie Jinying, director of the Ministry of Culture’s Bureau for External Cultural Relations, said that most previous internatio­nal cultural cooperatio­nwith China was based on bilateral agreements.

“However, more multilater­al efforts are taking place now,” Xie said. “If bilateral cooperatio­n isa du et, multilater­al cooperatio­n isa chorus .”

Unlike other multilater­al frameworks, which often involve China and other countries in a particular region, BRICS includes five representa­tive countries from different regions.

“It will thus create stronger internatio­nal ties,” he said.

Xie also revealed that the conference in Tianjin marked the start of an annual meeting among BR I CS ministers of culture, with the next meeting to be held in South Africa in 2018.

More concrete cooperatio­n in cultural fields will better benefit ordinary people in the countries involved.”

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