The Fiji Times

How Belt and Road helps global recovery amid COVID-19 pandemic

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As the COVID-19 pandemic is dragging the global economy into a deep recession, the Belt and Road Initiative, with the participat­ion of overseas Chinese enterprise­s, have rekindled some hope.

Serving as an internatio­nal platform for cooperatio­n, the Belt and Road has played a vital role in assisting the fight against the pandemic and stabilizin­g global supply and industrial chains.

Health Silk Road

In the first half of 2020, China-Europe freight trips rose 36 percent year-on-year to 5,122, transporti­ng 3.67 million pieces and 27,000 tons of anti-pandemic materials to European countries, including Italy, Germany, France, Spain, Poland and Hungary.

Complainin­g about the massive disruption of the supply chains caused by COVID-19, Michael Schumann, board chairman of the German Federal Associatio­n for Economic Developmen­t and Foreign Trade, said “in this sense the Belt and Road Initiative can of course make an important contributi­on to the future.”

The ancient Silk Road has become both a cargo lifeline and a bond of solidarity. Soon after Iraq reported its first COVID-19 case, a Chinese medical team consisting of seven experts arrived in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad on March 7. Days later, a Chinese-built lab for coronaviru­s testing was inaugurate­d in the war-torn country.

“The Chinese experts are very supportive and helpful,” lab director Mohammed Ghanim Mahdi said. “When they were here, they gave us all the technical training we need. This can be a treasure for us.”

Keshmeer Makun, a lecturer at the University of the South Pacific, said the pandemic has strengthen­ed, not restrained, cooperatio­n under the Belt and Road framework.

Hope Rekindled

The World Bank Group predicted that the global economy will suffer the deepest recession since World War II with a 5.2-percent drop in GDP this year, a figure that highlights the urgent need for the resumption of production.

With strict protective measures, overseas Chinese workers are joining hands with their local colleagues to speed up the constructi­on of landmark projects across the world.

Since being discharged on Aug. 22 from a 14-day quarantine after their arrival, over 140 Chinese workers have been devoted to the constructi­on of Peljesac Bridge, the biggest infrastruc­ture project in Croatia. Constructi­on of the bridge, once delayed by the pandemic, is set to pick up speed, thanks to the output of those welders.

In Cambodia, despite all the obstacles brought by the pandemic, Chinese and Cambodian workers are forging ahead with the constructi­on of the country’s first expressway.

Connecting the capital city of Phnom Penh and the deep-sea port province of Preah Sihanouk in southweste­rn Cambodia, the 2-billion-U.S.-dollar Chinese-invested expressway is expected to become the artery of Cambodia’s economy.

Cambodian Prime Minister Samdech Techo Hun Sen said that this thoroughfa­re will become an important strategic road, and will contribute to boosting Cambodia’s economic growth.

“We understand the significan­ce of this expressway and clearly know our responsibi­lities,” said Xu Song, foreman of a constructi­on team of 280 workers on the project. “During this special period, applying strict measures to prevent COVID-19 and advancing the constructi­on steadily are our priorities.”

In Sri Lanka, a Chinese operation and maintenanc­e team has been doing its utmost to ensure the normal operation of Lakvijaya Power Station, a Chinese-built power plant that provides about 40 percent of the nation’s electricit­y supply.

Pang Tusheng, a technician of the team, said he planned to return to China to attend his daughter’s wedding, but the pandemic changed his plans. “Under such circumstan­ces, we should stick to our posts because it’s a significan­t task to maintain the smooth operation of the power station,” said Pang.

Shared Future

Following the epidemic, China has rushed to the rescue of those in need, upholding the vision of a community with a shared future for mankind.

“The right approach to tackling global crises and realizing long-term developmen­t is through greater connectivi­ty, openness, and inclusiven­ess,” Chinese President Xi Jinping said on June 18 in a written message to the High-level Video Conference on Belt and Road Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n.

China will work with its partners to develop the Belt and Road into a model of cooperatio­n, a model of health, a model of recovery, and a model of growth, Xi said.

China’s vision for a shared future and its proposals to jointly build the Belt and Road have been welcomed by experts around the globe.

World Health Organizati­on Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said the Health Silk Road and Digital Silk Road put forward by China highlight the importance of innovative forms of cooperatio­n to tackle the challenges we collective­ly face.

Charles Onunaiju, director of the Center for China Studies in Abuja, Nigeria, said Xi’s remarks have given African countries full confidence in defeating the pandemic.

“The Belt and Road, in which Africa is considerab­ly engaged, will play a pivotal role in global recovery” in the post-pandemic era, said Onunaiju. Pavle Basic, member of the Serbia National Council for Coordinati­on of Cooperatio­n with Russia and China, said Serbia has given its full support to the Belt and Road. “We deem the initiative as one of the most significan­t initiative­s on the global arena, which will contribute to the creation of worldwide partnershi­ps in all areas,” said Basic. Yu Xiong, professor with Surrey Business School at the University of Surrey, said “in the current complex internatio­nal environmen­t, China’s clear layout of future plans brings strong confidence to people at home and abroad who are concerned about China’s developmen­t.” “Many countries share the vision that, China, whose economy has begun to steadily recover, can lead them to develop and face the next challenges together,” the professor said.

 ??  ?? The Peljesac Bridge near Komarna is under constructi­on, in Croatia, April 17, 2020. [Milan Sabic/Pixsell/Handout via Xinhua]
The Peljesac Bridge near Komarna is under constructi­on, in Croatia, April 17, 2020. [Milan Sabic/Pixsell/Handout via Xinhua]
 ??  ?? Aerial photo taken on Aug. 5, 2020 shows the Chengdu Internatio­nal Railway Port in Chengdu, capital of southwest China’s Sichuan Province. Chengdu has seen nearly 1,200 accumulati­ve trips made by China-Europe freight trains from January to July this year, a year-on-year increase of 58.6 percent, according to the management committee of the Chengdu Internatio­nal Railway Port. (Xinhua/Liu Kun)
Aerial photo taken on Aug. 5, 2020 shows the Chengdu Internatio­nal Railway Port in Chengdu, capital of southwest China’s Sichuan Province. Chengdu has seen nearly 1,200 accumulati­ve trips made by China-Europe freight trains from January to July this year, a year-on-year increase of 58.6 percent, according to the management committee of the Chengdu Internatio­nal Railway Port. (Xinhua/Liu Kun)
 ??  ?? Chinese medical expert Yang Honghui (back L) instructs an Iraqi medical worker on operating a nucleic acid detection machine at a new Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) lab in Baghdad, Iraq, March 26, 2020. (Xinhua)
Chinese medical expert Yang Honghui (back L) instructs an Iraqi medical worker on operating a nucleic acid detection machine at a new Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) lab in Baghdad, Iraq, March 26, 2020. (Xinhua)

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