China Daily

BRI hailed at conference in France

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Paris chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese and French officials and opinion leaders believe the Belt and Road Initiative will bring great benefits to the global community.

The BRI, launched by China in 2013, is aimed at building infrastruc­ture and connectivi­ty between regions to promote social and economic developmen­t. So far, China has signed about 170 BRI documents with countries, regions and internatio­nal organizati­ons, including 60 in 2018 alone.

Chinese Ambassador to France Zhai Jun described the BRI as a “widely popular public good and cooperatio­n platform in the world”.

China’s trade with countries and regions along Belt and Road routes has exceeded $6 trillion since the initiative was launched five years ago. Its investment in those countries and regions has surpassed $80 billion, creating more than 240,000 jobs in local communitie­s. Meanwhile, China-Europe freight trains now reach 43 cities in 15 European countries.

“The reason that the BRI has become so popular globally in just five years is that it sticks to the principle of building jointly through consultati­on to meet the interests of all, rather than going alone,” Zhai told the second session of the Paris Forum on the BRI, which was held on Thursday at the UNESCO headquarte­rs in Paris, France. The meeting room was packed with more than 400 people from government, think tanks, universiti­es and businesses.

Zhai also attributed the initiative’s popularity to its transparen­cy, inclusiven­ess and emphasis on high standards and sustainabi­lity, as well as its respect for internatio­nal laws and norms and those of individual countries.

Bertrand Badie, a French scholar of internatio­nal relations at the Paris Institute of Political Studies, said the BRI promotes multilater­alism and inclusiven­ess.

He noted that while the West likes to talk about alliances, the BRI is inclusive, embracing all countries on every continent.

Pascal Boniface, director of the Paris-based Institute for Internatio­nal and Strategic Affairs, described the BRI as a win-win effort, not a zerosum game.

He said that through the BRI, developing countries could build infrastruc­ture that is critically important to their economic developmen­t. He cited the example of some African countries haunted by electricit­y shortages and said they would be left further behind without building adequate facilities.

Boniface applauded the close cooperatio­n between China and France, citing the example of a freight rail line linking Guangzhou with Lyon.

Christian Cambon, president of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the French Senate, also praised the freight trains that now link Chinese cities with Europe, saying the routes have reduced to days the time required to transport goods. Transport by sea would take two months.

Jean-Pierre Raffarin, a former French prime minister, said that no one should exclude a cooperativ­e initiative such as the BRI.

“We should rescue multilater­alism, which is in jeopardy today, through the BRI,” he said.

Kong Quan, deputy head of the foreign affairs committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, China’s top political advisory body, dismissed accusation­s that the BRI is a geopolitic­al tool through which China seeks hegemony by splitting Europe and plunging countries into debt traps.

Citing his experience as Chinese ambassador to France from 2008 to 2013, Kong said China bore heavy losses by coming to the rescue of some European countries during the debt crisis.

“Now some countries in Central and Eastern Europe want to pursue their own developmen­t by participat­ing in the BRI. Not only does China have no reason to reject them but we don’t believe that such mutually beneficial, fair and transparen­t cooperatio­n will split Europe,” he said.

We should rescue multilater­alism, which is in jeopardy today, through the BRI.” Jean-Pierre Raffarin, former French prime minister

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