China Daily

BRI’s boost to global COVID-19 fight hailed

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

Countries have hailed the major boost that the China-led Belt and Road Initiative has given to global economic recovery and the joint fight against COVID-19.

At an internatio­nal conference on Wednesday, Beijing offered a fresh proposal to further strengthen the fight against the novel coronaviru­s and promote interconne­ctivity, green developmen­t and free trade among the countries.

The proposal was made when State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi chaired a highlevel meeting on Wednesday night via video link on internatio­nal cooperatio­n under the BRI in the Asia-Pacific region.

To deal with the common challenge, Wang called for greater teamwork among countries to provide more medical supplies to countries in need and promote the waiving of intellectu­al property rights for COVID-19 vaccines.

Nations should also gear up cooperatio­n on infrastruc­ture buildup and green developmen­t, speed up the region’s economic integratio­n and keep global production and supply chains afloat, Wang said.

The meeting, in which dignitarie­s from 29 countries and some leading internatio­nal agencies participat­ed, was held at a time when the number of countries that have signed BRI cooperatio­n documents with China has reached 140.

The cumulative trade volume between China and its BRI partners has exceeded $9.2 trillion, and the total direct investment of Chinese enterprise­s in countries along the BRI routes has exceeded $130 billion.

At the meeting’s conclusion, two initiative­s proposed by the 29 countries on BRI vaccine cooperatio­n and partnershi­p on green developmen­t were adopted.

Armida Salsiah Alisjahban­a, executive secretary of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, warned that “the countries of Asia and the Pacific are still going through challengin­g times due to the COVID-19 pandemic”.

“We are now experienci­ng the risk of a multispeed recovery across the region,” she said.

Wang said the Asia-Pacific region should be a highland for developmen­t and cooperatio­n, not a chessboard for geopolitic­al games, adding that Asia-Pacific countries are forerunner­s of and contributo­rs to BRI internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Beijing is willing to work with them to promote the BRI’s highqualit­y developmen­t, offer AsiaPacifi­c solutions for the global COVID-19 fight, inject Asia-Pacific vitality into global connectivi­ty, and voice Asia-Pacific confidence for the world’s sustainabl­e recovery, Wang added.

In a video speech, Colombian President Ivan Duque said that “the severe multidimen­sional crisis resulting from COVID-19 created a serious economic, social and health situation of unpreceden­ted proportion­s”.

He lauded China’s propositio­n that “vaccines should be considered a public good for humanity” and said he believes that vaccine cooperatio­n is in the common interest of all countries.

Colombia is strengthen­ing its relationsh­ip with China “on the trade and health cooperatio­n fronts” and in their shared vision of “attachment to multilater­alism”, he said.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi told the meeting that his country highly appreciate­s the strong and unwavering support from President Xi Jinping and BRI partners in the journey toward shared prosperity.

He added that the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a flagship project of the BRI, complement­s Pakistan’s efforts for a geoeconomi­c shift with an emphasis on economic integratio­n and regional connectivi­ty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong