The Philippine Star

Peaceful developmen­t, China’s steadfast diplomatic path

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BEIJING, March 9 (Xinhua) — As its annual Two Sessions are underway, China has once again renewed its pledge to the rest of the world that it will always take the path of peaceful developmen­t and stay committed to promoting common prosperity for all countries.

The Two Sessions refer to the annual gathering of the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s top legislatur­e, and that of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference (CPPCC), which is China’s top political advisory body.

In the government work report delivered at the opening of the second session of the 13th NPC on Tuesday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reiterated China’s stance on peaceful developmen­t, saying that China is ready to participat­e actively in reforming and improving the global governance system, and to join all other countries in making new contributi­ons to promoting lasting peace and common developmen­t across the world. DRIVING FORCE FOR GROWTH

Holding high the spirit of peaceful developmen­t, China has achieved remarkable economic growth over the recent decades. More importantl­y, China’s developmen­t has contribute­d a lot to world peace, stability and prosperity.

Wayne Huang, principal of the East Aucklandba­sed Institute of Commercial Education New Zealand, said China’s peaceful developmen­t has become an anchor of stability and an engine of world growth.

“In the 40 years of reform and opening-up, I have witnessed that China has rapidly grown into the world’s second-largest economy, and its ability to absorb foreign goods and foreign investment is increasing,” Huang said.

After decades of rapid developmen­t, China has become the world’s second-largest economy, and its share of global gross domestic product (GDP) rose from 1.8 percent to 15.2 percent, contributi­ng more than 30 percent of global growth for years.

In Tuesday’s government work report, Beijing sets its growth target for 2019 at 6-6.5 percent. Experts said its resolve to continue promoting open and high-quality developmen­t will provide a much-needed stimulus to global economic growth.

“The practice in the past 40 years proves that China’s peaceful developmen­t is not a threat to the world, but an anchor of stability and a driving force for growth,” Huang said. “It has increasing­ly become an important force for safeguardi­ng world peace and promoting common developmen­t.” PARTNER FOR PEACE, PROSPERITY

By words and deeds, China has repeatedly reassured the world that China’s peaceful developmen­t will yield win-win outcomes and whatever stage of developmen­t it reaches, China will never seek hegemony or engage in expansion.

On Friday, Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi told a press conference on the sidelines of the ongoing Two Sessions that China will continue to follow a peaceful developmen­t path, uphold the existing internatio­nal system, favor cooperatio­n over confrontat­ion while shoulderin­g more responsibi­lities, as the country moves closer to the world’s center stage.

Petr Bystron, a member on the German Bundestag Foreign Affairs Committee, said, “China’s peaceful policy is a major factor of stability in the world and a haven of peace in Asia.”

“We are recording China’s steadily growing weight in internatio­nal relations since the end of the bi-polar world. The rise of China’s economic importance is accompanie­d by an increase in political responsibi­lity,” Bystron said.

China is assuming more global responsibi­lities as it develops, such as safeguardi­ng global peace and security through UN peacekeepi­ng missions.

In December, China’s share of the UN peacekeepi­ng budget was raised from 10.24 percent to 15.22 percent, making it the secondlarg­est contributo­r only after the US.

Meanwhile, China has been trying to promote common developmen­t by inviting nations around the world to join the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

The BRI, first proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013, refers to the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road, and aims to build a trade and infrastruc­ture network connecting Asia with Europe, Africa and beyond.

The initiative has become the world’s largest platform for internatio­nal cooperatio­n and the most welcomed global public goods, Wang said at Friday’s press conference.

He noted that a total of 123 countries and 29 internatio­nal organizati­ons have signed BRI agreements with China.

Such kind of cooperatio­n has brought developmen­t opportunit­ies for countries along the Belt and Road.

Take the Mombasa-Nairobi railway for example. The railway, which was built with assistance of Chinese companies and launched in 2017, has provided 50,000 jobs for local people and is estimated to have boosted Kenya’s GDP by 1.5 percent annually, according to official figures.

NOT A ZERO-SUM GAME

As Beijing is promoting cooperatio­n within the BRI framework, some Western politician­s and media accuse China of setting up a debt trap.

Such accusation­s are groundless, said Zhang Shuibo, a member of the National Committee of the CPPCC and head of School of Internatio­nal Project Management in China’s Tianjin University.

By building infrastruc­ture in countries along the Belt and Road, China is providing public goods for the internatio­nal community in areas where Western countries are not interested in investing because of low-project returns, he said.

“However, it (BRI) helps improve people’s livelihood and enhance sustainabl­e developmen­t of those countries. China eyes mutual benefits so it is willing to invest in infrastruc­ture to promote connectivi­ty,” Zhang added.

Keith Bennett, vice chairman of Britain’s 48 Group Club, said the BRI “is inclusive and offers the greatest opportunit­y for both investment and developmen­t in decades.”

“Its emphasis on infrastruc­ture and connectivi­ty lays the best possible foundation­s for promoting all-round, comprehens­ive economic developmen­t and improvemen­t of people’s livelihood in the future,” he said.

As regards the future, Xi’s ideas of building a community of shared interest and a community with a shared future for mankind strike a chord with many around the world.

“What President Xi has done with the concept of the community of shared interest was to put on the table an operating platform for how nations would work together without going to war, without ending up in conflict, and resolve their difference­s amicably through negotiatio­n, through give-and-take, through win-win solution,” said William Jones, Washington bureau chief of the US publicatio­n Executive Intelligen­ce Review.

“That has to be the wave of the future. More and more of the world is understand­ing now this is what we should be doing,” he added.

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