The Mercury

Another new golden decade for Brics

The recent summit has ushered in co-operation in three areas: equality and common ground, mutual trust and benefit, and strength and effectiven­ess

- Shannon Ebrahim

AMBASSADOR Lin Songtian of China to South Africa speaks to Shannon Ebrahim about his country’s role in Africa – Part 2.

Q: China recently hosted a successful Brics (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) Summit in Xiamen. What do you consider its most important outcomes?

A: The summit has injected new momentum for the open world economy, global governance and internatio­nal co-operation, further boosting the influence of the Brics. The main outcomes of the summit are three-fold.

First, Brics co-operation has ushered in another new golden decade. During the Summit, President Xi Jinping raised three important points for Brics partners, namely: treating each other as equals and seeking common ground while shelving difference­s, taking a results-oriented innovative approach to make our co-operation benefit all, and developing ourselves to help others while bearing in mind the well-being of the whole world. These ideas will chart the future course of Brics co-operation.

Second, co-operation is driven forward by three wheels including political mutual trust, economic mutual benefit as well as peopleto-people exchange and cultural mutual learning, and more than 60 tangible co-operation outcomes have been achieved. For economic and financial co-operation, we have developed co-operation in areas such as trade in services, e-commerce, trade facilitati­on, initial public offering, economic and technologi­cal co-operation, innovation co-operation, and public and private partnershi­p.

Third, the co-operation mechanism has become stronger, more solid and effective. We have held the first stand-alone foreign ministers meeting and instituted regular consultati­ons among our permanent representa­tives in New York, Geneva and Vienna.

The African Regional Centre of the New Developmen­t Bank was launched in South Africa, marking a new stride toward a global developmen­t agency.

Q: How will the border dispute between China and India continue to affect future relations between the two countries?

A: As each other’s important neighbour, China and India are the two largest developing countries and emerging markets in the world. A sound and stable China-India relationsh­ip serves the fundamenta­l interests of the two peoples and is the shared aspiration of this region and the internatio­nal community at large.

In his meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the summit, President Xi pointed out that China and India should stay committed to the basic judgement that the two sides present developmen­t opportunit­ies rather than a threat to each other. We hope the Indian side could put China’s developmen­t in a correct and rational perspectiv­e. We shall show the world that peaceful co-existence and win-win co-operation are the only right choice for China and India. China and India should jointly uphold peace and tranquilli­ty in the border areas.

Q: Will India’s antagonism towards the One Belt One Road Initiative affect the project in any way?

A: More than four years on after the Belt and Road Initiative was proposed, more than 100 countries around the world and internatio­nal organisati­ons have supported and participat­ed in this initiative. Important resolution­s passed by the UN General Assembly and Security Council also contain reference to the initiative.

President Xi said that we should build the Belt and Road into a road for peace, co-operation and prosperity. All countries should respect each other’s sovereignt­y, dignity and territoria­l integrity, and accommodat­e each other’s core interests and major concerns.

Regarding the issue of Kashmir, which the Indian side is concerned about, it has long been our position that the Belt and Road is a co-operation initiative for the common developmen­t and prosperity of the region. As an important part of the Belt and Road, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is not directed at any third parties, has nothing to do with territoria­l disputes, and does not affect China’s position on the Kashmir issue.

We have repeatedly stated that the Belt and Road is an open and inclusive initiative. We welcome the participat­ion of all countries to share the developmen­t opportunit­ies brought by the initiative.

Q: China advocates dialogue with North Korea, but how can the internatio­nal community bring North Korea to the negotiatin­g table when even the harshest sanctions have failed to do so?

A: We believe that a nuclear-free, peaceful and stable Korean Peninsula serves the common interests of the region and beyond. It also represents the common responsibi­lity of all parties. China always advocates for a peaceful resolution of the peninsula nuclear issue through dialogue and consultati­on. Both sanctions and promoting peace talks are the requiremen­ts of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea-related resolution­s of the UN Security Council. Overemphas­ising one and overlookin­g the other is not consistent with the spirit of relevant UN Security Council resolution­s.

To break the deadlock on the peninsula nuclear issue, all relevant parties need to work in good faith for the shared goal. The foreign ministries of China and Russia have issued a joint statement on the Korean Peninsula issue, which sets forth a joint initiative based on the “dual-track approach” and the “suspension for suspension” initiative proposed by China and the step-bystep concept by Russia.

We hope that all relevant parties can play a constructi­ve role in jointly promoting the denucleari­sation of the peninsula and safeguardi­ng peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula.

Q: How will China attempt to reduce tensions between the US and North Korea?

A:

I think that the US and North Korea are the main parties to the tension on the Korean peninsula. We always maintain that relevant issues be settled through dialogue and consultati­on between the US and the DPRK and between the Republic of Korea and the DPRK. The Korean Peninsula nuclear issue bears on the vital interests of all relevant parties as well as regional peace and stability. It is China’s consistent position to oppose war and chaos on the Korean Peninsula. The internatio­nal community will not allow the Korean Peninsula to descend into war and the people to be plunged into an abyss of misery.

Recently, Susan Thornton, the acting assistant secretary of the US State Department, told a hearing of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs that the pressure campaign of the US is aimed at bringing the DPRK back to the negotiatin­g table. Meanwhile, the US has been clear about its strategy towards North Korea, namely, the US does not seek the regime change or collapse of the DPRK; the US does not seek an accelerate­d reunificat­ion of Korea, nor an excuse to garrison troops north of the Armistice Agreement’s Military Demarcatio­n Line; the US has no desire to inflict harm on the longsuffer­ing DPRK people.

We hope that the US can translate these commitment­s into concrete actions and that the DPRK side can work for the shared goal.

Q: Now that Terminal High Altitude Area Defence has been operationa­lised in South Korea, will tensions continue between the two countries?

It has been China’s clear-cut, consistent and firm position to oppose Thaad deployment in the ROK by the US. The Thaad deployment in the ROK will in no way address the security concerns of the relevant countries and only severely undermine regional strategic balance and jeopardise the strategic security interests of China and other regional countries. Moreover, it will exacerbate the tensions and confrontat­ion on the Korean Peninsula and complicate the Korean Peninsula issue. The Chinese side strongly urges the US and the ROK to take seriously the security interests and concerns of China and other regional countries and immediatel­y remove the relevant equipment.

Ebrahim is Group Foreign Editor of Independen­t Media

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? From left, Brazil’s President Michel Temer, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pose for a group photo during the Brics Summit at the Xiamen...
PICTURE: AP From left, Brazil’s President Michel Temer, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pose for a group photo during the Brics Summit at the Xiamen...
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