China Daily Global Weekly

Better to be friends than rivals

China, UK need to jointly tackle the pandemic, build a global community of health for all

- By LIU XIAOMING The author is the Chinese ambassador to the United Kingdom. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

At the dawn of the third decade of the 21st century, the worst pandemic in 100 years ravaged the world, precipitat­ing the profound changes unseen in a century and posing unpreceden­ted challenges to the world.

The grave pandemic situation calls on all countries to bear in mind the larger picture and do the right thing.

It is in this spirit that China and the United Kingdom have come to each other’s assistance and fought the pandemic hand in hand, strengthen­ing the response at home and abroad, and contributi­ng to the building of a community with a shared future for mankind.

There have been five highlights in China-UK cooperatio­n:

First, there has been close highlevel communicat­ion, ensuring coordinati­on of their public health responses. At the beginning of the outbreak, President Xi Jinping and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson had two telephone conversati­ons in a little over one month, during which they built up consensus and charted the course for China-UK cooperatio­n.

President Xi stressed that viruses know no borders or races, and the only way to defeat them is working together.

Vice Premier Hu Chunhua, Yang Jiechi, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Minister of the National Health Commission Ma Xiaowei have maintained communicat­ion with UK counterpar­ts to fully implement the important agreements reached between President Xi and Prime Minister Johnson.

The Chinese embassy in the UK has also enhanced communicat­ion and coordinati­on with government department­s and local government­s in the UK in order to enhance ChinaUK cooperatio­n both bilaterall­y and multilater­ally.

Second, there have been closer exchanges of experience in prevention and control which has led to better results.

Health officials, medical profession­als and frontline health workers from China and the UK have readily shared their diagnosis, treatment and prevention experience­s.

Not long ago, the National Health Commission of China and the Department of Health and Social Care of the UK held the fifth China-UK Health Dialogue, where the two sides had in-depth exchanges of views on prevention and control measures, World Health Organizati­on reform and support for response in developing countries.

This was a reiteratio­n that China and the UK will continue stepping up cooperatio­n to safeguard the health of the people in our two countries and beyond.

Third, there has been deeper cooperatio­n on scientific research that has brought together the respective strengths of both countries.

Chinese universiti­es and research institutio­ns have carried out effective cooperatio­n with the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge and Imperial College London on tests, medicines and vaccines.

Businesses of the two countries have also taken an active part. A rapid COVID-19 test developed by a joint team from the Oxford Suzhou Centre for Advanced Research and Oxford’s Department of Engineerin­g Science has been put to use in Heathrow Airport and some communitie­s, hospitals, schools and large-scale event venues in the UK and has achieved good effects.

Fourth, there has been mutual assistance in supplies and mutual goodwill in times of hardship.

At the height of China’s fight against the virus in Wuhan, the UK government sent two shipments of badly-needed medical supplies to China and British people from all walks of life donated funds and supplies.

When the virus spread in the UK, Chinese government­s at various levels, businesses and ordinary citizens donated medical supplies to reciprocat­e the kindness of the British people.

A joint team from Shandong province came to the UK and brought critical supplies, including ventilator­s, when the UK was at a critical point in its response to the virus. Despite the shortage of supplies at home, the Chinese side assisted the UK side in procuring more than 100 million medical items.

Fifth, there has been a firm joint commitment to multilater­alism and internatio­nal responsibi­lities.

China and the UK have made vigorous efforts to enhance global cooperatio­n in response to the pandemic and global governance on public health. Both countries have supported the WHO playing a central role in the global health crisis.

Premier Li Keqiang attended the Global Vaccine Summit and worked with the UK and other participat­ing parties to raise funds for the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizati­on.

The two countries joined the COVID-19 Vaccine Implementa­tion Plan to promote fair distributi­on of vaccines around the world.

They have also taken vigorous measures to implement the G20

Debt Service Suspension Initiative to provide support for the response of developing countries.

Recently, new cooperatio­n projects in pandemic response and healthcare were launched to improve the virus management and control capacity of primary healthcare institutio­ns and to provide support for the wide applicatio­n of vaccines, diagnostic methods and treatment.

A webinar was also held to discuss tripartite cooperatio­n between China, the UK and Africa.

Unavoidabl­y, the pandemic affected the business cooperatio­n and personnel exchanges between China and the UK in 2020. However, as China effectivel­y placed the virus under control and got the economy back on track, China-UK business cooperatio­n has shown a momentum of steady growth.

The year 2021 has historic significan­ce for both China and the UK: China will embark on a new journey of implementi­ng the 14th Five Year Plan (2021-25) and building a modern socialist country in all aspects; the UK, having completed Brexit, will enter a new stage of building a “Global Britain”.

There will be new opportunit­ies for the relationsh­ip this year, and there will be enormous potential and promising prospects for China-UK cooperatio­n in trade, investment, financial services, science and technology, education and healthcare, as well as in safeguardi­ng multilater­alism, fighting against the pandemic, addressing climate change, upholding free trade and promoting the global recovery.

In particular, China and the UK will host the 15th Conference of the Parties to Convention on Biodiversi­ty and the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties in May and November, respective­ly. The two sides are enhancing communicat­ion and coordinati­on on global environmen­tal protection and climate response.

Despite all these positive factors, 2020 was not without tests for the relationsh­ip.

A series of wrong remarks and actions by the UK side on issues related to the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region and the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region caused severe difficulti­es for bilateral relations.

Will the relationsh­ip return to the normal track and will cooperatio­n resume in the new year?

This will, to a large extent, depend on whether the UK sees China as a partner or a rival, respects China’s core interests and major concerns, and abides by the basic norms governing internatio­nal relations, including non-interferen­ce in each other’s internal affairs. The ball is in the court of the UK side.

Winter will end and spring will arrive. As I am about to complete my tour of duty in the UK, where I have served as Chinese ambassador for 11 years, I would like to express my two wishes for the China-UK relationsh­ip.

First, I hope China and the UK will continue to deepen their pandemic response cooperatio­n, promoting the research and fair distributi­on of vaccines and contributi­ng to an early global victory.

Second, I hope China and the UK will deepen mutual trust, resist disruption­s and guard against “political viruses” in the spirit of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit, so as to ensure the sound and steady developmen­t of our relationsh­ip and jointly promote the building of a global community of health for all.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

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