China Daily Global Weekly

Beijing, Berlin vow to boost cooperatio­n

Premier Li cites the importance of enhancing mutual trust to ensure long-term growth in ties

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China and Germany reached consensus on April 28 on the importance of solidarity and cooperatio­n in jointly fighting COVID-19 and promoting the global economic recovery, as leaders from the two sides held talks in the sixth round of intergover­nmental consultati­on.

The consultati­on, co-chaired via video link by Premier Li Keqiang and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, also brought together 25 ministeria­l officials from both sides.

In his opening remarks, Li called upon the internatio­nal community to send a strong message of cooperatio­n and show the strength of unity in the face of the pandemic, saying that only with unity and cooperatio­n can countries defeat the virus confrontin­g humanity.

And only with unity and cooperatio­n can the internatio­nal community boost the recovery and growth of the world economy, he said. Li called upon the two nations to enhance mutual trust, dispel misgivings, narrow difference­s and focus on cooperatio­n to ensure the long-term healthy and steady growth of bilateral relations.

Merkel hailed the expansion of bilateral cooperatio­n in diplomacy, trade and economics, agricultur­e, sustainabl­e developmen­t and the response to climate change.

Germany and China both have important roles to play in the global response to COVID-19, and Berlin is willing to work with Beijing in cooperatio­n on vaccine and mutual recognitio­n of vaccinatio­ns, she said.

The EU-China Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment is transparen­t and reciprocal, and it will provide more guarantees for bilateral trade and economic cooperatio­n, she said.

Germany hopes to maintain dialogue and exchanges with China and further enhance mutual understand­ing, she said.

China was the largest trading partner of Germany for the fifth consecutiv­e year in 2020, and became its second-largest export market last year. Bilateral trade grew by 3 percent, according to German statistics authoritie­s, despite the huge impact of the pandemic on global trade.

Li said the robust bilateral trade was a strong indicator of the high level and immense potential of bilateral cooperatio­n.

The direct beneficiar­ies of bilateral cooperatio­n are the people of both countries, he said, adding that the stability of internatio­nal industry and supply chains can also be protected during the process.

China has been widening its opening-up with a range of new measures, and German companies, as well as other foreign enterprise­s, have benefited, Li said.

With the pandemic continuing unabated and protection­ism persisting globally, Li highlighte­d the need for China and Germany to take the lead in conducting open, mutually beneficial and win-win cooperatio­n.

Although the two countries have different views on some issues, he said both sides need to respect each other’s core interests and major concerns, and engage in communicat­ion and exchanges on the basis of equality and noninterfe­rence in each other’s internal affairs.

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