Xinhua Insight: Xi's Asia visits highlight "new type of international relations"
Xinhua | 14 October 2016
BEIJING, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) --
Chinese President Xi
Jinping on Thursday started a five-day trip to Southeast and South Asia
which will see him pay state visits to Cambodia and Bangladesh and attend the
8th BRICS summit, in Goa, India.
The visits play a key role in
China's diplomatic efforts in Asia and are part of a move to build a "new
type of international relations" and "a community of common
destiny."
Since 2012, Xi has spoken of a
"community of common destiny" dozens of times, putting the notion at
the heart of China's relations with its neighbors and the international
community at large.
In a speech to present China's views
on the world situation and proposals for peace and development in the world at
large, Xi called for building a new type of international relations featuring
win-win cooperation, and creating "a community of common destiny for
mankind" at the UN headquarters in 2015.
STARTING IN
THE NEIGHBORHOOD
In particular, Xi's visit to
Cambodia will further strengthen pragmatic cooperation and alignment of
respective development strategies, and boost friendship between the two
countries.
China has long signaled that it
welcomes neighboring countries board its "train of development."
In 2015, the Lancang-Mekong
Cooperation mechanism was launched to boost existing cooperation between China
and Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.
Zhong Feiteng, a researcher
with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), said that Xi's visit to
Cambodia showcases China's will to cooperate with mid-sized and small
developing countries in Southeast Asia and South Asia.
"China is willing to let
less developed countries in the region to hitch a hike on the Chinese express
train of development and share its development achievements," Zhong said.
Xi's trip to Bangladesh,
meanwhile, will also chart a course for future bilateral ties, help the two
countries deepen mutual trust, and lift relations between the countries to a
new high.
It will also help push forward
the implementation of the Belt and Road Initiative, in which Bangladesh serves
as an important link.
Xue Li, a researcher with the
Institute of World Economics and Politics at CASS, said that neighborhood
diplomacy has become a prominent priority of China's foreign relations.
China tops the world in the
number of neighboring countries. A sound and stable neighborhood translates to
real benefits for everyone involved.
Xue said that China's rapid
development has benefited its neighbors, but brought about concerns at the same
time.
"Xi's visits will thus
help China deepen political trust and economic cooperation with neighboring
countries, including Cambodia and Bangladesh," Xue said.
SPREADING
'ASIAN STYLE' DIPLOMACY
China has proposed the Belt and
Road Initiative, which consists of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st
Century Maritime Silk Road, involving more than 60 countries and regions and
affecting some 4.4 billion people worldwide.
As of June this year, China has
signed agreements on industrial capacity cooperation with 20 countries along
the routes.
The Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank (AIIB), proposed by China, has been set up to address
infrastructure needs in the region. Already, the AIIB has approved 165 million
dollars in loans for a Bangladeshi project.
At the upcoming summit of
BRICS, which groups Brazil, Russia,
India, China and South Africa, Xi will continue to highlight important plans
for BRICS development to inject enthusiasm into the building of a new type of
international relations.
"Through the BRICS summit,
an important platform of global governance, China's 'Asian style' diplomacy,
featuring mutual respect, seeking consensus through consultations and taking
care of the degree of comfort of all parties, will have significance in the
larger region, said Tao Jian, president of the Beijing-based University of
International Relations.
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