Want China
Times, Xinhua 2013-10-09
| Chinese premier Li Keqiang, touring for closer ASEAN-China ties. (Photo/Xinhua) |
China's
premier Li Keqiang started a three-nation tour to Southeast Asia on Wednesday,
following in the footstep of Chinese president Xi Jinping, who just wrapped up
his visit to Indonesia and Malaysia.
The highly
frequent visits by the two top Chinese leaders, who visited five out of 10
countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) within two
weeks, demonstrated the importance China attaches to ASEAN and its efforts to
push forward common development, observers said.
Xu Liping,
a researcher with the Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies under the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, said China is moving to consolidate a stable ASEAN
partnership through a multi-level approach.
Xu said
trade is only one component of China-ASEAN ties. Infrastructure and
people-to-people exchanges are new initiatives that China is taking in building
a "diamond decade," which Li proposed last month in a keynote speech
at the 10th China-ASEAN Expo.
The
infrastructure projects, such as the proposed pan-Asia railway network, once
completed, will bring about tangible benefits to countries concerned and their
people, Xu said.
Citing a
research by Xiamen University of China, Xu said about 70 to 80% of overseas
Chinese are in Southeast Asia, and they have, for many years, played a positive
role in promoting economic and trade exchanges between China and the Southeast
Asian countries.
"Having
such a large number of overseas Chinese (in the Southeast Asian countries) is a
unique advantage of China in boosting people-to-people exchanges," Xu
said.
"China's
development needs a peaceful neighboring environment and China's
good-neighborly policy toward ASEAN is not a matter of expediency, but a
long-term strategic choice," Ruan Zongze, a researcher with the China
Institute of International Studies, said.
Apart from
Brunei, Li will visit Thailand and Vietnam and attend the 16th China-ASEAN
leaders' meeting, the 16th ASEAN plus three (China, Japan and South Korea)
summit and the 8th East Asia Summit.
In Brunei,
Li is to explain the policy on ASEAN implemented by the new Chinese leadership
and China's views on further enhancing China-ASEAN political security, economic
and trade cooperation, infrastructure connectivity, maritime cooperation and
people-to-people exchanges, China's vice foreign minister Liu Zhenmin said.
The Chinese
premier will also explore new possibilities for cooperation with ASEAN leaders,
including the signing of a China-ASEAN treaty on good-neighborliness and
friendly cooperation, upgrading the China-ASEAN free trade area and the
creation of an Asia infrastructure investment bank, Liu said.
Meanwhile,
China has also proposed to set 2014 as the year of China-ASEAN cultural
exchanges, and the country promised to offer ASEAN members 15,000 government
scholarships over the next three to five years.
The past
decade of China-ASEAN cooperation has witnessed a remarkable increase in
bilateral trade, which surged from US$54.77 billion in 2002 to US$400.1 billion
in 2012, an annual growth rate of 22%.
The
bilateral trade volume is expected to reach US$500 billion before 2015 and
China has become the biggest trading partner and largest source of tourists for
ASEAN.
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