Nations reap benefits from BRI projects

BEIJING: Nicaraguan Ambassador to China Michael Campbell has been a keen advocate for the Belt and Road Initiative, which was proposed by President Xi Jinping in 2013.
On multiple occasions, he has called the BRI “an emblematic, groundbreaking proposal for the world”. The Central American country was a guest country of honor at the seventh China International Import Expo in Shanghai last month, and the ambassador helped promote beef, seafood and coffee from his country.
“Nicaragua is a part of China’s emblematic cooperation programs such as the Belt and Road Initiative and the Global Development Initiative,” he told China Daily.
“We subscribe to the efforts that China does to create a more multipolar world — a world of peace, justice and equality,” he added.
As of last month, more than 150 countries and over 30 international organizations have signed Belt and Road cooperation documents with China, and this cooperation has created more than 420,000 local jobs in partner countries, according to China’s Foreign Ministry.
The Institute of Party History and Literature of the Communist Party of China Central Committee has defined joint building of the Belt and Road as “a major innovative move of major country diplomacy with Chinese characteristics in the new era”.
Jointly building the Belt and Road is “a major decision made to promote win-win cooperation and common development between China and the world”, the institute said in an article published by People’s Daily in April.
So far, Belt and Road cooperation has galvanized nearly $1 trillion in investment globally and lifted 40 million people out of poverty, according to the Foreign Ministry. Liu Weimin, China’s ambassador to Tonga, wrote in an article last month that “as Belt and Road cooperation has entered its second decade, new opportunities are emerging”.
Since 2013, Belt and Road cooperation has spanned from the Eurasian region to Africa, Oceania and Latin America.
Within the BRI framework, a global network of connectivity is taking shape, consisting of economic corridors, international transportation routes and information highways, and a large number of signature projects and “small yet smart” people-centered programs have been launched, analysts noted.
“The BRI has delivered remarkable increases in connectivity,” London-based think tank ODI Global said in a report released in September. The BRI and China’s financing “have played an instrumental role “in closing the infrastructure financing gap in many developing countries, and the partner countries’ own domestic situations “will remain a crucial factor in determining the outcomes of the BRI”, the report said.
Last month in Lima, Peru, President Xi and Peruvian President Dina Ercilia Boluarte Zegarra attended the opening ceremony of Chancay Port, a flagship BRI project, via video link. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item