2022-05-11 10:29:21 source: Global Times
China's commitment to multilateralism and opening-up is reassuring to a
world faced with rising security risks, academics and delegates
attending the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) 2022 said on Wednesday, as the
international forum amid a new round of epidemic flare-ups in several
Chinese cities sends a strong positive message to the world.
The
2022 BFA will be held from April 20-22 in Boao, South China's Hainan
Province, with the theme of "The World in COVID-19 and Beyond: Working
Together for Global Development and Shared Future."
Chinese
President Xi Jinping will attend the opening ceremony of the annual
conference of the Boao Forum for Asia via video link and deliver a
keynote speech on Thursday, China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
announced on Wednesday.
It will be the Chinese president's sixth
address at the forum. In 2021, President Xi called on all countries in
Asia and beyond to uphold multilateralism, embrace openness and enhance
the Belt and Road cooperation.
Leaders from Israel, Mongolia,
Nepal, the Philippines, Kazakhstan, and Laos, as well as IMF managing
director Kristalina Georgieva will also attend the forum virtually.
As
the world is undergoing profound changes, the Omicron variant ravaging
many parts of the world and the ongoing escalation of geopolitical
tensions are putting world economic recovery and sustainable development
at bay. Several countries were fighting to be solvent and countries in
Africa are already facing grain shortages in the wake of the
Russia-Ukraine conflict.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesperson said on Wednesday that the BFA reflects the common
aspirations of the international community to win over the pandemic as
soon as possible, jointly develop the economy and improve global
economic governance.
Determination to bridge world
Chen
Yanjun, Director for Annual Conference with the Boao Forum for Asia,
told the Global Times on Wednesday the fact that the BFA was held as
scheduled in the face of the ravaging epidemic shows the confidence of
the Chinese host in preventing cluster outbreaks through strict epidemic
prevention measures.
"Delegates and staff attending the forum
had to take nucleic acid tests three days before and every day during
the forum. Closed-loop management was also conducted during the forum,"
Chen said.
The determination to hold this large-scale
international forum despite the grim situation shows that China still
hopes to make full use of this forum as a platform for communication and
exchanges, and provide an opportunity for political and business
dialogue in Asia and the world to discuss how to strengthen
international cooperation and promote global development in the
post-epidemic era, Chen said.
Leon Wang, executive vice
president of global drug maker AstraZeneca, told the Global Times at the
forum that it also demonstrated China's firm resolve to expand reform
and opening-up and great sense of responsibility through the continued
promotion of international economic exchanges and cooperation.
Cao
Li, Vice President of the Research Institute of BFA, told the Global
Times on Wednesday that against the backdrop of the global epidemic and
the complex international situation, Asian cooperation for global
development has become a stabilizer of multilateralism and a ballast
stone for global economic development.
"Asia accounts for almost
half of the world's economic output and its economic growth is also
faster than the rest of the world. With the advancement of regional
integration, the Asian economy will play a more important role in global
stability," Cao said.
Guo Yanjun, Director of the Institute of
Asian Studies at China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing, said the
forum also shows the importance China attaches to neighborhood
diplomacy.
"China has been vigorously advocating the building of
a community with a shared future for mankind, and China's neighboring
regions, especially the Asian community of shared future, are a pilot
area for China to promote the idea. It is also a crucial region for
China to achieve peaceful development and promote the implementation of
major initiatives and strategies," Guo told the Global Times on
Wednesday.
Through the forum, China can better explain the
country's foreign policy and diplomatic philosophy, and put forward some
Chinese plans and wisdom for promoting the world's economic development
cooperation, the expert said.
Cooperation ensures security
Facing
unprecedented challenges in terms of the pandemic and international
changes, experts and academics said the forum was endowed with a new
responsibility in advocating China's new concept for Asian security that
emphasizes a common, comprehensive, cooperative, and sustainable
approach.
"There are two main forces in the game on global
security. The first is to maintain its own security as the core, to
achieve its own security regardless of the security of other countries,
even if it sacrifices the security of other countries. On the other side
is the new security concept advocated by China, which is supported by
most countries as the concept represents new thinking that rejects any
Cold War mentality," Guo said.
Amid the global security turmoil,
the forum was given a new responsibility to help China advocate its new
security concept, promote the world's security to a right track and
safeguard global stability, Guo said.
Liu Qing, vice president
at the China Institute of International Studies, said although the world
is facing new security threats such as geopolitics games, food security
and a refugee crisis, some Western countries led by the US are still
aiming to seek absolute security, draw water to its own mill, engage in
clique politics and hype great power confrontation.
"Against the
backdrop of spillovers of security issues, the new security concept
advocated by China is very important. The forum is a powerful platform
to convey that China has always been practicing multilateral
cooperation, de-escalation, neighborhood cooperation," Liu said.
Zheng
Yongnian, a professor of political science at the Chinese University of
Hong Kong (Shenzhen), told the Global Times at the forum that the
Russia-Ukraine conflict and the US-led Western sanctions on Russia have
many security implications.
In addition to the proliferation of
weapons and even nuclear weapons, the energy and food crisis were
emerging, and a more serious harm that China should pay special
attention to is some countries' efforts to dismantle the global trade
system, which took many years and global efforts to reach its current
status and is now at the receiving end of wanton weaponization of trade.
Issues
such as the Western sanctions against Russia, not just against the
country but also the Russian people, and the various challenges exposed
in different aspects of national security deserve China's attention and
careful thinking, Zheng said.
China's strength lies in the
resilience of its supply chain, Zheng said, albeit such strength mostly
exists in the lower- and middle-end of the global value chain. China is
more integrated into the global economic system after four decades of
reform and opening-up, the professor said.
Since the pandemic,
many companies have been rethinking their supply chains amid the
fragility exposed under the global pandemic and climate change. Some
countries, such as the US, also acted to politicize and weaponize the
supply chain issue.
Experts attending the forum said the
higher-level of regional integration in Asia stands as a safeguard amid
the current supply chain reshuffle, as companies choose to shorten their
supply chain, but they still tend to keep their supply chain in Asia.
Over
600 delegates from 42 countries and regions are attending BFA 2022
despite the recent epidemic flare-ups in several Chinese cities
including the economic hub Shanghai. Some 700 reporters from 102 media
outlets are attending.
Editor: Fan Wenwu
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