China to host the Biggest Summit of Year on New Silk Road
China's President Xi Jinping during the official welcoming ceremony in front of the Presidential Palace, in Helsinki, Finland April 5, 2017. Lehtikuva/Martti Kainulainen/via REUTERS REUTERS |
BEIJING - China will gather its friends and allies
together for its biggest diplomatic event of the year in May, a summit on its
New Silk Road plan, with most Asian leaders due to attend but only one from a
G7 nation, the Italian prime minister.
President Xi Jinping has championed what China formally
calls the "One Belt, One Road" or OBOR, initiative to build a new
Silk Road linking Asia, Africa and Europe, a landmark program to invest
billions of dollars in infrastructure projects including railways, ports and
power grids.
China has dedicated $40 billion to a Silk Road Fund and the
idea was the driving force behind the establishment of the $50 billion
China-backed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi announced on Tuesday a list of
those attending the conference, including some of China's most reliable allies
- Russian President Vladimir Putin, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev,
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and Indonesian President Joko Widodo are
coming too, all generally good partners of China.
"One Belt, One Road is to date the most important
public good China has given to the world, first proposed by China but for all
countries to enjoy," Wang said.
"The culture and historical genes of One Belt, One Road
come from the old Silk Road, so it takes Eurasia as its main region," he
said, adding that representatives of 110 countries would attend.
While China says the New Silk Road is not political, it has
run into opposition from India due to a section of it in Pakistan, known as the
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, where some projects run through the disputed
Kashmir region.
Wang dismissed those concerns, saying the Pakistan project
had no direct connection to the dispute and India was welcome to participate in
the New Silk Road.
"Indian friends have said to us that One Belt, One Road
is a very good suggestion," he said.
Nevertheless, India Prime Minister Narendra Modi was not on
the list of leaders attending.
Wang also made no mention of any attendance of officials
from Japan, South Korea or North Korea, all countries with which China has
strained ties. Nor was there mention of Australia, a strong U.S. ally that has
close trade links with China.
The list included only one leader from the Group of Seven
(G7) industrialised nations, Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni.
Diplomatic sources in Beijing said China had hoped for at
least some senior Western leaders to attend, including British Prime Minister
Theresa May, to burnish the plan's credentials and make it less China-centric.
British finance minister Philip Hammond will come as May's
representative, while Germany and France are having elections at the time and will
send high-level representatives, Wang said.
Wang confirmed Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte as among
28 leaders coming, along with the Spanish, Greek, Hungarian, Serb and Polish
prime ministers and Swiss and Czech presidents.
"This is a positive, cooperative agreement, and we
don't want to politicize it," Wang told reporters when asked if China was
upset at the absence of most major Western leaders.
"This is an economic cooperation forum, an
international cooperation platform that everyone is paying attention to,
supports and hopes to participate in," he said.
GLOBAL FRIEND
China is sensitive to any suggestion that what it sees as
its benign intentions do not have a receptive global audience, especially in
Western capitals.
China was privately upset in 2015 after most Western leaders
rebuffed invitations to attend a big military parade marking 70 years since the
end of World War Two. Western leaders were unhappy that the guest list that
included Putin and wary of the message China would send with the show of
strength.
While China has portrayed the New Silk Road as a genuine
effort to share the bounty of China's economic development and to fund
infrastructure gaps, many Western countries are concerned about a lack of
detail and transparency in the project and are suspicious about China's broader
political intents.
Diplomatic sources said the presence of Putin and other
leaders from countries with dubious human rights records, like the Philippines
and Central Asian states, had contributed to a reluctance among Western leaders
to attend.
Still, at a time of uncertainty about the U.S. place in the
world following President Donald Trump's pledges to put America first, China
sees an opportunity to become more of a global leader and has found a receptive
audience for its New Silk Road.
Leaders from countries that would appear to have little, if
any, connection so far to the plan are coming to the summit, including Chile
and Argentina.
"Everyone wants to be China's friend now with Trump in
office," said a senior Asian diplomat in Beijing.
A senior Indonesian government official said China was
aiming for a "spectacular" summit.
"The Chinese are gunning for ... global leadership so I
think this OBOR summit is going to be huge," the official said.
Source: (Reuters)
(Additional reporting by John Chalmers in Jakarta; Editing
by Robert Birsel)
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