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by Huang Haimin Bui Minhlong
HANOI, Sept. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- One Chinese province and four Vietnamese northern localities
are pulling their socks up to build an economic corridor to broaden
and deepen multi-faceted ties between the two countries under a medium-and
long-term plan worked out by the two governments.
Top leaders of China's Yunnan Province and the four Vietnamese cities and
provinces of Hanoi, Hai Phong, Quang Ninh and Lao Cai gathered here early this
month for their first meeting on the issue, touching measures to facilitate the
construction of the economic corridor involving Yunnan's capital city Kunming
and the four localities, mainly by giving a boost to transport, trade, tourism
and investment.
The medium-and long-term plan also includes another economic corridor
involving Nanning city in China's Guangxi province and the three Vietnamese
localities of Lang Son, Hanoi and Hai Phong, and the Beibu Gulf economic belt.
Under the meeting's minute signed by Yunnan's Governor Xu Rongkai and chairmen
of People's Committees of the four Vietnamese cities and provinces on
Sept. 3, the five localities agreed to cooperate in turning the Kunming-Lao
Cai-Hanoi-Hai Phong-Quang Ninh economic corridor into one of key routes in
economic development ties between China and Vietnam in the principles of free
will, equality and win-win relation.
Specifically, the five localities will focus their cooperation on
facilitating bilateral trade via the international border gate of Lao Cai-Hekou,
developing international tourism routes involving China, Vietnam and some other
regional countries, conducting trade and investment promotion programs, and
proposing the two governments raise transport capacity of road and railway
networks in the corridor.
During the meeting, the five top leaders mentioned the necessity of
upgrading the road route of Lao Cai-Hanoi-Quang Ninh,and the two possibilities
of upgrading the existing rail route from Hanoi to Lao Cai, and building a new
one to satisfy higher demand for transporting cargoes, especially goods from the
Hai Phong seaport in Hai Phong city and the Cai Lan seaport in Quang Ninh
province to China through the international border gate of Lao Cai-Hekou and in
the reverse direction.
Yunnan and Lao Cai authorities are working together to permit automobiles
of one province carrying passengers, fresh vegetables,fruits or frozen seafood
to travel deep into the territory of the other province in the next few months
to cut costs for their enterprises and visitors, said Bui Quang Vinh, chairman
of the LaoCai People's Committee.
Lao Cai is scheduled to start building a 20-meter wide bridge, the widest one
in Vietnam, to connect its trade area with the Chinese province in late 2004,
and put into operation an inland container depot with a daily capacity of 1,000
containers in early 2005, he added.
Regarding trade facilitation, the chairmen of the four Vietnamese
localities, in a meeting in mid-August 2004, agreed to propose the State Bank of
Vietnam allow commercial banks in their territories to join hands with
commercial banks in Yunnan on international payment in the mode of letters of
credit (L/C) in local currencies.
Commercial banks in Lao Cai and their partners in the Chinese province
began issuing L/C in Vietnam dong or yuan in December 2003, facilitating and
securing transactions between Vietnamese and Chinese enterprises, Vinh said,
noting that Lao Cai is now theonly locality in Vietnam to have applied such kind
of payment mode.
In the near future, the Vietnamese Ministry of Trade is expected to take
new measures to strengthen Vietnam-China trade through the international border
gate of Lao Cai-Hekou, such as the establishment of trade centers and
supermarkets adjacent to bordering areas, the organization of fairs, forums and
exhibitions,and the exchange of trade information.
Concerning customs and entry-exit procedures, the top leaders of Yunnan and
four Vietnamese localities agreed to simplify procedures and facilitate the flow
of tourists and entrepreneurs via border gates.
Lao Cai has already proposed the Vietnam Department General of Customs
carry out the "one-time" inspection of goods at the bordergate, under which
Vietnamese and Chinese customs will jointly inspect the goods and verify the
inspection results.
In a bigger move, the five localities agreed to launch tourism routes
linking Chinese localities such as Yunnan and Beijing with Vietnam, Laos,
Myanmar and Thailand.
Yunnan attaches great importance to cooperation with the four Vietnamese
northern cities and provinces, especially Lao Cai and Hanoi, Xu Rongkai said,
noting that the two-way trade between the Chinese province and Vietnam rose 36
percent to 220 million US dollars last year.
The trade is likely to reach 300 million dollars this year and 500 million
dollars next year, he said, hoping it will account forat least 10 percent of the
total import-export turnover of China and Vietnam in the near future.
Now, major Vietnamese goods entering China via border gates include
seafood, fruits grown in the northern and southern deltas,consumer goods like
detergents, plastic wares, footwear, confectioneries, processed coffee and tea,
and materials such as latex, unprocessed cashew nuts and dried cassava.
Yunnan in particular and the Chinese southwestern region in general supply
Vietnam with machines, equipment, metal tools, chemicals, coke, clinker and
agricultural strains such as potatoes,hybrid rice, flowers and fruits.
According to economists, once completed, the economic corridor will help
Vietnam boost exports to China, especially in its western and southwestern
regions. It also complies with China's strategy on encouraging its enterprises
to do businesses abroad, stepping up trade and investment ties between China and
Vietnam aswell as other Southeast Asian countries.
In recent years, the trade and economic relations
between China and Vietnam have seen remarkable development. Their bilateral
trade, which reached about 4.6 billion US dollars last year, is expected to
surpass 5 billion dollars this year. The two countries have targeted trade
revenues of 10 billion dollars in 2010. Enditem |