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Wu Bangguo (1st R), chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress of China (NPC), pays a visit to the manufacturing center of Gree ELectrical Appliances Inc. in Manaus, capital of the Brazilian State of Amazonas Sept. 3, 2006. Wu visited some Chinese-funded companies Sunday in Manaus. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery >>> |
BRASILIA, Sept. 3 (Xinhua) -- China's top legislator
Wu Bangguo finished on Sunday his six-day official visit to Brazil, which
represented a step further in the consolidation of the two countries strategic
alliance.
The visit marked the continuation
of the process initiated in 2004, when, at the celebration of the 20th
anniversary of the establishment of bilateral diplomatic relations, China's
President Hu Jintao and Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva exchanged
State visits and vowed to strengthen the friendship and cooperation between the
two countries.
Wu, chairman of the Standing Committee of China's
National People's Congress (NPC), visited the cities of Brasilia, Sao Pauloand
Manaus. In the Brazilian capital, he was welcomed by President Lula and the top
authorities of the Brazilian Congress, the President of the House of
Representatives Aldo Rebelo and the President of the Senate Renan Calheiros.
On Wednesday, an agreement on the exchange of
information between the House of Representatives and China's NPC was signed, the
first accord of its kind China has signed with a Latin American country. When he
talked about the friendly links between the two nations, Representative Rebelo
stressed China's contribution to keep the balance of the world that tends
towards an unilateral approach.
In Rebelos words, China and Brazil can significantly
help their own people, but they can together help even more, the whole humanity.
Rebelo said he favors a broader bilateral
cooperation, which must not be confined to the diplomatic field and must be
extended to all levels, institutions and organizations of the society.
Wu and Calheiros had a meeting, in which they
stressed the two countries cooperates with each other on major world issues.
The NPC president said both Brazil and China are
advocating protecting the interests of countries in development. The two
countries, he added, favor the democratization of world relations and the
construction of a world with several poles, where the cultural diversity is
respected.
The technical and scientific cooperation between
Brazil and China, Wu said, is a bright spot of their bilateral relation. He
mentioned the launching of two binational satellites and said the countries will
continue their cooperate in the space program field.
On Wednesday afternoon, at a meeting with President
Lula in Palacio do Planalto, the headquarters of the Brazilian government, the
two countries signed an agreement under which China will buy 100 jets of
Brazilian Embraer.
The deal between Embraer and Chinese group HNA
amounts to some 2.7 billion U.S. dollars. The delivery of the jets will begin
next year and last for five years.
Other four agreements between Brazilian and Chinese
companies were also signed, relating to the aviation, telephony and
infrastructure sectors. One of these deals was also signed by Embraer that
extended its joint-venture with Chinese Avic II.
Wu had a meeting on Friday with Latin American
Parliaments President Ney Lopes, in Sao Paulo. During the meeting, Lopes
stressed the Latin American Parliament and himself favor the One China policy
and oppose the independence of Taiwan.
The decision of the Latin American Parliament in 2004
to grant the NPC observer status, he said, was an important step.
From Sao Paulo, Wu traveled to the city of Manaus,
capital of the Brazilian State of Amazonas, in which China has important
investments.
The Amazonas state Governor Eduardo Braga expressed
his hope that the visit of Wu will boost the bilateral cooperation in the
electronics, lumber, petro chemical and tourist sectors.
Wu left Manaus for Uruguay for a three-day visit, and
he will then go to Chile, the last leg of his South American tour.
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