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Chinese President Hu Jintao (1st L)
hosts a welcoming ceremony for South African President Thabo Mbeki at the
Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Nov. 6, 2006. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo Gallery
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Chinese, South
African presidents stress partnership
BEIJING, Nov. 6 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President
Hu Jintao and South African President Thabo Mbeki agreed here on Monday the two
countries would work together to promote development of a new type of
China-Africa strategic partnership and enhance coordination and collaboration in
international affairs.
Bilateral relations have maintained all-round and
rapid development since China and South Africa established diplomatic ties nine
years ago, Hu said during talks with Mbeki Monday morning in the Great Hall of
the People in central Beijing.
"The two sides have established strategic partnership
and our cooperation has been fruitful in politics, trade and economy, science
and technology, culture, education, tourism and human resources," he said,
adding that the two countries have also collaborated closely in major regional
and international issues.
The two presidents reached extensive consensus on
enhancing their countries' long-term and stable strategic partnership on the
basis of equality, mutual benefits and common development.
"It serves the fundamental interests of the two
countries and peoples. It is conducive to world peace and development, too," he
said.
Hu made four proposals to that effect.
"Firstly, we should enhance political trust and
strategic consultation; maintain the momentum of high-level contacts; fully
exploit the roles of bilateral exchange mechanism and promote all-round
reciprocal cooperation," he said.
Secondly, Hu proposed the two countries to take their
respective advantages and bring trade and economic cooperation to a new level.
"We should encourage and support two-way investment, optimize trade structure
and ensure the sound and smooth development of bilateral trade," he said.
Thirdly, China and Africa need to carry out
diplomatic consultation and enhance coordination and collaboration.
"The Chinese side supports South Africa's efforts in
promoting unity and cooperation among the developing countries," Hu said. "We
are willing to enhance communication and exchanges with South Africa, intensify
coordination and collaboration on the UN affairs and work together to maintain
the legitimate rights and interests of the developing countries."
Fourthly, Hu proposed the two countries increase
personnel and cultural exchanges so as to cement the social foundation for the
development of China-Africa ties. "We hope the two sides expand exchanges and
cooperation in diverse sectors including education, human resources, health,
culture, sports, academics, media and tourism."
The Chinese president also voiced appreciation for
South Africa's adherence to the one-China policy and active support to China's
reunification.
Mbeki actively responded to Hu's four-point
proposals. He said that the year 2008 will mark the 10th anniversary of the
inauguration of diplomatic ties of the two countries. South Africa hopes the two
sides review the development progress of bilateral ties and deepen the
cooperation between the two countries.
He said that South Africa and China will carry out
the cooperation plan on deepening the strategic partnership, and promote the
cooperation in the fields of trade, investment, human resources, culture and
sports.
South Africa welcomes Chinese enterprises to bid for
the construction of the stadium for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, the
president said.
On South-South cooperation and the Forum on
China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), Hu said that the developing countries cannot
have a bright future without strengthening cooperation with each other.
China proposes that the developing countries
strengthen dialogue and expand cooperation, actively protect their own common
interests, explore potential, create new modes of cooperation, expand trade and
investment, strengthen negotiations and coordination, actively participate in
the enacting of international economic rules, and push forward the economic
globalization in the direction of balanced, generally beneficial and win-win
development, Hu said.
China is willing to cooperate with the developing
countries including South Africa to push forward the construction of a peaceful,
prosperous and harmonious world, and implement the results achieved during the
Beijing Summit of the FOCAC, Hu said.
Mbeki said the Beijing Summit is a great success.
Sino-African relations have drawn world's attention. South Africa hopes to
strengthen negotiations with China to demonstrate to the world that cooperation
between China and South Africa will benefit not only the two countries but also
the whole world as well.
Before the meeting, Hu held a welcoming ceremony for
President Mbeki, who arrived here on Friday to attend the Beijing Summit and pay
a state visit to China at Hu's invitation.
Also Monday morning, Mbeki met with China's top
legislator Wu Bangguo and Premier Wen Jiabao, respectively.
Mbeki, who arrived Friday for a state visit at Hu's
invitation, was among 41 African heads of state or government and senior
officials from 48 African countries that have established diplomatic ties with
China at the landmark Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation.
The forum, the highest-profile gathering between
Chinese and African leaders, concluded Sunday after a declaration and an action
plan for 2007-2009 had been adopted.
South Africa established diplomatic relations with China on January 1, 1998. The two countries established a strategic partnership focusing on equality, mutual benefit and common development in 2004.
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