Special Report: The 7th Asia-Europe Meeting Summit
BEIJING, Oct. 23 (Xinhua) -- Asian and European
leaders on Thursday discussed solutions for stemming the financial chaos
sweeping the world, one day ahead of a regional summit in Beijing that will
tackle the financial woes.
"The current world economic situation is grim and
complicated," Chinese President Hu Jintao said in meeting with Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Thursday morning.
"The emerging markets and developing countries are
confronted with financial risks, weak foreign demand and mounting inflation," he
said, referring to the ongoing financial crisis triggered by U.S. credit crunch.
Hu and Susilo agreed on jointly responding to the
crisis and ensuring financial stability and the economic soundness in Asia.
While delivering a speech at Peking University in the
afternoon, Susilo called on every nation to mobilize their available resources
and negotiate about a solution for the financial turmoil.
The same subject was brought up repeatedly at a
series of leaders' meetings and speeches on Thursday, as the upcoming
Asia-Europe Meeting(ASEM) summit provided a timely opportunity for the region's
leaders to meet face-to-face to seek solutions to the crisis.
"We sink together or we swim together," European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told a press conference on Thursday
afternoon.
The financial turbulence, which broke out amid the
globalization drive, was transnational and thus requires more international
efforts, said Barroso while giving a speech at the National School of
Administration.
He also stressed China's significant contribution to
the world economy.
"We need a coordinated global response to reform the
global financial system. We are living in unprecedented times, and we need
unprecedented levels of global coordination," the former Portuguese prime
minister told reporters after landing in Beijing.
With the largest gathering of Asian and European
leaders due on Friday, a string of foreign dignitaries had streamed into the
Chinese capital since Tuesday. These included Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso,
President of Republic of Korea (ROK) Lee Myung-bak and Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh.
French President Nicholas Sarkozy was among those
arriving on Friday.
Launched in 1996 as an informal dialogue mechanism,
ASEM now included 45 members, a body representing more than 50 percent of the
world's gross domestic product.
The European side is represented by 27 European Union
nations and the European Commission. The Asian members count 10 countries of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus China, Japan, ROK, India,
Pakistan, Mongolia and the ASEAN Secretariat.
With the world preoccupied with the financial
turmoil, the two-day summit will also draw the leaders' attention to other
topics of energy, climate change and food security.
China will put forward a proposal on building an
eco-city network in Asia, while France, which holds the rotating European Union
presidency, will present a statement on climate change.
The biennial summit also offered host China an
opportunity to step up relations with other ASEM members as the country's top
leadership was engaged in intensive one-on-one meetings on Thursday.
Premier Wen Jiabao gave a red-carpet welcome to
German Chancellor Angela Merkel before their 90-minute talk in the Great Hall of
the People in downtown Beijing.
"China and Germany are reviving their relations," Wen
told Merkel, citing the record bilateral trade volume and active cultural and
people exchange.
He proposed the two countries respect mutual
concerns, expand common ground and enhance their coordination on global issues,
such as the ongoing financial chaos.
Merkel's visit was widely seen to mend a yearlong
period of soured ties, frayed by her meeting with the Dalai Lama in September
2007.
"Cooperation with China is of utmost importance" for
Germany, Merkel told reporters after the talks.
On Thursday, China and Singapore signed a free trade
agreement to bolster their economies, which President Hu Jintao said signaled
that "economic ties between the two countries have entered a new stage."
On the ASEM summit sidelines, the Chinese leadership
will on Friday meet one-on-one with Aso, who was paying his first visit to the
country since taking office last month.
They are scheduled to attend a celebration marking
the 30 year anniversary of the China-Japan friendly relations treaty.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said
on Thursday evening "there wasn't any anti-U.S. sentiment within ASEM," in
response to a question on why the United States was not included in the upcoming
summit.
"All ASEM members value their cooperation with the
United States, particularly in the face of the current financial crisis," he
said.
The leaders of the G20, which groups major industrial
countries and big emerging economies, will meet in Washington D.C. on Nov. 15 to
cope with the economic crisis.
