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Chinese premier backs more investments in eastern Europe

AP  |  Budapest 

China's outlined his hope today that his country's closer cooperation with central and eastern will help foster prosperity in the region.

At a summit of 16 countries in the Hungarian capital, Li Keqiang said efforts such as China's "new Silk Road" initiative to expand trade across Asia, and Europe, should be a boon to the countries that were formally part of the communist bloc.


"Our aim is to see a prospering Europe," he said, adding that the closer ties with the 16 countries, which includes 11 European Union members, will "usefully complement" EU- relations.

China's rapid economic growth has seen the country ratchet up its spending on the global stage, and the "Silk Road" prospect is a key trade effort.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, host of the "16+1" summit, said the region was in need of external technological and financial resources, including from China, to grow.

"European resources are in themselves insufficient," Orban said. "For this reason we welcome the fact that as part of the new economic world order, sees this region as one in whose progress and development it wants to be present."

Orban mentioned the reconstruction of a railway line between Budapest and Belgrade, the capital of Serbia, a project financed mainly by China, as a "flagship project" of China's increased presence in the region.

Orban said that the upgraded railroad line could become the fastest transport route to Western of China's new Silk Road.

Li laid out his hope that the countries of eastern Europe, which generally are poorer than those in the west, will account for more of China's imports, which should total some USD 8 trillion over the next five years.

"We hope the central and eastern European countries find their place in this volume and expand their presence on the huge Chinese market," Li told an economic forum being held during the summit.

Orban, who has closed off his country to most migration from outside Europe, especially Muslims, said needed "strong allies" to confront the "historical challenges" it is faced with.

"If shuts itself in, it loses the possibility of growth," Orban said. "We 16 have always been open and would always like to remain so. We always saw cooperation with as a great opportunity."

Orban has been keen to pursue a policy of "Eastern Opening" for Hungary, looking to increase trade with while portraying Western as economically challenged and losing its global standing. His stance is seen as an effort to discredit criticism from the European Union that he is undermining democratic principles.

"We see the Chinese president's 'One Belt, One Road' initiative as the new form of globalization which does not divide the world into teachers and students but is based on common respect and common advantages," Orban said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, November 28 2017. 00:10 IST
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