China invites Latin America to take part in One Belt, One Road

Reuters  |  SANTIAGO 

By Cambero and Dave

SANTIAGO (Reuters) - invited Latin American and countries to join its "One Belt, One Road" initiative on Monday, as part of an agreement to deepen economic and political cooperation in a region where U. S. influence is historically strong.

Chinese said the region was a natural fit for the initiative, which has leveraged to deepen economic and financial cooperation with developing nations.

"will always stay committed to the path of peaceful development and the win-win strategy of opening up and stands ready to share development dividends with all countries," Wang said at a meeting between and 33 members of the Community of Latin American and States (CELAC).

Representatives from and CELAC signed a broad agreement to expand ties in the second time has met with CELAC - a bloc formed in in 2011 that does not include the or

Though it had few specific details, the agreement is part of an evolving and more aggressive Chinese foreign policy in as the United States, under Donald Trump, has taken a more protectionist stance.

The "One Belt, One Road" initiative, proposed in 2013 by Chinese Xi Jinping, promotes expanding links between Asia, and Europe, with billions of dollars in infrastructure investment.

Wang emphasized projects to improve connectivity between land and sea, and cited the need to jointly build "logistic, and information pathways."

The so-called Santiago declaration, signed by and CELAC delegates, also calls for bolstering trade and taking action on climate change.

Heraldo Munoz, who has criticized Trump in the past, said the agreement marked an "historic" new era of dialogue between the region and

"said something that is very important, that it wants to be our must trustworthy partner in and the and we greatly value that," said Munoz. "This meeting represents a categoric repudiation of protectionism and unilateralism."

has sought a bigger role overseas since Trump was elected, presenting its agreement as an alternative to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which the has abandoned.

The country is already testing U.

S. dominance in Latin America, offering the region $250 billion in investment over the next decade. It is the top trading partner of many countries in the region, including Brazil, and

Still, Wang played down the idea of a race for influence.

"It has nothing to do with geopolitical competition. It follows the principle of achieving shared growth through discussion and collaboration," Wang said in his remarks. "It is nothing like a zero sum game."

In recent years, Chinese companies have moved away from merely buying Latin American raw materials and are diversifying into sectors such as auto manufacturing, such as

"Our relations with are very broad, this (CELAC) is one more pathway for to work with Together we identified more areas of cooperation," said Brazil's Vice

(Additional reporting by Felipe Iturrieta, editing by Caroline Stauffer; Editing by and Lisa Shumaker)

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

First Published: Tue, January 23 2018. 05:26 IST