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Today's Paper | December 22, 2024

Updated 11 Mar, 2017 09:24am

Chinese provinces jostling for roles in Beijing’s New Silk Road plan

BEIJING: China’s regional governments are falling over each other to curry favour with President Xi Jinping, jostling for roles in his New Silk Road plan to boost economic and cultural links through Asia to Europe.

One says it wants to send its young people to be Silk Road “super connectors”, while a second is pitching to become a new home for foreign consulates. Another wants to build a folk museum to commemorate Beijing’s overseas push.

The plan, officially the ‘One Belt, One Road’ (OBOR) project, has so far seen billions of dollars pledged overseas to countries such as Pakistan and Kazakhstan, in a drive to develop trade and build infrastructure along land and sea routes between the two continents.

At home, it is stoking a frenzy of one-upmanship among provinces keen to catch Xi’s eye and find new drivers for growth in their patch as the economy slows.

While official plans published in 2015 only list 18 provinces as areas key to the plan, over 30 of China’s territories now say they have an OBOR strategy.

At the annual meeting of China’s parliament in Beijing this week, delegates from all attending provinces trumpeted their support for the initiative during meetings.

“Our party secretary, mayor, vice mayor have all visited One Belt One Road countries like Poland and the Czech Republic, even parts of the Russian Federation like Tatarstan,” Tang Limin, secretary general of central Sichuan province, told Reuters after addressing delegates at a meeting.

It didn’t matter that the government didn’t identify Sichuan as key to the plan two years ago, Tang said.

“We have a lot of cooperation projects that come under One Belt One Road,” he said.

Aligning such projects with Xi’s vision has been aided by the loose definition of OBOR. Beijing has provided some guidelines of where it wants the initiative to focus, such as heavy infrastructure investment, but has left much of it open to interpretation.

Cultural exchanges with other countries, the formation of the Asian Investment Infrastructure Bank, and overseas acquisitions by Chinese firms have all been described by local media as part of the OBOR project.

Published in Dawn, March 11th, 2017

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