Chinese President Hu Jintao will make proposals on deepening cooperation of
the Asia-Pacific region at the 14th APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation)
Economic Leaders' Informal Meeting to be held in Hanoi, Vietnam from Nov. 17 to
19.
Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai made the remark Tuesday at a
news briefing on Hu's coming state visits to Vietnam, Laos, India and Pakistan
from Nov. 15 to 26 during which Hu will also attend the APEC meeting from Nov.
17 to 19.
Cui said Hu will layout China's policies on deepening regional cooperation
and the key points and prospects of Asia Pacific economic cooperation, and make
proposals on further promoting economic and technological cooperation within
APEC.
Hu will also brief foreign leaders on China's scientific development and tell
them that China's development will bring opportunities to regional and world
development, said Cui.
According to Cui, Hu will hold side bar meetings with a number of leaders
attending the meeting, including Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and U.S.
President George W. Bush.
Cui said China hopes the APEC meeting will help support the healthy
development of multilateral trade systems and promote the implementation of the
"Bogor goals" of free and open trade and investment in Asia-Pacific by 2010 for
industrialized economies and 2020 for developing economies.
China hopes the APEC meeting will reach agreements on carrying out
cooperation on the challenge of high oil prices, infectious diseases and natural
disasters in a bid to promote sustainable development and improve the livelihood
of the people, said Cui.
He also said China hopes the meeting will help promote the reform process of
APEC to safeguard the status and influence of the economic bloc, adding China
will make joint efforts with the other sides to realize the goals.
According to Cui, the 14th APEC Economic Leaders' Informal meeting will focus
on supporting the Doha Round of negotiations at the World Trade Organization,
realizing the Bogor goals, regional trade arrangements, economic and trade
cooperation, anti-terrorism, energy, health, anti-corruption and the reform of
the APEC.
Since its inception in 1989, APEC has worked to reduce tariffs and other
trade barriers across the Asia-Pacific region and to create efficient domestic
economies and dramatically increasing exports.
APEC has 21 member economies, including China, the United States, Japan,
Vietnam, Singapore and Australia, which account for more than a third of the
world's population, over 50 percent of world's GDP and in excess of 41 percent
of world trade.