CGTN: What is China's role in global fight against COVID-19?
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BEIJING, Feb. 17, 2021 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
The COVID-19 pandemic, affecting all countries, has underscored both the way
China addresses a global challenge and its vision for a better world.
VIDEO - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BL9kiDlb13s
As the first major country to have effectively contained the virus and the only
major economy to register positive growth last year, China has been at the
forefront of the global fight – believing that COVID-19 knows no borders and
cannot be defeated without working together.
"After a year of hardship, we can understand more than ever the significance of
a community with a shared future for mankind," Chinese President Xi Jinping
said in his New Year address on the last day of 2020.
The pandemic prevented Xi from traveling overseas, but it was a busy year of
diplomacy for the Chinese president nevertheless. He had 87 virtual meetings
and phone calls with foreign leaders and heads of international organizations
and attended 22 bilateral or multilateral events in the form of "cloud
diplomacy," calling for solidarity and cooperation to tackle the crisis.
'Most powerful weapon'
China – particularly its central province of Hubei and the provincial capital
of Wuhan – was hit hard by the COVID-19 outbreak: Nearly 90,000 confirmed cases
have been reported on the Chinese mainland and more than 4,600 lives have been
lost; residents in the worst-hit regions have endured weeks or even months of
lockdowns, while people across the country have been cooperative amid travel
restrictions, even during Chinese New Year holidays; the country's gross
domestic product (GDP) contracted 6.8 percent year on year in the first quarter
of 2020.
Making people's lives and health the priority, China has largely cut
transmission channels of the virus, despite sporadic cases emerging in winter.
Successful epidemic control contributed to a speedy economic recovery, with the
country's GDP expanding by 2.3 percent year on year in 2020.
Meanwhile, China is fulfilling its responsibilities as a major country and
fighting shoulder to shoulder with the rest of the world against the common
threat to mankind that COVID-19 poses.
"Solidarity and cooperation is our most powerful weapon for fighting the
virus," Xi said in a speech at the opening of the 73rd World Health Assembly in
May.
"This is the key lesson the world has learned from fighting HIV/AIDS, Ebola,
avian influenza, influenza A (H1N1) and other major epidemics. And solidarity
and cooperation is a sure way through which we, the people of the world, can
defeat this novel coronavirus," he said via video link.
China organized its largest global humanitarian drive since 1949, providing
anti-virus assistance to over 150 countries and 10 international organizations
and sending 36 medical teams to 34 countries in need.
In his speeches at the 73rd World Health Assembly, the Extraordinary
China-Africa Summit on Solidarity against COVID-19, the 12th BRICS Summit, the
27th APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting and the 15th G20 Leaders' Summit, Xi
repeatedly promised to make Chinese COVID-19 vaccines a "global public good"
accessible and affordable to people around the world.
And China is delivering on that promise by providing vaccines to countries
including Cambodia, Chile, Peru, Pakistan, Serbia, Hungary, Equatorial Guinea,
the Laos, Mexico, Zimbabwe, the Dominican Republic and Thailand – most of which
are developing countries.
"We feel greatly honored, and this speaks volumes to the relationship between
us and the people of China," Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa last week
said as he thanked China for its donation of 200,000 doses of vaccine.
Aiming for a better future
As well as helping fight the health crisis brought by the pandemic, China is
contributing to economic recovery worldwide and the improvement of global
governance in the post-COVID-19 era.
President Xi appealed to the world's leading economies to boost economic
recovery as early as March, when the coronavirus was fast spreading across the
globe.
"I want to call on all G20 members to take collective actions – cutting
tariffs, removing barriers, and facilitating the unfettered flow of trade," Xi
said at the G20 Extraordinary Virtual Leaders' Summit on COVID-19. "Together,
we can send a strong signal and restore confidence for global economic
recovery."
Addressing the G20 Riyadh Summit in November, he called for concerted efforts
from major economies to promote more inclusive development and improve global
governance.
The G20, playing a key role in the global fight against COVID-19, should uphold
multilateralism, openness, inclusiveness, and mutually beneficial cooperation,
and keep pace with the times, said the Chinese president.
"We should keep our support for developing countries and help them overcome the
hardships caused by the pandemic," he told other G20 leaders.
To ease poor countries' debt burden, China has fully implemented the G20 Debt
Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI), with the total amount exceeding $1.3
billion, Xi noted.
The G20 launched the DSSI in April to address the immediate liquidity needs of
low-income countries, allowing the debt service payments due from May 1 to the
end of 2020 owed by the most impoverished countries to be suspended. Later the
debt suspension was extended by another six months until June 30, 2021.
China has also set more ambitious goals to combat climate change and drive
sustainable development. Xi announced in September that the country would
strive to have CO2 emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality
before 2060.
"COVID-19 reminds us that humankind should launch a green revolution and move
faster to create a green way of development and life," he said in an address at
the General Debate of the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly.
Xi unveiled further targets in December at the Climate Ambition Summit to mark
the fifth anniversary of the Paris Agreement on climate change.
By 2030, China will lower its carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP by over
65 percent from the 2005 level, increase the share of non-fossil fuels in
primary energy consumption to around 25 percent, increase the forest stock
volume by six billion cubic meters from the 2005 level, and bring its total
installed capacity of wind and solar power to over 1.2 billion kilowatts, he
said.
The world is seeing profound changes brought by COVID-19. China, while acting
to address the challenge at home, is shouldering greater responsibilities to
make the world a better place after the crisis.
Original article: here
Source: CGTN
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