BEIJING: French President Emmanuel Macron urged Europe Monday to take part in China’s massive Silk Road infrastructure project but warned against “hegemony,” saying both sides should share the benefits.
Macron, on the first day of a state visit, also called on Europe and China to team up on curbing climate change in the face of the US decision to withdraw from the Paris accord.
“Our destinies are linked,” he said in a keynote speech on the future of Sino-French relations during a visit to the northern city of Xian, the starting point of the ancient Silk Road.
“The future needs France, Europe and China,” Macron said, adding he would travel to China “at least once a year.”
Macron started his three-day visit in Xian as a gesture to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s huge New Silk Road project, an initiative to connect Asia and Europe by road, rail and sea.
The $1 trillion infrastructure program is billed as a modern revival of the ancient Silk Road that once carried fabrics, spices and a wealth of other goods in both directions.
Known in China as “One Belt, One Road,” the plan will see gleaming new road and rail networks built through Central Asia and beyond, and new maritime routes stretching through the Indian Ocean and Red Sea.
The project has spurred both interest and anxiety in many countries, with some in Europe seeing it as an example of Chinese expansionism.
Macron said Europe should join the new silk road initiative but added a warning.
“They cannot be the roads of a new hegemony that will put the countries that they traverse in a vassal state,” he said.
“Multilateralism means balanced cooperation.”
The ancient Silk Roads were never purely Chinese, he said. “These roads are to be shared and they cannot be one way.”
The US and Europeans often accuse China of restricting access to its vast market even though they have opened up to Chinese imports.
France has a €30-billion ($36 billion) trade deficit with China.
Macron’s first official visit to Asia marks a new stage in his diplomacy, which has so far been concentrated on Europe and Africa.
He plans to seek a “strategic partnership” with Beijing on issues including terrorism.
In a French version of panda diplomacy, Macron has brought Xi a gift: a retired Republican Guard horse that is currently in quarantine in China.
On climate change, Macron said he would talk to Xi about “relaunching the climate battle” by preparing an increase in their engagements to combat global warming at the COP 24 talks in Poland later this year.
He praised China, the world’s top polluter, for committing to the Paris accord after US President Donald Trump gave notification of America’s withdrawal.
“China kept its word,” he said. “You demonstrate your immense sense of responsibility.”
Cooperation will “show the world that the French and Chinese are capable of making our planet great and beautiful again,” he said in Chinese.
After Xian, Macron traveled to Beijing along with his delegation which includes some 60 business executives and representatives of institutions.
Macron and his wife Brigitte met Xi and his wife Peng Liyuan on Monday night. On Tuesday he will visit the Forbidden City, meet top Chinese officials and oversee the signing of business deals.
Human Rights Watch has urged Macron to call publicly for human rights improvements in China during his meeting with Xi, but the French president’s office said the matter would be addressed privately.
Along with Brigitte, Macron visited the famous terracotta warriors in Xian, as well as a centuries-old Big Wild Goose Pagoda — a Buddhist site — and the city’s mosque.
The 8,000-man clay army, crafted around 250 BC for the tomb of China’s first emperor Qin Shihuang, is a symbol of ancient artistic and military sophistication in a country that proclaims itself a 5,000-year-old civilization.
Macron endorses China’s Silk Road but warns against ‘hegemony’
Macron endorses China’s Silk Road but warns against ‘hegemony’
Venezuela parliament chief vows quick release of remaining political prisoners
- Venezuela's head of parliament promised the speedy release of remaining political prisoners
CARCAS: Venezuela’s head of parliament on Friday promised the speedy release of remaining political prisoners during a meeting with their relatives in which he promised to correct the government’s “mistakes.”
“By Friday (February 13) at the latest they will all be free,” Jorge Rodriguez, a former member of ousted leader Nicolas Maduro’s inner circle, told prisoners’ families outside the notorious Zona 7 detention center in Caracas.
“We are going to rectify all the mistakes that have been made.”
It was not clear whether he was referring to all remaining political prisoners — estimated to number around 700 by rights groups — or only those being held at Zona 7.
The meeting came a day after National Assembly members gave their initial backing to a draft amnesty covering the types of crimes used to lock up dissidents during 27 years of socialist rule.
But Venezuela’s largest opposition coalition denounced “serious omissions” in the amnesty measures Friday, after a shorter and more general draft of the law was released compared to the previous version circulated the day before.
The text “excludes large groups of civilian and military political prisoners,” “does not establish mechanisms for reparation to victims” and “does not guarantee the safe return of exiles,” the Democratic Unitary Platform coalition said in a statement.
Acting president Delcy Rodriguez is pushing the bill as a milestone on the path to reconciliation, a month after the US overthrow of Maduro.
Jorge Rodriguez, her brother, said the legislation would “repair all the mistakes” of Chavismo — the anti-US, socialist doctrine of late firebrand leader Hugo Chavez and his successor Maduro.
He said he expected parliament to complete the adoption of the bill as early as Tuesday.
“As soon as the law is adopted, they (prisoners) will also be released the same day,” he said.
Relatives surrounded the interim leader’s brother, clamoring for the release of their loved ones.
“Help me get my family member out of there, please,” a woman told him.
“We’re going to get them all out,” he replied while hugging another family member.
Nancy Plaza, whose husband is detained in Zona 7, said she told Rodriguez that “there are many mothers suffering” because of the detentions.
“I told him to please do it for my children, for me, for all the political prisoners,” she told AFP.
“We need him to be released. I’m going to believe that he will keep his promise.”









