Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Monday, June 02, 2003
Hu Jintao, Chirac Meet on Bilateral Ties, Cooperation
Visiting Chinese President HuJintao said in Evian, France,Sunday that China attaches great importance to the development of an all-around partnership with France and hopes to maintain close high-level exchanges between the two countries.
Visiting Chinese President HuJintao said in Evian, France,Sunday that China attaches great importance to the development of an all-around partnership with France and hopes to maintain close high-level exchanges between the two countries.
Meeting his French counterpart, Jacques Chirac, ahead of a South-North leaders dialogue meeting opened here Sunday, Hu hailed the sound development of the Sino-French relations over the years, noting that an all-around partnership between China and France has been continuously strengthened and enriched with the concerted efforts of both sides.
The two countries have enjoyed fruitful trade relations and carried out high-quality and multi-faceted bilateral cooperation in the fields of culture, science and technology, and education, Hu said.
He also noted that China and France have been supportive of and cooperative with each other on a series of major international issues and maintained close consultation, coordination and cooperation in international organizations such as the United Nations.
Both as permanent members of the UN Security Council, China and France share common interests and shoulder great responsibilities in international affairs and they also have identical or similar views on a lot of important international and regional issues, the Chinese president said.
The new Chinese leadership attaches great importance to developing the all-around partnership with France and hopes to keep close high-level exchanges with it, he said.
Hu added that China also favors further improvement of the strategic dialogue and consultation mechanism between the two countries and encourages strengthened cooperation between big companies in the two countries.
"We are fully confident of the prospect of future development of the Sino-French relations," Hu said.
On the international situation, Hu noted that though the current international situation is complicated and in constant changes, peace and development remain the two main themes.
Hu pointed out that from a long-term perspective, multipolarity will continue to be the trend of the world.
There are nearly 200 countries in the world, with a population of 6 billion. And these countries have varied traditions, religions, cultures, economic development levels and social systems, Hu said. As a result, it is impossible to impose a uniform civilization, social system or development mode on all those countries, he said.
Hu called on all peace-loving peoples and nations in the world to join hands in safeguarding world peace and promoting common development.
Chirac, on his part, said he completely agreed to Hu's positive comments on the French-Chinese relations and views on the world situation.
France and China have witnessed fast development of bilateral relations and fruitful trade cooperation, Chirac said.
He suggested that the two countries set nuclear energy, aviation, transportation, agriculture and finance as the priority fields for future cooperation.
Chirac also agreed that multipolarity is an inevitable trend in the world and in such a world, Europe and China will play an increasingly important role.
Hu thanked the French government and people for their understanding and support to China in its effort to fight against Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).
The two presidents also exchanged views on a number of major international and regional issues, such as reconstruction in post-war Iraq, the situation in the Korean Peninsula and the solution to the conflict between Palestine and Israel.
President Hu and his entourage arrived here Sunday by boat from Lausanne, Switzerland, for the informal South-North dialogue meeting between the heads of state or government of 11 developing countries and the leaders of the Group of Eight.