'Strategic partnership' pact on horizon By Hu Qihua (China Daily) Updated: 2005-07-04 05:37
China and Kazakhstan are set to declare the establishment of a "strategic
partnership" during President Hu Jintao's visit to the Central Asian country.
Citing Hu's visit as evidence of the two states' mutually beneficial
partnership, China's Ambassador to Kazakhstan Zhou Xiaohui said that following
talks today, the two heads of states are expected to sign a number of agreements
on economic, political and humanitarian issues as well as a declaration of their
strategic partnership.
The countries have made remarkable achievements in bilateral co-operation in
fields including economy, trade, public transportation, energy and security,
said President Hu in a written statement delivered yesterday afternoon upon his
arrival in Astana, capital of Kazakhstan, following the end of his visit to
Russia.
Today, Hu will meet with a series of Kazak senior leaders, including
President Nursultan Nazarbayev, Prime Minister Danial Akhmetov and parliamentary
leaders.
Bilateral co-operation on energy, transportation, and the fight against
terrorism, separatism and extremism the "three forces" are expected to be top of
the agenda.
Analysts say the upgrading of bilateral ties has been prompted by the
complete conclusion of boundary issues, growth of bilateral trade, smooth
co-operation in the Shanghai Co-operation Organization (SCO) and a joint
crackdown on the "three forces."
In an interview with the Kazakhstan News Agency on the eve of his visit, Hu
said the two countries had launched a series of joint science and technology
projects regarding agriculture, information, energy, earthquakes, physics and
the exploration of natural resources.
Construction of the China-Kazakhstan oil pipeline linking Atasu in Kazakhstan
to the Alataw Pass in northwestern Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, which began
last September, is going well and is scheduled to be completed by December 2005,
according to a source with Chinese officials.
China and Kazakhstan are also preparing for the establishment of a centre of
international boundary co-operation in the Helgus boundary port, said Hu.
The two sides will carry out projects concerning scientific and technological
exchanges, including the establishment of a science and technology zone.
"The Chinese Government will actively promote the implementation of
co-operative projects which accord with the fundamental interests of both
peoples and are conducive to regional prosperity," Hu said.
Following his two-day official visit, Hu is to attend a meeting of the SCO
heads of state in Astana tomorrow and Wednesday, before heading to the G8 summit
in Scotland, July 7- 8.
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