The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) aims to play a role in promoting the digital and cyber Silk Road, China's top Internet regulator Lu Wei says at the first China-EU digital cooperation roundtable held on July 6 in Brussels.
Following Chinese Premier's visit to EU headquarters last Monday, Lu's visit to Brussels is the first high-level visit of a Chinese official to Brussels after the EU-China summit.
"We will push forward the digitalization, information, exchange and collaboration of cyberspace between China and the European Union," says Lu Wei, director of the Cyberspace Administration of China.
To connect this digital and cyber Silk Road across the two continents, the head of the CAC says they hope to see more Chinese Internet companies going out to Europe, and more European enterprises entering the Chinese market, too.
Stressing the determination to benefit 1.1 billion Internet users in both China and EU through broader cooperation in the digital sector, China's Internet helmsman says they are in favor of a platform built based on mutual trust and a win-win vision.
"There are still 800 million people unconnected to the Internet in Europe and China, and there is a huge space for our cooperation. We look forward to achieving a better synergy between Europe's Digital Agenda and China' Internet Plus Strategy.
"And we will make our contribution to digitalization, cyber development and cyberspace security," he says.
The roundtable, organized by the ChinaEU Association for Digital and Internet Society of China (ISC), brings together more than 50 top-level stakeholders in the information and communications technology (ICT) industry, apart from representatives of Chinese and European banks.