Xi inspects central China's Hubei Province
Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, inspected the cities of Xiaogan and Xianning, central China's Hubei Province, from Monday afternoon to Tuesday morning.
Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, inspected the cities of Xiaogan and Xianning, central China's Hubei Province, from Monday afternoon to Tuesday morning.
Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar's recent remarks on border issues with China, hinting that further de-escalation will require reciprocal steps from the Chinese side, are primarily a response to domestic pressure, said Chinese analysts. They emphasize that joint efforts from both India and China are needed to overcome the mistrust accumulated over the past few years and implement the resolution on China-India border issues.
While addressing a press conference in Mumbai on Sunday, Jaishankar said that the disengagement of troops at two places in the border areas is the first step and the next step is de-escalation, which will not happen until India is sure that the same thing is happening on the other side as well, New Delhi Television reported, noting that Jaishankar was "obviously referring to China."
It is incorrect for Jaishankar to place unilateral blame on China for the border issue, or for the Indian side to suggest that China is seeking concessions from India. Improving relations requires genuine effort and sincerity from both sides, avoiding overreactions and the creation of new issues. Cooperation is essential, and it is unreasonable to place all demands solely on China, Long Xingchun, a professor from the School of International Relations at Sichuan International Studies University, told the Global Times.
Lin Minwang, deputy director at the Center for South Asian Studies at Fudan University, said that in response, Jaishankar's remarks on Sunday showed that, despite the agreements, there's still a lack of mutual trust between the two countries, and Jaishankar's stance serves to address domestic political pressure.
However, from China's perspective, it has consistently maintained equality and mutual respect during negotiations and has always honored agreements, Lin said.
Chinese Foreign Ministry Lin Jian said at a press conference on October 22 that over a recent period of time, China and India have reached resolutions on issues concerning the border area following close communication through diplomatic and military channels. China commends the progress made and will continue working with India for the sound implementation of these resolutions, he said.
In a significant move to enhance diplomatic relations, India and China are set to complete the military disengagement along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) by October 28-29, according to ANI.
The resolutions reached by both sides represent a breakthrough in addressing the border disputes since 2020. However, Jaishankar's remarks indicate that the mistrust accumulated over the past four years will take time and efforts to overcome, Qian Feng, director of the research department at the National Strategy Institute at Tsinghua University, told the Global Times on Monday.
The resolution, reached by China and India after numerous rounds of negotiations and dialogue, has put bilateral relations back on to the path of normalcy. However, the lasting progress depends on the faithful implementation of the agreement and the gradual strengthening of ties, Qian said.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino said Wednesday the world soccer governing body is willing to enhance soccer progress in China, highlighting the country's immense potential to become a powerhouse in the sport.
At a 2025 FIFA Club World Cup promotional event held in Shanghai, Infantino underscored that he looks forward to seeing a greater presence of Chinese soccer in global competitions.
"We are not satisfied with the way football has developed in the last couple of years [in China]. We need to change that," he told the Global Times. "We need to bring China back where China belongs on the top of the world."
He expressed aspirations for China to host the FIFA World Cups at both the club and national team levels in the future, seeing it as a pivotal opportunity to showcase the country's enthusiasm for the sport.
"I believe China could be a great host for any FIFA World Cup," the 54-year-old added, noting the potential for high-profile soccer events to inspire and cultivate local talent.
Addressing concerns about the current state of Chinese soccer, which has been underachieving for decades, Infantino acknowledged the challenges, but emphasized that hard work and determination are the key to overcoming them.
"There is no shortcut; the only formula that works is hard work," he told the Global Times.
He encouraged collaboration between FIFA and the Chinese soccer authority to establish a solid structure and organization to "restore" China's position in world soccer.
Ongoing projects include the soccer for schools program and a talent development scheme aimed at nurturing young players in China.
"We will support these initiatives, and I am looking forward to discussing further projects with the Chinese Football Association (CFA) leadership," said the Swiss man, who assumed office of FIFA president in February 2016.
Infantino is expected to meet CFA President Song Kai on Thursday to discuss further cooperation between the two bodies.
He reiterated FIFA's readiness to support Chinese soccer at all levels, from grassroots initiatives to elite competitions.
"Football is about working together. With collaboration, dedication, and investment, Chinese football can shine on the world stage," he said.
At Wednesday's event, he also highlighted the potential impact of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, which includes 32 teams from various countries and regions, offering a platform for clubs to demonstrate their capabilities.
"We need to create opportunities for clubs from all over the world to showcase their brands and players, helping them grow and improve," he said.
Chinese President Xi Jinping said China and Russia have found the right way for neighboring major countries to get along with each other which features non-alliance, non-confrontation and not targeting any third party, during his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Kazan, Russia on Tuesday.
Xi said during the meeting that China-Russia relations have come a long way, and made a series of pioneering achievements.
Xi said that he expected to have an in-depth discussion with Putin and other world leaders over the future development of the BRICS cooperation mechanism, in a bid to win more opportunities for the Global South.
BRICS cooperation mechanism is a pillar force in promoting equitable and orderly multipolarization of the world and a universally beneficial and inclusive economic globalization, Xi said.
Observers said cooperation between China and Russia not only plays a vital role in pushing for the development of BRICS, but it is also important in finding political solutions to international crises and helps improve global governance.
China, which has placed BRICS high on its foreign policy agenda, has made a remarkable contribution to push forward the organization's growth. China's economic strength has provided opportunities for members to achieve win-win cooperation, and its upholding of multilateralism plays a crucial role in enhancing the voices of Global South countries, experts said.
Xi arrived in Russia's Kazan on Tuesday for the 16th BRICS Summit, the Xinhua News Agency reported.
Russian officials greeted Xi at the airport. Guards of honor lined up on both sides of a red carpet to salute the Chinese leader, and Russian youths dressed in national costumes welcomed him with traditional courtesy, the report said.
A Russian fighter jet was seen escorting Xi's plane, according to Xinhua.
Global Times reporters saw that Chinese nationals and students who live locally waited to greet Xi outside the airport and the hotel where he stays in Kazan. Some were seen chanting "welcome" in Tatar, the language spoken by Tatars in Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan.
China and Russia have maintained communication and coordinated positions on major international and regional issues, actively cooperating and closely aligning on hot topics such as human rights, global governance and regional conflicts. The China-Russia partnership not only provides strong support for the revitalization and development of both sides but also plays an important role in maintaining the balance of international strategic power, and ensuring regional and global peace and stability, Chinese Ambassador to Russia Zhang Hanhui told the Global Times.
China and Russia are pivotal forces in the development of the BRICS organization, serving as key pillars for the organization's growth. Continuous consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between the two nations is essential for BRICS to effectively represent the common interests of its member countries and a broader array of countries amid the complexities of the current international landscape, Li Haidong, a professor at China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times on Tuesday, noting that such collaboration is crucial in promoting a multipolar world.
Furthermore, the partnership between Beijing and Moscow plays a vital role in seeking political solutions to ongoing crises and turmoil. As a result, the impact of their cooperation on stabilizing bilateral relations and improving the global governance is increasingly significant and urgent, said Li.
China's role in BRICS
BRICS, an acronym for Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, is literally called "gold bricks" in Chinese, indicating optimism for its great potential and shining future.
This optimistic view features prominently in Xi's engagement with the group. He has consistently placed BRICS high on China's foreign policy agenda. His first appearance on the multilateral stage as China's head of state was at the 2013 BRICS summit in Durban, South Africa, and he visited all other four BRICS countries during the first two years of his presidency, according to Xinhua.
China is undoubtedly one of the key drivers of the BRICS development. It was an initial founder of the group and over many years it heavily invested into the group's growth, including jointly launching the New Development Bank with its headquarters located in Shanghai and the recent enlargement of BRICS, Andrey Kortunov, Director General of the Russian International Affairs Council, told the Global Times.
China remains the top trading partner for most BRICS nations and is by far the strongest economic power within the group, Kortunov said.
In the first quarter of this year, China's imports and exports to BRICS countries increased by more than 11 percent year-on-year, according to Xinhua.
Chinese experts believe that China's commitment to the concept of peaceful development has significantly enhanced the appeal of BRICS for developing countries. They emphasize that Beijing's dedication to true multilateralism and its efforts to amplify the voices and influence of emerging markets and developing nations in international affairs play a crucial role in this dynamic.
China is pursuing the vision of a community with a shared future within the BRICS bloc. It is offering dividends for its development and devising instruments to share its prosperity, Shakeel Ahmad Ramay, CEO of the Asian Institute of Eco-civilization Research and Development in Pakistan, told the Global Times.
Ramay believes that under a complicated world landscape, BRICS is a ray of opportunity for developing countries who are sharply losing their say in the global system, while rich countries exploit them in the name of openness and trade linkages. The developing world wants to break the shackles of the system and is looking for a fairer and more just system in global dealings.
In this context, the meeting is extremely important because BRICS believes in win-win cooperation and joint actions and promotes building a community with a shared future for mankind, said Ramay.
China expresses strong indignation and resolute opposition to the erroneous act that violates the one-China principle and interferes in China's internal affairs, and has lodged a solemn representation to the European side, said a spokesperson from the Chinese Mission to the European Union on Friday, in response to the European Parliament (EP) unilaterally passing a resolution related to China's Taiwan region.
The EP, disregarding China's strong opposition, maliciously distorted United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 2758. This is a distortion of facts, a violation of international law, and a blatant provocation against the post-war international order and established norms of international relations, said the spokesperson, according to the Chinese Mission to the EU.
Over the past few years, the EP has passed multiple resolutions against China, which indicates that it views China through a biased lens, Zhao Junjie, senior research fellow at the Institute of European Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Friday.
However, the EP holds certain powers, especially focuses on internal European affairs, and although it has adopted a somewhat tough stance on China, its actual influence is limited and does not play a decisive role, Zhao said.
Before the adoption of UN General Assembly Resolution 2758, it was already a historical fact and an international consensus that the Taiwan island belongs to China. It serves as an important political premise for the passing of Resolution 2758, said the spokesperson.
The Taiwan question relates to China's sovereignty and territorial integrity and is at the core of China's core interests. The one-China principle is a widely recognized fundamental norm in international relations and serves as the political foundation for China's relations with countries around the world and the European Union. It is a red line that cannot be crossed, said the spokesperson.
China urges the European side to adhere to its political commitments, implement the one-China principle, and exercise caution in its statements and actions regarding the Taiwan question, thereby safeguarding the political foundation of China-EU relations, the spokesperson noted.
We also urge those ignorant politicians to refrain from a futile effort and to abandon the illusion of using the Taiwan question to contain China's development and obstruct China's reunification, said the spokesperson.
China will achieve national reunification and Taiwan island will inevitably return to the embrace of the motherland. This is a historical trend that no one and no force can stop, the spokesperson said.
Despite that the EP has adopted a tough stance on China, the EU is not uniform in its approach. Member states have varying interests and positions, for instance, countries like Hungary and Germany have expressed differing views on issues such as high tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, Zhao noted.
Xi, Mongolian President Khurelsukh exchange congratulations on 75th anniversary of diplomatic ties
Editor's Note:
As this year marks the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China, the Global Times has launched the second volume of its "Wish List" series, which documents ordinary Chinese people's wishes as a window into the changes in and achievements of the Chinese path to modernization.
In this volume, we present five representative stories that capture the aspirations and pursuits of individuals, which reflect the deep connection between national prosperity and people's destinies, illustrating how the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the country prioritize the well-being of the people in their quest for common prosperity, ecological civilization, and social harmony. They also bear witness to how Chinese people have marched forward toward Chinese modernization with high spirits.
This is the third installment of the series. It tells a story of how two residential communities in East China's Fujian Province, with the help of the local government and legislators, utilized the wisdom of whole-process people's democracy to resolve a decade-long neighborhood conflict and live in harmony.
On a day in early October, the Global Times reporter visited two residential communities in Quanzhou city, East China's Fujian Province, where the residents in two compounds once had a decade-long animosity toward each other, due to an ownership dispute on a middle pathway.
However, in Quanzhou, the reporter witnessed the sun shining on the clean and tidy pathway, as residents from both communities warmly greeted each other and engaged in friendly conversations.
It's hard to imagine that a decade ago, these two residential communities had been filled with arguments and insults, leaving the pathway littered with the remnants of their fights: wooden planks, sand, dirty water, and sometimes even feces.
During a fierce quarrel, Chen Jiantong locked a six-meter gate between the communities. Cai Detuan, who lives in the neighboring community, climbed a ladder and smashed the lock. A physical altercation ensued until police arrived and hurriedly separated them.
The disputes lasting 10 years were finally resolved in late 2022, thanks to the efforts of the local government, legislators, and compound residents, who together effectively practiced the concept of whole-process people's democracy to address grass-roots community issues, demonstrating the essence of the people's democracy in China, that is, the people get to discuss their own affairs, to reach the greatest common ground based on the wishes and needs of the entire society.
"We are all very satisfied with the result," Chen told the Global Times downstairs his home. "We had a vivid lesson in whole-process people's democracy and benefited greatly from it."
A decade-long heart knot
At the township-level Fengze subdistrict in downtown Quanzhou, there are two adjacent residential communities that are not enclosed by solid walls. Between them is an approximately 21-meter-long, 7-meter-wide pathway.
The pathway used to be a focal point of conflict between residents of the two neighboring communities, as there was no clear boundary between the two areas due to land designation and construction mistakes. Both sides insisted that the pathway belonged, or at least mostly belonged, to them.
Seventy-year-old Cai is one of the earliest residents there, living in the eastern residential community - a resettlement housing compound constructed in 2010 during the city's urbanization process. Two years later, a high-end residential complex was built to its west in 2012, which had the highest property prices in Quanzhou at that time.
In Cai's memory, this was when all the problems began. The western expensive complex claimed the pathway as their own and locked it. Before that, this pathway was considered as a rightful space of the eastern residential community.
Cai did not hide his past resentment toward his neighbors. "Every time I saw them, I couldn't help but want to say a few harsh words," he said.
Living in the western residential community, non-local Chen felt wronged and angry as well. In 2015, Chen bought a property there, after the developer promised it would be a "gated, high-end residential compound" populated by the affluent. It wasn't until Chen moved in, that he discovered the compound had no solid walls, enabling the "countrymen" of the neighboring community to come and go freely.
"[They] made our compound look less 'decent,'" Chen lamented.
The boundary dispute led to years of grumbles and quarrels. It remained unresolved until in 2021, when candidates for deputies of the district people's congress (also known as the district's legislators) visited the two residential communities to engage with voters. To the candidates, many residents from both sides mentioned their border dispute, and asked for a resolution to this decade-long heart knot.
Lawyer and then candidate Guo Rongfeng took note of their demands. "I give you my word," he said to the residents, "If I were elected, I would definitely try hard to resolve this issue once and for all."
The people get to discuss their own affairs
In November 2021, at the suggestion of Guo and two other newly elected deputies of local district-level people's congress - the legislative body of the district - Fengze subdistrict included the "boundary dispute" case as an annual working project and committed to resolving the issue.
In the past, the local government had repeatedly tried to intervene and resolve the dispute, but each time it had to put it aside because "residents from both communities suspected the government might favor the other side, even when it was not," said Lin Xinzhou, director of the working committee of the standing committee of district-level people's congress at Fengze subdistrict.
One day, when studying the concept of whole-process people's democracy, Lin was attracted by the sentence "the people get to discuss their own affairs." It inspired Lin, who realized that the "border dispute" was a matter concerning the two residential communities themselves, and the involving residents would be more appropriate than the government and the people's congress to take the lead.
"We could encourage the residents to discuss and solve the problem themselves," Lin told the Global Times. "Our role is to provide a platform for democratic consultation and decision-making, along with the help the residents need."
The whole-process people's democracy, which encompasses law-based democratic elections, consultations, decision-making, management, and oversight, became a key to solving this issue. In the early spring of 2022, with the assistance of local government and deputies to the district people's congress, the two residential communities respectively, for the first time, held their house-owner meetings, where all residents voted for their inaugural homeowners' committee.
The two seven-member committees later served as the main body for democratic consultation on this matter. Chen was elected as the head of the homeowners' committee for the western commercial residential complex. And Cai became a member of the homeowners' committee for the eastern resettlement housing community.
The two individuals, who had previously clashed fiercely over the interests of their respective communities, began to sit down calmly in their new roles to engage in consultation on behalf of their neighborhoods.
Over the following seven months, the two homeowners' committees had dozens of discussions and negotiations regarding to various matters. In most cases, deputies for the district people's congress like Lin and Guo were present on-site. But instead of directly participating in the negotiations, they stayed on the sidelines, providing legal and policy advice and sometimes mediating quarrels.
Once during a heated argument at a negotiation, Guo shared with the residents an ancient Chinese story of "Liu Chi Xiang (literally an approximately 2-meter-wide alley)," which tells of two neighbors who moved their respective walls about one meter back for each other, resulting in friendly neighborhood relations.
Finally, later in 2022, a draft of the "boundary dispute settlement agreement" was completed. The resettlement community agreed to give most part of the pathway to the commercial housing community, and to erect a railing wall on the pathway to formally separate the two compounds. In exchange, the commercial housing community granted another piece of shared to the former.
The following steps then went much more smoothly: the two sides publicly announced the draft agreement, respectively held house-owner meetings again, and invited all the residents to vote to approve or reject it. In the end, over 90 percent of residents voted in support, bringing a decade-long neighborhood dispute to a close.
Cai and Chen shook hands in reconciliation after the agreement was approved. "We were very pleased with this result," they told the Global Times.
A vivid example in grass-roots governance
The happy ending of the pathway ownership solution, now widely known as a "Liu Chi Xiang case in the new era" in Quanzhou, becomes a vivid example of the whole-process people's democracy being practiced at the grass-roots level.
"For us, the community environment has improved, neighborly relationships have become harmonious, and our sense of happiness and fulfillment has increased," Chen told the Global Times.
Inspired by whole-process people's democracy, Fengze subdistrict has addressed several grass-roots issues, including the renovation of a dilapidated building and the revitalization of an aging residential community. In May 2013, a district-level practice base for whole-process people's democracy was built there, the first of its kind in Fujian Province.
Today there are tens of thousands of practice bases for whole-process people's democracy at different levels throughout China. These bases serve as a testament to the deepening of people's democracy at the grass-roots level. They reflect public sentiment and opinions, while also gathering the wisdom and collective will of the people.
The concept of the whole-process people's democracy first came to light in 2019, when Chinese President Xi Jinping pointed out that Chinese people's democracy is a type of "whole-process democracy," during his inspection tour in Shanghai.
The essence of the people's democracy is that people get to discuss their own affairs, to reach the greatest common ground based on the wishes and needs of the entire society, Xi said.
In contrast to the Western model, where democracy and elections are frequently equated, the people's democracy allows people to discuss their own affairs to reach the greatest common ground. As a result, it has not only gained deep resonance among the Chinese people, but also is being appreciated by more countries globally.
In 2023, the Academy of Contemporary China and World Studies conducted a survey in 23 countries across five continents on practice and modern development of democracy in China. Results showed that the value and practice of whole-process people's democracy has won widespread plaudits throughout the international community.
Whole-process people's democracy is the defining feature of socialist democracy; it is democracy in its broadest, most genuine, and most effective form.
Walking on the clean and tidy pathway in the middle of the two communities, seeing smiles on the residents' faces, Lin told the Global Times that the pathway has now not only connected the hearts of the two sides, but has also brought together the practice of whole-process people's democracy, with the voices of grass-roots Chinese residents, as well as their most simple wish for neighborhood harmony.
Chinese President Xi Jinping met with foreign guests attending the China International Friendship Conference and conference marking the 70th founding anniversary of the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC) here on Friday.
Xi had a group photo taken with the foreign guests and spoke highly of the long-term dedication of international friends to cementing friendship with China.
He pointed out that people-to-people friendship is the foundation for stable and long-term international relations and an unremitting driving force for promoting world peace and development. Over the past 75 years since the founding of the People's Republic of China, the Communist Party of China (CPC) has united and led the Chinese people in blazing a path of modernization that has not only developed the country itself but also benefited the world, he said.
Xi said that looking back on the journey, China's achievements in various fields would not have been realized without the support of people from other countries. Numerous international friends have shared weal and woe with the Chinese people. Numerous foreign enterprises, institutions and individuals have actively participated in advancing China's socialist modernization, thus achieving mutual benefits and making important contributions to promoting friendly exchanges and cooperation between China and other countries, he added.
"We will always remember your important contributions to China and the sincere friendship that has been developed with the Chinese people," said Xi.
Stressing that the world is once again at a crossroads in history, Xi said that in the face of changes unseen in a century, building a community with a shared future for humanity is the right way forward for people of all countries.
China is willing to strengthen friendly exchanges with friends from all other countries, give play to the unique role of people-to-people diplomacy, and strive to build a community with a shared future for humanity, said Xi.
"First, embracing the spirit of 'shared responsibility as dwellers of the same planet,' we must build a broad consensus on creating a community with a shared future for humanity," Xi said. "We should promote humanity's common values of peace, development, fairness, justice, democracy and freedom, advocate an equal and orderly multi-polar world and an inclusive economic globalization that benefits all, and make the planet Earth a peaceful, friendly and harmonious home for all."
"Secondly, guided by the principle of win-win cooperation, we should strengthen synergy in building a community with a shared future for humanity," Xi said. China does not pursue self-centered modernization, and welcomes more foreign friends to actively participate in China's modernization process. The country is committed to providing new opportunities for global development with its achievements in modernization, and promoting a global modernization that features peaceful development, mutually beneficial cooperation and common prosperity to better benefit people of all countries.
"Thirdly, with an open and inclusive mindset, we should embrace all civilizations to build a community with a shared future for humanity," Xi said. Noting that the Chinese nation has always been open and inclusive and the Chinese people are kind and friendly, he said China is willing to work with all parties to advance the Global Civilization Initiative and deepen understanding and friendship through sincere dialogue in order to replace estrangement with exchanges and clashes with mutual learning.
Xi emphasized that the CPC serves the people, the Chinese government belongs to the people, and China's diplomacy represents the people. The Chinese government will continue to support the CPAFFC in playing its unique role in developing international friendship and promoting practical cooperation.
Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, former President of the National Assembly of Thailand Bhokin Bhalakula, and Elyn MacInnis, the founder of "Friends of Kuliang," spoke at the conference.
They extended warm congratulations on the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China and praised the unique role of the CPAFFC in promoting people-to-people diplomacy and fostering greater understanding and friendship among people from different countries.
According to the speakers, under the leadership of President Xi, China has successfully eradicated absolute poverty and achieved rapid development, becoming a beacon of hope for developing countries. President Xi's proposal to build a community with a shared future for humanity and initiatives such as the Belt and Road Initiative demonstrate far-sightedness, vision and a sense of responsibility toward global governance. Xi's proposal and initiatives have pointed the way for close cooperation and mutual benefit among countries, and China's development and prosperity will continue to benefit the world.
Approximately 200 people attended the event, including former political leaders from various countries, members of royal families, heads of international friendship organizations, and international friends of China.
Senior Chinese officials Cai Qi, Han Zheng and Wang Yi were present.
On Monday, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Eastern Theater Command is dispatching its troops of army, navy, air force and rocket force to conduct joint military drills code-named Joint Sword-2024B in the Taiwan Straits and areas to the north, south and east of Taiwan island. The drill serves as a stern warning to the separatist acts of "Taiwan Independence" forces, Senior Captain Li Xi, spokesperson of the PLA Eastern Theater Command, said in a statement released early Monday morning.
With vessels and aircraft approaching Taiwan island in close proximity from different directions, troops of multiple services engage in joint drills, focusing on subjects of sea-air combat-readiness patrol, blockade on key ports and areas, assault on maritime and ground targets, as well as joint seizure of comprehensive superiority, so as to test the joint operations capabilities of the theater command's troops, Li said.
The drill serves as a stern warning to the separatist acts of "Taiwan Independence" forces. It is a legitimate and necessary operation for safeguarding state sovereignty and national unity, said the spokesperson.
The scope of deterrence in the Monday exercise has expanded, and the exercise is moving closer to the island of Taiwan in comparison to the previous ones, especially with China Coast Guard vessels conducting patrol and control operations around the island, achieving successive new breakthroughs, Zhang Chi, a professor at the PLA National Defense University, told the Global Times on Monday.
On Monday, China Coast Guard (CCG) fleets 2901, 1305, 1303, and 2102 conducted law-enforcement patrols in the waters surrounding the Taiwan island, implementing patrol and control operations around the island. This is a concrete action to manage the Taiwan island in accordance with the one-China principle, CCG spokesperson Liu Dejun said in a statement.
Zhang said that the Monday exercise, with overwhelming force and strategic depth, has significantly squeezed the Taiwan military's "defense and operational space."
The PLA's naval and air forces, along with CCG, are advancing toward the Taiwan island from multiple directions, enforcing a complete blockade of the island. It is as if a sharp sword is piercing through the Taiwan authorities' so-called "defense space," drawing ever nearer to the island, fully showcasing the PLA's joint operational capabilities across multiple operational domains around Taiwan island, Zhang said.
Upon further analysis of the designated areas for this exercise, Zhang said the PLA has established six zones: two in the Taiwan Straits, two to the east of the island, one in the north, and one in the south. Zhang noted that the drills in the northern sea and airspace serve as a direct warning to the leading figures of 'Taiwan independence," specifically targeting Lai authorities. Meanwhile, the exercises in the southern sea and airspace are designed to send a warning to the main strongholds of the "Taiwan independence" forces.
Compared to previous PLA's exercises around the Taiwan island in recent years, the deterrence scope of the current drill has expanded significantly, and the location of the drill is moving closer to the island. In response to the provocations by the "Taiwan independence" separatist forces in collusion with external powers, who employ a "salami slicing" strategy, the PLA has developed a proactive counter posture to deal with these challenges, said Zhang.
Soon after Lai's separatist inaugural speech on May 20, the PLA Eastern Theater Command held the Joint Sword-2024A exercises in the Taiwan Straits, the north, south and east of the Taiwan island, as well as areas around the islands of Kinmen, Matsu, Wuqiu, and Dongyin from May 23 to 24.
The PLA's Joint Sword-2024B exercise sends a clear message: The more aggressively "Taiwan independence" separatists push their agenda, the greater the countermeasure they will face. This also delivers a strong signal of firm opposition to "Taiwan independence" and a steadfast commitment to safeguarding national reunification, dispelling the illusion among separatist forces that the mainland will refrain from taking military action, Wang Wenjuan, an expert from the PLA Academy of Military Science, told the Global Times.
Wang said that the exercise also showcases the Chinese military's unyielding spirit, high-level preparedness, and strong combat capabilities. "Like a sword hanging overhead or a hammer poised to strike at any moment, it forces the Lai authorities to feel the deterrence of war firsthand, delivering a clear message in a language they understand — that secession means war," said Wang.
Wang noted that this exercise will show Lai and the "Taiwan independence" separatist forces mainland's determination and confidence to defend national unity and territorial integrity.
The decision to conduct military exercises is solely within a nation's sovereign rights, experts said.
As outlined in the 1949 Draft Declaration on the Rights and Duties of States by the United Nations, each state has the right to manage its internal and external affairs according to its own discretion, without outside interference, coercion, or directives. Consequently, a state has the legitimate right to govern the development and deployment of its armed forces through its domestic laws, Zheng Hong, a research fellow from PLA Naval Research Academy, told the Global Times on Monday.
Zheng noted that China's Constitution states that Taiwan is an inseparable part of China and the PLA's role is to strengthen national defense, protect the motherland, and resist external aggression. China's National Security Law stipulates that the state shall take all necessary defense and control measures to safeguard national territorial sovereignty and maritime rights, and to prevent armed subversion and secession.
The National Defense Law of China specifies that one of PLA's core missions is to defend the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Anti-Secession Law stipulates that the "Taiwan independence" forces are prohibited from separating Taiwan from China under any name or in any way, said Zheng.
These legal provisions, whether in international law or Chinese domestic law, provide the legal basis for the PLA to carry out exercises on the country's territory and in its jurisdictional waters to effectively fulfill its mission, Zheng said.
The PLA requires no so-called "excuses" to conduct exercises, as it strictly adheres to domestic laws when fulfilling its duties. In response to Lai's provocative actions in pursuit of "Taiwan independence," the PLA is obliged to take firm, decisive measures to punish and deter such moves. "The greater the provocation, the stronger the response."
China and ASEAN announced the substantial conclusion of the Version 3.0 China-ASEAN Free Trade Area (FTA) negotiations during the 27th China-ASEAN Summit, China's Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) said on Thursday.
The upgrades in the FTA will enhance cooperation in emerging fields, align standards and regulations, and promote trade facilitation and inclusive development for both sides, MOFCOM said.
The conclusion of the negotiations demonstrates both sides' unwavering resolve to maintain a rules-based trading environment and accelerate post-pandemic economic recovery by deepening and broadening economic integration and cooperation amid a complex global environment, MOFCOM said.
The negotiations on Version 3.0 of the China-ASEAN FTA started in November 2022.
Version 3.0 will deepen cooperation in areas including digital economy, green economy, supply chain connectivity, competition and consumer protection, and for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises.
These upgrades will comprehensively expand mutually beneficial cooperation between China and ASEAN in emerging fields, strengthen the integration of standards and regulations, and promote trade facilitation and inclusive development, MOFCOM said.
Both sides aim to complete the legal reviews and domestic procedures to facilitate the signing of the upgrade protocol in 2025, MOFCOM said.
The FTA's first upgrade was signed in 2015 and entered into force in 2019, with improvements regarding rules of origin, customs procedures and trade facilitation, investment, and economic and technical cooperation, as well as market access for services, CCTV reported.
In the first eight months of this year, trade between China and ASEAN reached 4.5 trillion yuan ($638 billion), marking a year-on-year increase of 10 percent and accounting for 15.7 percent of China's total foreign trade during the period. ASEAN has solidified its position as China's largest trading partner, according to customs data.