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EAM conveys India's interest in Mediterranean region at Raisina Mediterranean
EAM conveys India's interest in Mediterranean region at Raisina Mediterranean

India Gazette

timea day ago

  • Business
  • India Gazette

EAM conveys India's interest in Mediterranean region at Raisina Mediterranean

Marseille [France], June 14 (ANI): External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar held talks with Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan, Italian legal professional Francesco Parisi and Head of the Foreign Relations team Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS) Abigal Vasselier at Raisina Mediterranean 2025 dialogue. Jaishankar conveyed India's interest in the Mediterranean region. In a post on X, he said, 'Joined FM Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan, Francesco Parisi and Abigal Vasselier at Raisina Mediterranean 2025. Spoke about India's strong interest in the Mediterranean region and the importance of partnerships driven by trade and people to people ties.' Jaishankar said on Friday that Europe is now more self-aware, strategically autonomous and thinks about global issues from European perspective rather than a collective and all this has policy implications, and noted that France is in many ways is India's most trusted partner in Europe. Speaking at the Raisina Mediterranean 2025 conference, Jaishankar said that India and France have had a willingness to 'stratagise for ourselves'. He laid emphasis on the value of trust and pointed to the need of resilient and reliable supply chains. 'I totally agree that one of the things which have gone with the world is a kind of cost determinism by which choices have been made. The result of the cost determinism is that we have ended up with an over concentration of capabilities in one geography which is creating problems for everybody is not just price points and economic efficiencies. Particularly in the digital era...I think there are many other sensitivities, embedded in products and services. Which makes a concept like trust very important. Trust means intuitively we are comfortable with each other. How do you get that? Sometimes by having similar values, sometimes by saying that in my difficulty you supported or who was willing to go the extra mile for our security needs,' he said. India and France have completed 25 years of strategic partnership. The bilateral relations with France are rooted in deep trust and commitment, and the two countries cooperate closely across all domains of strategic and contemporary relevance besides sharing similar outlook on many regional and global issues. (ANI)

China's exports rise 8.1% in April despite escalating US tariffs
China's exports rise 8.1% in April despite escalating US tariffs

Al Etihad

time09-05-2025

  • Business
  • Al Etihad

China's exports rise 8.1% in April despite escalating US tariffs

9 May 2025 09:51 BEIJING (dpa)China's exports rose more than expected in April despite escalating trade tensions with the United States, even as bilateral trade with Washington saw a steep increased by 8.1% year-on-year in dollar terms, the Chinese customs authority said on Friday. Imports dipped slightly by 0.2%, leaving a trade surplus of $96 billion for the figures came in well above market expectations. Economists had anticipated weaker export growth and a sharper drop in imports. In March, Chinese exports had already surged by 12.4%, which analysts attributed to stockpiling ahead of anticipated US with the US, however, plummeted following a wave of new tariffs introduced in April. US President Donald Trump imposed additional duties of up to 145% on Chinese goods, prompting Beijing to retaliate with its own tariffs of up to 125% on US sides, however, have issued exemptions for items seen as critical, such as certain electronics, to limit the economic a result, Chinese exports to the US fell by 21% in April from a year earlier, while imports from the US declined by 13.8%, according to official to Max Zenglein, chief economist at the Berlin-based Mercator Institute for China Studies, Beijing has been preparing for a potential escalation with the US in recent years. However, the renewed flare-up in trade tensions carries "massive risks" for the global economy, including Germany, he trade with Germany showed a sharp divergence in April, with exports jumping 20.4% year-on-year while imports dropped by 12.2%.Imports from the European Union as a whole fell by 16.5%.Zenglein noted that Beijing is using the current global disruptions to position itself as a more reliable economic partner, contrasting its approach with Washington's confrontational stance. Chinese President Xi Jinping has recently promoted closer cooperation during visits to countries including Russia, Vietnam and Malaysia.

Chinese money is transforming our favourite holiday destinations
Chinese money is transforming our favourite holiday destinations

Yahoo

time14-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Chinese money is transforming our favourite holiday destinations

Tourism is worth more than $10 trillion (that's 10,000 billion) to the world economy every year. But is the Chinese Communist Party looking to carve off a bigger slice of that particular pie – and what might it mean for your next holiday? The idea of China shaping your next getaway may sound fanciful to most travellers (unless you're heading to Shanghai or Beijing, of course). But the Chinese government's increasingly ambitious strategy of international investments – otherwise known as the controversial Belt and Road Initiative – is increasingly expanding Beijing's presence in some of the world's most popular tourism spots. Perhaps the most dramatic example of this phenomenon so far has been the Maldives. While best known to most British travellers as an archipelago of high-end resort islands, the destination's unique and isolated location has turned into a battleground for influence between China and one of its biggest strategic rivals, India. 'India has traditionally been very concerned about Chinese investment along the coast of the Indian Ocean,' says Jacob Gunther, from the Germany-based think tank MERICS (the Mercator Institute for China Studies). 'However, the investments in the Maldives have been particularly contentious, as they're right in the middle of the ocean itself.' While India is keen to maintain a strong military presence in the ocean, China has been on a charm offensive, using its vast cash reserves to try to pry the Maldives away from its historic ally. While this investment spree might not be on the minds of tourists lazing in waterfront bungalows, it isn't entirely invisible either. It was Chinese cash that funded the upgrade and expansion of Velana International Airport – the landing point for almost every single international tourist arriving in the Maldives. The Belt and Road Initiative (or BRI) also funded a massive, modern road bridge connecting the airport with Male – the Maldives' densely-populated capital city – as well as the slightly more tourist-friendly island of Hulhumalé. If you've crossed over out of curiosity to see the 'real' Maldives, you've almost certainly been on it. Infrastructure investment is all well and good, but analysts fret that the Maldives is becoming indebted to China, which may then seek to take control of land and assets in the country in return. They point to the massive controversy surrounding China's investment into a new port in Sri Lanka – another tourist hotspot – which then fell into Beijing's hands when the South Asian country was unable to make its payments. The port story goes to the heart of the mysteries surrounding the BRI, which is understood by most analysts as a way of China expanding trade routes while also peeling some countries away from the West. 'The BRI is both a geostrategic and commercial project, so a lot of the projects are a blend of those two aims,' says Mr Gunther, who has researched China's 'political economy' for more than a decade. While the Maldives may have been one of the most contentious investments, the Chinese government and its state-backed enterprises have been making their presence felt in numerous other holiday destinations, spanning all the way from south-east Asia to the Adriatic Coast. Sometimes these investments are explicitly focused on tourism projects. In Cambodia, Chinese investment has turned the unremarkable beach-town of Sihanoukville into an enclave of skyscrapers, some of them hosting plush Chinese casino resorts, but hundreds of them unfinished, creating a dystopian feel. Some 300 miles away in Krong Siem Reap, the nearest city to Angkor Wat, China has ploughed $1.1 billion into a state-of-the-art airport. Sub-Saharan Africa has been another hotspot, with China taking advantage of a Western retreat from the continent to bolster its influence. In 2023, African countries received more than $20 billion in investment via BRI deals, much of it going into energy and transport infrastructure. Then there's the Caribbean, where a number of Commonwealth countries have signed BRI partnerships with Beijing, including Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago. While the Caribbean governments have relished the chance to upgrade their infrastructure, the wave of Chinese funding – which has topped $9 billion across Latin America and the Caribbean – has led the US State Department to warn about the region becoming a 'Chinese lake'. Closer to home, China has unnerved some Western governments by becoming a significant investor in parts of the Western Balkans, most notably the emerging tourism hotspot of Montenegro. Alongside some hotel developments backed by private Chinese investors, Beijing has also embarked on creating a new motorway connecting the coastal towns of Budva and Tivat. The building splurge comes amid concerns that overdevelopment is spoiling the character of the region. 'China has an interest in some of the Balkan countries like Montenegro as it regards them as future EU states and thus a potential route for influence in future European decision-making,' says Vladimir Shopov, a BRI expert with the European Council on Foreign Relations think tank. What will it mean for tourists? To date, Chinese-backed tourism investments haven't proved massively successful. The ambitious project of Sihanoukville remains a ghost town, as does a similar project called Forest City in Malaysia. Those Western travellers who have used the new Siem Reap airport have been baffled to find it almost entirely empty. The other possibility is that the BRI could result in more Chinese tourism. While outbound Chinese tourism was grounded by the pandemic, it has been rising in recent years, with the number of overseas trips taken by Chinese nationals projected to rise to 128 million by the end of 2028. 'A lot of countries are keen to get Chinese tourists, but there haven't necessarily been any explicit links between BRI investments and expanding tourism,' says Mr Shopov. 'If you look at Montenegro, tourism is still down on pre-pandemic levels, and Chinese tourism to Europe is still down significantly compared to 2019.' 'While tourism isn't a major focus for the BRI, there is often a link between countries which have strong trade links with China and those which receive a lot of Chinese tourism,' says Jacob Gunther from MERICS. Indeed, Chinese visitors to Cambodia rose some 55 per cent in 2024, although he cautions against attributing the increase entirely to any one factor. Perhaps we shouldn't be expecting the CCP or its state-backed allies to displace the likes of Hilton or Marriott in their dominance of the tourism world any time soon. But with Chinese influence increasing across the globe – including in the West – the chances of Beijing playing a role in your next holiday are probably nowhere near as remote as you think. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Chinese money is transforming our favourite holiday destinations
Chinese money is transforming our favourite holiday destinations

Telegraph

time14-04-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Chinese money is transforming our favourite holiday destinations

Tourism is worth more than $10 trillion (that's 10,000 billion) to the world economy every year. But is the Chinese Communist Party looking to carve off a bigger slice of that particular pie – and what might it mean for your next holiday? The idea of China shaping your next getaway may sound fanciful to most travellers (unless you're heading to Shanghai or Beijing, of course). But the Chinese government's increasingly ambitious strategy of international investments – otherwise known as the controversial Belt and Road Initiative – is increasingly expanding Beijing's presence in some of the world's most popular tourism spots. The battle for the Maldives Perhaps the most dramatic example of this phenomenon so far has been the Maldives. While best known to most British travellers as an archipelago of high-end resort islands, the destination's unique and isolated location has turned into a battleground for influence between China and one of its biggest strategic rivals, India. 'India has traditionally been very concerned about Chinese investment along the coast of the Indian Ocean,' says Jacob Gunther, from the Germany-based think tank MERICS (the Mercator Institute for China Studies). 'However, the investments in the Maldives have been particularly contentious, as they're right in the middle of the ocean itself.' While India is keen to maintain a strong military presence in the ocean, China has been on a charm offensive, using its vast cash reserves to try to pry the Maldives away from its historic ally. While this investment spree might not be on the minds of tourists lazing in waterfront bungalows, it isn't entirely invisible either. It was Chinese cash that funded the upgrade and expansion of Velana International Airport – the landing point for almost every single international tourist arriving in the Maldives. The Belt and Road Initiative (or BRI) also funded a massive, modern road bridge connecting the airport with Male – the Maldives' densely-populated capital city – as well as the slightly more tourist-friendly island of Hulhumalé. If you've crossed over out of curiosity to see the 'real' Maldives, you've almost certainly been on it. Infrastructure investment is all well and good, but analysts fret that the Maldives is becoming indebted to China, which may then seek to take control of land and assets in the country in return. They point to the massive controversy surrounding China's investment into a new port in Sri Lanka – another tourist hotspot – which then fell into Beijing's hands when the South Asian country was unable to make its payments. The port story goes to the heart of the mysteries surrounding the BRI, which is understood by most analysts as a way of China expanding trade routes while also peeling some countries away from the West. 'The BRI is both a geostrategic and commercial project, so a lot of the projects are a blend of those two aims,' says Mr Gunther, who has researched China's 'political economy' for more than a decade. Empty skyscrapers and ghost airports While the Maldives may have been one of the most contentious investments, the Chinese government and its state-backed enterprises have been making their presence felt in numerous other holiday destinations, spanning all the way from south-east Asia to the Adriatic Coast. Sometimes these investments are explicitly focused on tourism projects. In Cambodia, Chinese investment has turned the unremarkable beach-town of Sihanoukville into an enclave of skyscrapers, some of them hosting plush Chinese casino resorts, but hundreds of them unfinished, creating a dystopian feel. Some 300 miles away in Krong Siem Reap, the nearest city to Angkor Wat, China has ploughed $1.1 billion into a state-of-the-art airport. Sub-Saharan Africa has been another hotspot, with China taking advantage of a Western retreat from the continent to bolster its influence. In 2023, African countries received more than $20 billion in investment via BRI deals, much of it going into energy and transport infrastructure. Then there's the Caribbean, where a number of Commonwealth countries have signed BRI partnerships with Beijing, including Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago. While the Caribbean governments have relished the chance to upgrade their infrastructure, the wave of Chinese funding – which has topped $9 billion across Latin America and the Caribbean – has led the US State Department to warn about the region becoming a 'Chinese lake'. A European toehold Closer to home, China has unnerved some Western governments by becoming a significant investor in parts of the Western Balkans, most notably the emerging tourism hotspot of Montenegro. Alongside some hotel developments backed by private Chinese investors, Beijing has also embarked on creating a new motorway connecting the coastal towns of Budva and Tivat. The building splurge comes amid concerns that overdevelopment is spoiling the character of the region. 'China has an interest in some of the Balkan countries like Montenegro as it regards them as future EU states and thus a potential route for influence in future European decision-making,' says Vladimir Shopov, a BRI expert with the European Council on Foreign Relations think tank. What will it mean for tourists? To date, Chinese-backed tourism investments haven't proved massively successful. The ambitious project of Sihanoukville remains a ghost town, as does a similar project called Forest City in Malaysia. Those Western travellers who have used the new Siem Reap airport have been baffled to find it almost entirely empty. The other possibility is that the BRI could result in more Chinese tourism. While outbound Chinese tourism was grounded by the pandemic, it has been rising in recent years, with the number of overseas trips taken by Chinese nationals projected to rise to 128 million by the end of 2028. 'A lot of countries are keen to get Chinese tourists, but there haven't necessarily been any explicit links between BRI investments and expanding tourism,' says Mr Shopov. 'If you look at Montenegro, tourism is still down on pre-pandemic levels, and Chinese tourism to Europe is still down significantly compared to 2019.' 'While tourism isn't a major focus for the BRI, there is often a link between countries which have strong trade links with China and those which receive a lot of Chinese tourism,' says Jacob Gunther from MERICS. Indeed, Chinese visitors to Cambodia rose some 55 per cent in 2024, although he cautions against attributing the increase entirely to any one factor. Perhaps we shouldn't be expecting the CCP or its state-backed allies to displace the likes of Hilton or Marriott in their dominance of the tourism world any time soon. But with Chinese influence increasing across the globe – including in the West – the chances of Beijing playing a role in your next holiday are probably nowhere near as remote as you think.

Wang Yi heads to Dublin as Ireland's role in US-China rivalry comes into focus
Wang Yi heads to Dublin as Ireland's role in US-China rivalry comes into focus

South China Morning Post

time13-02-2025

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Wang Yi heads to Dublin as Ireland's role in US-China rivalry comes into focus

For a small island of just over 5 million people on Europe's western edge, Ireland is playing an outsize role in the travel plans of China's top leadership. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi is scheduled to land in Dublin on Sunday to meet his Irish counterpart Simon Harris and Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin on Monday, off the back of a visit to Britain on Thursday and a frenzied weekend of diplomacy in Munich. At the Munich Security Conference, Wang is expected to meet top diplomats from the United States, the European Union, Germany, Ukraine and others. In such heavyweight company, Ireland – a geopolitical minnow – stands out. 02:00 Trump says talks to end Ukraine war to start 'immediately' after Putin call Trump says talks to end Ukraine war to start 'immediately' after Putin call In isolation, though, the trip is easy to understand. Over a decade as foreign minister and in more than 70 trips to Europe – including Russia and the Caucuses, Wang has never been to Ireland, according to a database kept by Sense Hofstede, an independent researcher on China. In trade terms, Ireland also punches above its weight. It is one of the only European countries to have a trade surplus with China – almost US$13 billion last year, according to calculations based on Chinese customs statistics. Furthermore, with a new Irish government installed in December, Wang will surely be keen to press the case for maintaining ties with Beijing at an increasingly fraught geopolitical moment. 'It could be to do with the formation of a new Irish government and to try to keep them on side,' said Alexander Davey, an analyst at the Mercator Institute for China Studies, who monitors Sino-Irish ties.

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