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Serbia takes initiative to further ambitions

By Fu Jing in Belgrade, Serbia | China Daily Europe | Updated: 2017-04-30 14:26

Balkan country sees China's 'new Silk Road' as a means of achieving growth via greater involvement in its home region and across the globe

With a population of 7 million, roughly the same as a number of Chinese cities, Serbia is set to enjoy rapid economic growth, climbing from last year's 2.8 percent to 3.5 percent in 2019, according to the World Bank.

The bank's latest updates suggest the Balkan country's prospects are even rosier than those of the European Union economies, which will average about 2 percent a year.

The promising outlook is partly a result of the country's plan to become a regional transportation hub, which has seen Serbia deepen investment in roads, railways, urban infrastructure and high-tech business parks-similar to the growth engines used in a number of cities in China.

Chinese investors have contributed to the rising level of investment.

"The scale of China's investment in ongoing projects and in the pipeline totals about $10 billion," Li Manchang, China's ambassador to Serbia, says in an exclusive interview with China Daily in Belgrade, the capital.

Ivica Dacic, Serbia's first deputy prime minister and also foreign minister, confirms that Serbian President Aleksandar Vui will head the country's delegation at the Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation, which will be held in Beijing on May 14 and 15.

"This speaks volumes of the importance Serbia attaches to this significant initiative of global character," he says.

Serbia's former president Tomislav Nikolic paid a state visit to China earlier this year, following President Xi Jinping's visit to the Balkan country in June. He also attended a ceremony in 2015 to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II and the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression.

Dacic is looking forward to the start of direct flights between Serbia and China, which are currently under discussion, while special prominence has been given to the construction of a high-speed railway line between Belgrade and Budapest, the Hungarian capital, a pioneer transportation network along the land-sea link between China and Europe.

"This is an opportunity for regional development, the greater sale of goods and the flow of goods and people," he says.

He adds that Serbia aspires to the closest possible connections with the world. "In that context, we want to see even stronger momentum in cooperation with China in infrastructure investment to make Serbia the regional transportation hub."

Ambassador Li refers to several "firsts" in bilateral cooperation. He notes that the first bridge built by the Chinese in Europe is located on the Serbian stretch of the River Danube, and the high-speed railway to link Belgrade and Budapest will be the first to be built by the Chinese in Europe. The project is expected to be started within the year, once the European Commission completes supervision of loan agreements. Moreover, Serbia was the first country to grant Chinese passport holders visa-free entry for stays of up to 30 days.

According to Li, Chinese companies are currently building highways and electricity generation plants in Serbia, and Chinese investors have already signed a contract with Belgrade's municipal government to construct a ring road in the city.

Chinese companies are also working to improve Belgrade's wastewater treatment facilities and heating network. Meanwhile, Chinese companies are vying to win a contract to construct an electricity generation project, which has total investment of $900 million

Of the $10 billion worth of projects, China will also help to construct an industrial park covering 300 hectares in its first phase, Li says, adding that having signed the memorandum of cooperation, both sides are hoping to sign an agreement by the end of the year that will pave the way for ground to be broken next year.

"Some other Balkan countries have shown 'envy' toward Serbia, which has taken the opportunity of enhancing cooperation with China," he says. "I think Serbia has taken the lead in that regard, and other European countries may follow suit."

According to Branislav Djordjevic, director of the Institute of International Politics and Economics in Belgrade, given the current political and economic situation in the Balkans, it is easy to see how important participation in the Belt and the Road Initiative is, not only for Serbia but for all countries in the region.

He says the institute has long been interested in China, but interest really surged after the conclusion of a strategic partnership between the two countries in 2009. Now, great attention is being focused on the Belt and Road Initiative, which consists of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st century Maritime Silk Road.

"It is an old truth that prosperity brings peace and stability," he says, adding that the initiative has helped Serbia become more qualified as an EU member. "Since many countries are looking for EU membership, it would be easier for them to be absorbed as economically and politically stable entities. With certain necessary adjustments, combined with the synergies of the Belt and Road Initiative, Serbia could be an engine of progress."

Radosav Pusic, dean of the Confucius Institute in Belgrade, is in full agreement with that view, saying Serbia is a small country in the Balkan region and, at critical moments in history, it has been a hostage to fortune.

"When great powers play games, small countries suffer. Belgrade has been destroyed more than 40 times, and we even suffered from wars in the 1990s," he says.

The country's economy stagnated for several years after NATO's action against Serbia ended in the late 1990s, and the 2008 global financial crisis made things even harder. Those difficulties resulted in many young people leaving the country.

Pusic says this is a "historic moment" for Serbia because the country's economic and investment activities with China have become more frequent than ever, thanks to the cooperation framework for the Belt and Road Initiative.

"This has resulted from a firmer political and strategic partnership between the countries, which has laid solid foundations for other encounters," says Pusic, a renowned scholar who has written or translated 30 books about classic Chinese literature, poetry and philosophy, and is currently writing a book about the history of ancient Chinese philosophy.

"Against this background, many people in Serbia have shown an interest in the Belt and Road Initiative," he says. "But if it had been raised 10 years ago, recognition would not have been that easy."

Greater efforts will be required, especially on the cultural and publicity fronts, he says.

Zheng Jinqiang in Brussels contributed to this story.

fujing@chinadaily.com.cn

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