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Chinese companies invested nearly $15bn in countries participating in Beijing’s new Silk Road initiative last year, up one-fifth from 2014, President Xi Jinping said in Uzbekistan, lauding a scheme that is one of his key foreign policy.
Under the programme, announced by Xi in 2013, and also known as the “One Belt, One Road” programme, China aims to invest in infrastructure projects including railways and power grids in central, west and southern Asia, as well as Africa and Europe.
China has dedicated $40bn to a Silk Road Fund and the idea was the driving force behind the establishment of the $50bn Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. In comments carried by state media late on Wednesday, Xi said China’s trade with countries participating in the new Silk Road exceeded $1tn in 2015, accounting for a quarter of its total foreign trade.
“The Belt and Road Initiative’s primary planning and deployment has been completed and is now stepping onto the stage of taking root and intensive cultivation for sustained development,” Xi told the Uzbek parliament.
Regions like the Balkans and Central Asia are key to the project, the government has said.
Xi’s trip to Uzbekistan followed trips to Serbia and Poland.
The initiative envisages the revival of the ancient Silk Road routes from China to Europe to open new trade markets for its firms as the domestic market slows.
Forty nine countries along the economic corridor invested $8.2bn in China in 2015, up 25%, Xi said, adding that over 70 countries and international organisations have taken part in the initiative.
Xi will also attend a meeting in Uzbek capital Tashkent of the Chinese and Russia-lead Shanghai Cooperation Organisation security bloc.
China has long been concerned at links between Islamist militants in Central Asia and those Beijing accuses of promoting separatism in the violence-prone far western region of Xinjiang.
State media said China and Uzbekistan had agreed to deepen their counter-terrorism cooperation, and ensure the safety of pipelines into China from Central Asia which are vital for Chinese energy security.
“China and Uzbekistan share concerns about terrorism, with extremists in the two countries sometimes conspiring together,” the official China Daily said yesterday, noting extremists had been know to enter Xinjiang from Uzbekistan.
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