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| Chinese President Hu Jintao (R) shakes
hands with Venezuelan President Hugo Rafael Chavez Frias in Beijing, Aug.
24, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) |
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| Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan (2nd R
Front) shakes hands with Venezuelan President Hugo Rafael Chavez Frias
(2nd L Front) while posing for a group photo with participants of the
fifth meeting of the China-Venezuela mixed committee in Beijing, Aug. 24,
2006. (Xinhua Photo) |
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| Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan (1st L
Back) speaks while Venezuelan President Hugo Rafael Chavez Frias (3rd L
Back) looks on during the closing ceremony of the fifth meeting of the
China-Venezuela mixed committee in Beijing, Aug. 24, 2006. (Xinhua
Photo) |
Related: Vice premier, Chavez hold talks on
China-Venezuela co-op
BEIJING, Aug. 24 (Xinhua) -- China and Venezuela on
Thursday signed eight agreements on a range of issues, including two on
expanding energy cooperation, pointing to stronger ties between the two
countries.
In the two agreements, the China National Petroleum
Corp. (CNPC) and the PDVSA, the state-owned Venezuelan energy company, agreed to
jointly develop Venezuelan oil fields, according to China's Foreign Ministry.
Other agreements, involving trade, energy,
infrastructure construction and tourism, were signed after Chinese President Hu
Jintao held talks with visiting Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
"I'm very satisfied with the cooperation with China
in the oil and petrochemical fields," Chavez told reporters after the ceremony,
vowing to increase oil exports to China to 500,000 barrels per day in the near
future.
During talks with Hu, Chavez said Venezuela would
make concerted efforts with China to implement their proposals and strengthen
cooperation in bilateral and multilateral areas so as to develop the bilateral
strategic partnership.
Venezuela hoped to expand cooperation in energy,
railway construction, telecommunications, agriculture, tourism, culture and
education, and develop the bilateral high-level mixed committee into an
important platform for enhancing cooperation, Chavez said.
As this year marks the fifth anniversary of the
establishment of the Sino-Venezuelan strategic partnership, Hu also offered a
four-point proposal.
The first was to strengthen high-level exchanges and
expand strategic consensus.
The Chinese side would work with Venezuela to expand
exchanges and cooperation between governments, legislatures and political
parties and strengthen dialogue, consultation and coordination on major issues
of common concern, Hu said.
The second was to deepen reciprocal cooperation and
speed up common development.
The Chinese side will join Venezuela in improving the
functions of the bilateral high-level mixed committee, implementing cooperative
projects, and exploring cooperation in railway construction, shipbuilding, oil
machinery manufacturing and high technology, Hu said.
He also pledged that China would encourages
enterprises to invest in Venezuela and welcome Venezuelan businesses to China.
China would work with Venezuela to explore their
potentials and expand cooperation for better economic and social benefits, Hu
added.
The third point was to enhance cultural exchanges and
mutual understanding with expanded cultural, education, science, technology,
media, and tourism exchanges.
The fourth was to strengthen international
cooperation, especially coordination in international and regional organizations
such as the United Nations, the World Trade Organization and the Organization of
American States, Hu said.
Hu said Sino-Venezuelan relations had grown
comprehensively and deepened with frequent exchanges of high-level visits,
increasing political trust, substantial progress in cooperation, and sound
cooperation in international and regional affairs.
Hu expressed his appreciation for the Venezuelan
government's adherence to the one-China policy and firm support for China on
major issues such as Taiwan.
Chavez said the development of bilateral relations
has entered a new stage as the two countries strengthened political mutual
trust, economic and trade cooperation, cultural exchanges and people-to-people
friendship.
He said the Venezuelan government would continue to
abide by the one-China policy.
Chavez arrived in Beijing as Hu's guest on Tuesday
night, starting a six-day state visit to China.
He will also visit the eastern province of Shandong.
Chavez previously visited China in October 1999, May
2001, and December 2004. Enditem
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