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Chinese President Hu Jintao (R, front)
is accorded a red-carpet welcome by his Sudanese counterpart Omar Hassan
Ahmed Al-Bashir (L, front) in Khartoum, capital of Sudan, Feb. 2, 2007.
(Xinhua/Ju Peng) Photo Gallery>>> |
KHARTOUM, Feb. 2 (Xinhua) -- Visiting Chinese
President Hu Jintao on Friday held talks in Khartoum with his Sudanese
counterpart Omar Hassan Ahmed al-Bashir and they pledged to raise Sino-Sudanese
bilateral relationship to a new high.
During the talks, the two leaders had frank, in-depth
and fruitful discussions on bilateral ties and major regional and international
issues and reached consensus.
The two leaders praised the smooth development of
Sino-Sudanese relations. Hu said that Sudan was one of the first group of
African and Arab countries to have established diplomatic ties with China, and
43 years ago, then Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai visited Sudan, thus ushering in a
new chapter in bilateral ties.
Hu said the peoples of the two countries have trusted
each other and forged a sincere and friendly relationship over the past decades,
and bilateral ties have stood the test of the changing international situation.
Thanks to the joint efforts, bilateral cooperation in
various areas has been progressing in recent years, enriching bilateral ties and
bringing about tangible benefit to the people of the two countries, he added.
Al-Bashir said that Sudanese-Chinese ties, based on
equality and mutual respect, have set a model for state-to-state cooperation,
and both countries have benefited from their increasingly close economic and
trade ties.
Sudan is grateful for China's long-standing support
for economic and social development in Sudan, he said, adding that the two
countries have maintained close coordination and consultation on regional and
international issues.
He reiterated that Sudan has adhered to the one-China
policy and opposed any attempt to separate Taiwan from China.
On Friday afternoon, President Hu will meet other
Sudanese officials.
Trade between China and Sudan has rapidly increased
in recent years.
In the first 11 months of 2006, bilateral trade
amounted to 2.9billion U.S. dollars.
Cooperation between the two countries has expanded in
areas of construction, agriculture, medical and health work and education.
President Hu flew into Khartoum from the Liberian
capital of Monrovia after a one-day visit.
President Hu is on the third leg of an eight-nation
tour to Africa that has taken him to Cameroon and Liberia and will also take him
to Zambia, Namibia, South Africa, Mozambique and Seychelles.
Hu's African trip comes only three months after the
Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, at which Chinese and
African leaders agreed to establish and develop a new type of strategic
partnership, featuring political equality and mutual trust, economic win-win
cooperation and cultural exchange.
Earlier, the Chinese president described his African
trip as "a journey of friendship and cooperation."
He said that his current visit to the eight African
countries aims to consolidate the traditional friendship between China and
Africa, implement the agreements reached at the Beijing Summit of the Forum on
China-Africa Cooperation last November, increase substantial cooperation and
promote common development.
