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| Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) and his Panamanian counterpart Juan Carlos Varela (R) signed a score of infrastructure, tourism and development cooperation agreements (AFP Photo/Luis ACOSTA) |
China's President Xi Jinping and his Panamanian counterpart Juan Carlos Varela signed a string of cooperation agreements Monday as Beijing aims to extend its political and economic influence in Latin America.
Xi arrived
in the Central American country late Sunday, fresh from striking a 90-day truce
deal in the trade war with US President Donald Trump at the G20 summit in
Argentina.
Xi and
Varela signed a score of infrastructure, tourism and development cooperation
agreements as Panama became the first Latin American country to partner with
Beijing's giant multi-billion dollar global investment initiative known as
"Belt and Road."
Xi's visit
comes after Panama broke ties with Taiwan last year and switched its allegiance
to Beijing. Since Panama's move, two other Central American countries -- the
Dominican Republic and El Salvador -- have made the switch.
"Our
bilateral relations have had a strong start after only a year and a half,"
Xi said.
Varela said
Xi's visit -- and the investment it brought -- meant Panama would become
"the gateway of China to Latin America."
The two
countries are also negotiating a free trade agreement.
Xi also met
with business leaders and visited the Panama Canal's new Cocoli Locks. China is
the canal's second biggest user after the United States.
In a column
written for local newspaper Estrella de Panama, Xi said he had "high
expectations" for the visit, the first ever by a Chinese leader to the
country.
"We
must be cooperative partners of mutual benefit and shared profits," wrote
Xi.
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Beijing
hopes Panama can be a logistics hub for the expansion of trade in
Latin America
and the Caribbean (AFP Photo/Luis Acosta)
|
Logistics
hub
Beijing
hopes Panama can be a logistics hub for the expansion of trade in Latin America
and the Caribbean -- an idea the local business community has fully embraced.
"Panama
usually generates a lot of interest because of its strategic location in the
region and because of the canal," Severo Sousa, president of the National
Business Council (Conep), told AFP.
These
factors -- along with Panama's political stability, growing economy and deep
financial network -- are "very attractive" to China, Sousa added.
"What
the Chinese want is very clear, they want to take advantage of the geographical
position for their expansion and development in the region," said
economist Francisco Bustamante.
"A
strong Chinese presence in Panama reaffirms to the world China's rise in the
global hierarchy at the expense of the United States," said Carlos Guevara
Mann, professor of international relations at Florida State University in
Panama.
"Being
caught in the rivalry between China and the United States would be extremely
problematic for Panama," because "it could lead to reprisals by
Washington," warned Mann.
During a visit
to the Central American country last month, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
warned Varela about China's growing influence in the region.
Tug of
war over Taiwan
China and
Taiwan have been governed separately since the end of a civil war on the
mainland in 1949, but Beijing sees the island as part of its territory awaiting
reunification.
Beijing and
Taipei have been engaged for years in a diplomatic tug-of-war in developing
countries, with aid and economic support often used as bargaining chips to gain
diplomatic recognition.
Washington,
which has accused the Chinese of trying to use aid to drive a wedge between
Taipei and its Western Hemisphere partners, recalled its envoy to Panama City
in September this year.
Varela, who
visited China last year, promptly asked the US to respect his country's
sovereignty.
VIDEO: China's President Xi Jinping and his Panamanian counterpart Juan Carlos Varela sign a string of cooperation agreements as Beijing aims to extend its political and economic influence in Latin America pic.twitter.com/tBsUUmxyo0— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 4, 2018


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