Deals strengthen Sino-Mexican ties By Hu Xiao and Cao Desheng (China Daily) Updated: 2004-08-18 10:08
China and Mexico made a "concrete step" forward in establishing a strategic
partnership between the two countries yesterday with the signing of a host of
co-operation agreements.
A series of economic, social, cultural, scientific, communications and
agricultural agreements were signed in Beijing in the presence of visiting
Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Ernesto Derbez Bautista.
President Hu Jintao praised the establishment of a permanent commission
between the two governments and the success of its first conference.
Hu made these remarks when meeting Derbez at the Great Hall of the People.
Strengthening friendly bilateral co-operation will benefit the two countries'
socio-economic development.
Derbez said that there was a great potential for bilateral co-operation and
the Mexican Government will work harder to improve this.
The founding ceremony of the permanent bi-national commission was held on
Monday, with Derbez and his Chinese counterpart Li Zhaoxing in attendance.
The two-day conference of the commission which closed yesterday included four
sub-committee meetings covering politics, trade and economics, science and
technology, and education and culture.
Both sides signed a mutual civil aviation transport agreement yesterday, seen
as one of the greatest achievements of the conference.
Mexican Secretary of Communi-cations and Transport Pedro Cerisola Y. Weber
said he expected the two sides have specific goals in the short, medium and long
term.
The agreement will provide a legal framework for future air transport
co-operation between airlines in the two countries, said Wang Ronghua, director
of the Department of International Affairs and Co-operation of the General
Administration of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC).
According to a joint statement issued following the signing of the agreement,
each country can designate two airlines to operate flights between two
destinations with no limits on the number of flights, Wang said.
He said CAAC would encourage domestic airlines to operate in the China-Mexico
business, benefiting from Mexico's large number of air routes in South America.
Direct flight between the two countries might open within this year, Wang
said.
After a three-day visit to Beijing, Derbez said yesterday that he would lead
a group of Mexican entrepreneurs to visit Shanghai, China's financial hub, to
seek out more investment opportunities in China.