Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi
announced on Thursday that the Chinese government is ready to
substantially reduce and forgive the debts owed by Iraq while
giving a grant of 50 million yuan of RMB (about US$6.5 million) to
Iraq in 2007.
The grant will be used to provide assistance in Iraq's public
health and education, Yang said at a ministerial meeting of the
International Compact with Iraq (ICI) opened in the day at Egyptian
Red Sea resort, Sharm el-Sheikh.
"The Chinese government is ready to substantially reduce and
forgive the debts owed by Iraq. In particular, it will forgive all
the debts owed by the Iraqi government," Yang said.
China has taken note of Iraq's request for debt reduction and
forgiveness according to the arrangement of the Paris club and is
ready to resolve the issue through continued friendly consultation
with Iraq, Yang said.
Addressing the meeting, Yang also said China supported the ICI
which he said serves as a blueprint for Iraq's future development
and reconstruction and defines its partnership with the
international community.
On how to implement the ICI, Yang noted that the international
community needs to increase consultation and coordination in
assisting Iraq to ensure assistance in a coordinated way.
China supports the UN in continuing to play a leading role in this
effort, said he.
Yang also said there should be a proper balance among the various
areas covered by the ICI, such as the efforts to promote dialogue
and reconciliation among Iraqi groups, human rights and the rule of
law, economic and social reform, among others.
He called on the international community to deliver on their
promises to assist Iraqi's reconstruction and help Iraq develop its
capacity for self development.
Yang also called for strengthening supervision, saying a fair and
transparent environment will encourage all parties to participate
in Iraq's reconstruction and that China supports conducting regular
progress evaluation on Iraqi's reconstruction and the providing of
international assistance.
Yang, who arrived at this Red Sea resort on Wednesday afternoon,
was on his first international mission after being named as Chinese
foreign minister on April 27, replacing retired Li Zhaoxing.
The ICI meeting, with attendance of some 60 nations and 12 regional
and international organizations, was the largest international
meeting on Iraq since the U.S.-led coalition forces seized Baghdad
in April of 2003.
The ICI was initially launched on July 28, 2006, in the hope of
creating "a permanent partnership between Iraq and the
international community" to help Iraq in its reconstruction efforts
and to pursue political, economic and social development over the
next five years.
The initiative, with strong support from the United States, looks
like a type of five-year plan for Iraq, yet it is also based on
economic, political and security commitments by the Iraqi
government in the next five years.
The ICI is supposed to be chaired jointly by Iraq and the UN, with
the support of the World Bank.
The one-day ICI meeting gathered senior diplomats from Iraq's six
neighbors -- Iran, Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
-- plus Bahrain, Egypt, the Arab League, the Organization of
Islamic Conference and the UN.
Also attending are senior diplomats from the other four permanent
members of the UN Security Council -- the United States, Britain,
Russia and France -- and members of the G-8, including Germany,
Canada, Japan and Italy.
Following the ICI meeting is an extended ministerial meeting of
Iraq's neighbors on Friday, with participation of the permanent
members of the UN Security Council and representatives of the G8
countries.
(Xinhua News Agency May 4, 2007)
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