Premier Wen
Jiabao presented visiting Thai Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra with DNA identification results from Thai tsunami
victims, a move Beijing hopes will further improve bilateral
relations to commemorate the 30th anniversary of official
diplomatic relations between the two nations.??
During a meeting on Friday in Beijing, the leaders witnessed the
signing of a series of biological, environmental, financial and
quarantine agreements, as Thailand makes plans to open a consulate
in northwestern Shaanxi
Province's capital Xi'an.
Wen noted that Thaksin's visit, his first since taking office in
March for a second term, demonstrated Thailand's commitment to
improving bilateral relations.
Four aspects
Wen explained that the future development of
Sino-Thai relations will focus primarily on four aspects:
dialogue on international and regional issues to enhance strategic
relations, exploration into new energy sources to strengthen trade
cooperation, promotion of security cooperation and cross-cultural
communication, and implementation of action plans for strategic
partnerships between China and the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN).
More cooperation called
Thaksin showed his appreciation for China's efforts to aid
tsunami victims, calling for a more dynamic cooperative
relationship, encouraging Chinese enterprises to expand business
ventures in Thailand, with hopes that Thai businesses will find
trade opportunities in south China's Pan-Pearl River Delta
region.
Thaksin also looks forward to more Chinese tourists in Thailand,
welcoming plans for a Chinese cultural center there.
GMS summit
Both sides expressed their desire to cooperate with participants
in next week's second summit meeting of the Greater Mekong
Subregion (GMS), to achieve practical results in trade
cooperation.
Wen and Thaksin, alongside leaders from Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos
and Vietnam, will take part in the summit meeting, taking place in
Kunming, capital of southwest China's Yunnan
Province.
After the meeting with Wen, Thaksin flew to Guangzhou, capital
of south China's Guangdong
Province, later on Friday. The province is ancestral home of
many Thai-Chinese, including the Thai prime minister himself.
(China Daily July 2, 2005)