TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) -The BRI plan, also known as the One Belt One Road project and championed by Chinese President Xi Jinping, aims to link China by sea and land with southeast and central Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa, through an infrastructure network on the lines of the ancient Silk Road.
Speaking to the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, Yang Jiechi, who runs the party’s foreign affairs committee, said he had noted that some in the international community believed this was a geopolitical tool and would only bring debt traps for participating countries.
“This obviously shows a lack of objectivity and fair understanding of the Belt and Road initiative. It is a misunderstanding, misjudgment and is even prejudiced,” said Yang, who is also a former foreign minister and ambassador to Washington.
Stressing that the BRI project was to promote “joint development,” he said, “The Belt and Road is open, inclusive and transparent. It does not play little geopolitical games. It does not engage in the exclusion of exclusive small circles.”
Yang went on to say that many countries, companies and ordinary people taking part in the plan had "publicly refuted rumors" about it being a debt trap.
Belt and Road projects, from their selection to their financing, go through careful risk assessments and the initiative's principles stress sustainable development, according to the Chinese official.
"For cooperative partners who have debt difficulties, China's principle is to appropriately resolve this through friendly consultations, and has never pushed or forced debt" on anyone, Yang said, adding that almost 40 foreign leaders would participate in the initiative, without naming any of them.
Some of China's closest allies have already confirmed they will partake, including Russia, Pakistan, the Philippines and Cambodia.
The remarks come after Washington denounced the infrastructure plan as a “vanity project” and warned Italy against supporting it.
“Italy is a major global economy and great investment destination. No need for Italian government to lend legitimacy to China’s infrastructure vanity project,” Garrett Marquis, a spokesman for the White House’s group of national security advisers, said on Twitter.
Last year, US Vice President Mike Pence slammed China’s BRI, arguing that Chinese funding of the infrastructure project was burdening developing nations with debt. President Xi rejected US criticism of the project, saying it is not "a trap."
Source:presstv