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Interview: China's rise an opportunity not threat, says Hungarian official

Updated: May 13, 2024 Source: Xinhua News Agency
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People welcome Chinese President Xi Jinping in Budapest, Hungary, May 8, 2024. (Xinhua/Zhang Fan)

Chinese President Xi Jinping's recent visit to Budapest was a pivotal moment in bilateral relations, and this visit marked a new peak in bilateral relations and was regarded as "crown jewelry," said a Hungarian official.

by Xinhua writers Yin Xiaosheng, Chen Hao

BUDAPEST, May 12 (Xinhua) -- Hungary sees China's emergence as an economic powerhouse as an opportunity, not a threat, Balazs Andras Orban, political director of Hungary's prime minister, has said.

Chinese President Xi Jinping's recent visit to Budapest was a pivotal moment in bilateral relations, Orban told Xinhua in a recent interview, adding this visit marked a new peak in bilateral relations and was regarded as "crown jewelry."

As the first European country to participate in the Belt and Road Initiative, Hungary has forged a deep and fruitful partnership with China in investment, trade, green development and technological innovation.

"We need practical and pragmatic collaborations," Orban said. "The Belt and Road Initiative is a perfect example of how to do so because it's not just in theory, it's in practice."

Highlighting the Budapest-Belgrade railway as a flagship project of the Belt and Road cooperation between China and Hungary, Orban said the railway, with state-of-the-art technologies, serves as "a perfect example of meeting the needs of the Hungarian people."

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People wait for trains at Belgrade railway station in Belgrade, Serbia, April 29, 2024. The Budapest-Belgrade railway is one of the flagship projects of China's Belt and Road Initiative. (Xinhua/Li Ying)

Noting the trend towards electric vehicles and the new energy industry, as well as China's world-leading technology in these fields, Orban expressed his expectation for further collaboration in the production and research of promising new technologies, which has the potential to provide a significant boost to the economy.

"This is a win-win situation and it's really a new phase of China-Hungary relationship building. We are very grateful that we have these good companies in Hungary," Orban said.

However, Orban cautioned that there is a growing trend of decoupling from some Western countries, noting that such actions are not in line with the interests of the Hungarian people.

"Instead of decoupling or de-risking, we believe connectivity is the strategy which is working," said Orban. "We need to be able to bring the Eurasian continent together and understand that the world shares a common future."

(Li Ruojia contributed to the story.)

Editor: Tian Shenyoujia