China eyes plan to connect Southeast Asian rail links, including ECRL
19 Jun 2024
China said it was willing to study a plan to connect Malaysia’s US$10-billion (RM47-billion) East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) to other China-backed railway projects in Laos and Thailand, potentially expanding Beijing’s Belt and Road initiative across Southeast Asia.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang, who is on a three-day visit to Malaysia, said on Wednesday the proposal would make the central line of a proposed Pan-Asia Railway, running from Kunming in China to Singapore, a reality.
“This will better promote the construction of new international land and sea trade corridors, enhance regional connectivity, and deepen the building of the Asean community,” Li said.
Li was speaking during a ground-breaking ceremony at a construction site for the ECRL — a 665km railway that will link Peninsular Malaysia’s east and west coasts by the end of 2026. Malaysia’s government said in March it would consider extending the China-backed project to its border with Thailand.
Li is on the third leg of a trip that has included New Zealand and Australia, as China looks to expand influence and investments in the Asia-Pacific region amid an ongoing rivalry with the US.
He met Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim in the administrative capital of Putrajaya, following his arrival in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday for a visit to mark 50 years of diplomatic ties between the two countries.
After Wednesday’s closed-door meeting, Li and Anwar witnessed the signing of more than a dozen pacts, including renewing a five-year programme to collaborate in areas such as trade and investment, agriculture, manufacturing, infrastructure and financial services, a statement after the meeting showed.
The programme, which will expire in 2028, was first introduced in 2013.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and Chinese Premier Li Qiang having durians on Wednesday. (Photo credit: Anwar’s Facebook page)
China also agreed to allow imports of fresh durian from Malaysia after it meets sanitary requirements, the statement added.
Malaysia, one of the world’s biggest producers of the spiky, smelly fruit, was previously allowed to ship only the whole frozen fruit and its products to China, with exports valued at RM1.19 billion in 2023.
The two countries also vowed to review visa-free travel arrangements set to expire in coming months.
China has been Malaysia’s largest trading partner since 2009, and the foreign ministry said total trade was valued at US$98.9 billion in 2023.
Anwar has pledged to remain neutral on China’s geopolitical rivalry with the US. Malaysia has announced large investments by companies from both countries this year, including from China’s ByteDance and US tech giants Google and Microsoft.
Anwar has said Malaysia considered China an important trading ally and accusedsome Western powers of “China-phobia”, amid ongoingclashes between neighbouring the Philippines and China in the disputed South China Sea.
China claims almost the entire South China Sea, including parts claimed by the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam.
Anwar and Li on Wednesday agreed that China and relevant countries from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) should independently handle the South China Sea issue, according to a report by Chinese news agency Xinhua.
The two leaders also pledged to work towards an early conclusion of a free trade agreement between China and Asean, Xinhua reported.
Source: The Edge Malaysia