President Hu Jintao
and Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin pledged on Friday to expand
bilateral cooperation.
After the meeting, the two leaders witnessed the signing of
cooperative agreements on aviation, railway and food safety, as
well as animal and plant quarantine.
Hu arrived in the Canadian capital Thursday morning on a state
visit as guest of Canadian Governor-General Adrienne Clarkson.
At the welcome ceremony, Hu reviewed the rapid growth of
exchanges and cooperation in the past 35 years of bilateral
diplomatic ties in politics, economy, trade, energy, science,
technology, education and culture, as well as fruitful bilateral
cooperation on major international and regional issues.
He said the economies of the two countries are highly
complementary and have vast potential for reciprocal
cooperation.
To further bilateral relations also serves the requirements of
the times and the aspiration of the two peoples, as the two
countries are influential and shoulder major responsibilities for
safeguarding world peace and promoting common development, said
Hu.
He expressed confidence that under the concerted efforts from
both sides, the friendship between the two peoples and bilateral
cooperation will continue yielding new and rich results.
Clarkson also highlighted the flourishing bilateral relationship
at the welcoming ceremony.
In their meeting after the ceremony, the two heads of state
reviewed the friendship and cooperation between their countries in
the past years.
Hu told Clarkson that China attaches great importance to the
friendly cooperation with Canada, and his current visit is aimed at
enhancing mutual trust and promoting cooperation so as to push the
bilateral partnership of all-round cooperation to a new level.
This is the first visit to Canada by a Chinese head of state in
eight years.
In a written speech delivered at the airport upon arrival, Hu
said that "deepening and enriching the
China-Canada all-round partnership serves the fundamental
interests of the two countries and two peoples and contributes to
the prosperity and development of the region and the world at
large."
Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing said last month that the visit
would "deepen bilateral cooperation in various fields and upgrade
the all-round partnership of cooperation to a new level."
Chinese statistics show that China-Canada trade volume last year
reached US$15.5 billion, a 55 per cent increase over the previous
year. In the first half of 2005, the figure was US$9 billion.
(China Daily September 10, 2005)