China, M’sia renew 5-year economic pact, to review visa-free travel

China, M’sia renew 5-year economic pact, to review visa-free travel

Chinese premier Li Qiang and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim witness the signing of several bilateral deals, including for exports of fresh durians to China.

China premier Li Qiang (left) and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim (second from right) witness the exchange of a MoU between agriculture and food security minister Mohamad Sabu and Chinese ambassador to Malaysia Ouyang Yujing. (Bernama pic)
KUALA LUMPUR:
China and Malaysia renewed a five-year economic and trade cooperation pact today and pledged to review visa-free travel arrangements between the countries, during a visit by Chinese premier Li Qiang to mark 50 years of diplomatic ties.

Li, who arrived in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday evening, met with Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in Putrajaya today.

After the meeting, Li and Anwar witnessed the signing of several bilateral deals, including for exports of fresh durians from Malaysia to China.

The agreement would see Malaysia, one of the world’s biggest producers of the fruit, join Southeast Asian neighbours Thailand and Vietnam in shipping fresh durians to the multi-billion dollar Chinese market.

Malaysia was previously allowed to ship only durian products and frozen whole durian to China.

Li is on the third leg of a trip where he has also visited New Zealand and Australia, as China looks to expand its influence and investments in the Asia-Pacific amid geopolitical tensions and competition with the US.

Li is also expected to meet Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Ibrahim, and attend a groundbreaking ceremony at a construction site for the East Coast Rail Link, part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, today.

The 665km, RM50.27 billion railway will connect the east and west coasts of Peninsular Malaysia by the end of 2026.

First proposed in 2017, the rail link is being constructed by the Malaysian unit of China Communications Construction Co Ltd. In March, Malaysia said it would consider extending the China-backed project to its border with Thailand.

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