Xi unveils plans to increase imports from South Africa
President, counterpart oversee signing of multiple cooperative documents
China would like to take proactive measures to expand imports from South Africa amid the two countries' efforts to boost strategic coordination, President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday.
Xi made the remark while meeting the media with his South African counterpart, Cyril Ramaphosa, in Pretoria during his third state visit to South Africa.
China and South Africa signed a number of cooperation documents covering such areas as trade, investment, finance and visa simplification with the two leaders as witnesses.
The two nations are influential developing countries and emerging markets, and they have agreed to enhance strategic coordination, support multilateralism and safeguard the multilateral trade system, Xi said.
- Mainland denounces Taiwan-US trade deal as 'sellout pact'
- Beijing becomes China's second 5-trillion-yuan economy in 2025
- Strengthening trade bonds benefits people across Taiwan Strait: spokesperson
- Chinese researchers develop eye surgery robot
- High-speed train staff members in Beijing busy preparing for Spring Festival travel rush
- Mainland says DPP's so-called trade deal with US sells out Taiwan's interests
































