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Mongolian Premier begins visit to China
BEIJING—Mongolia's prime minister pledged to strengthen trade and
political ties with China when he met with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao at
the start of a six-day visit.
Wen welcomed Prime Minister Mieagombo Enkhbold at the Great Hall of the
People, the seat of the legislature, and said his trip would help
advance relations between the two neighboring countries.
"I am willing to develop relations between both countries by deep and
friendly exchanges of opinions with you," Wen said.
Enkhbold was to meet Wu Bangguo, the country's top legislator, and Jia
Qinglin, member of the Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee on
Thursday. He will also visit the western region of Xinjiang and Shaanxi
province in the north.
"We will push for the important future development of partnership and
discussions. We hope for the stable long-term development of friendly
relations and cooperation," Enkhbold told Wen.
The Mongolian and Chinese delegations signed several memoranda of
understanding, including a gift of 2,000 tons of wheat from China to
Mongolia, a special export loan of US$300 million, cooperation between
the foreign ministries of both countries in 2007 and cooperation on
exploration of oil and coal. No additional details were provided on the
agreements.
According to the Xinhua News Agency, trade between China and Mongolia
hit US$1.13 billion (euro0.88 billion) in the first nine months of 2006,
up by 88.8 percent over the same period last year. Its 2.5 million
people live on a vast, grassy steppe between Russia and China. Many are
nomadic herders of cattle and sheep.
It is Enkhbold's first visit to China since taking office in January.
Last month, he survived a no-confidence vote in parliament amid
complaints of corruption and misconduct by officials of his government.
Critics have accused Enkhbold of misconduct in land sales during his
former term as mayor of Ulan Bator, Mongolia's capital and biggest city.
Others accused his ministers of incompetence and said they had failed to
do enough to ease poverty in the country, which suffered a sharp
economic decline since 1990.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |