‫شبكة تلفزيون الصين الدولية (CGTN): رأس المال الأجنبي إيجابي في السوق الصينية

بكين، 3 نوفمبر، 2022 / PRNewswire / — لا تزال غالبية الشركات الممولة من الخارج إيجابية في السوق الصينية، حيث تتمتع الصين بفرص هائلة في السنوات المقبلة مع جهود الانفتاح الدؤوبة وتحسين بيئة الأعمال وتوقعات نمو السوق المشرقة.

أدى الاختتام الناجح للمؤتمر الوطني العشرين للحزب الشيوعي الصيني إلى تعزيز ثقة الشركات الأجنبية في السوق، وفقًا لاستبيان صدر في 27 أكتوبر من قبل المجلس الصيني لتعزيز التجارة الدولية ( CCPIT ).

ومن بين أكثر من 500 شركة أجنبية شملها الاستطلاع، أكدت 96.7 في المائة إنجازات التنمية التي حققتها الصين على مدى العقد الماضي، وأعرب 96.9 في المائة عن ثقة أقوى في السوق الصينية.

وما فتئت الصين تسعى جاهدة لخلق فرص جديدة للعالم من خلال تنميتها الخاصة. معرض الصين الدولي للاستيراد ( CIIE ) هو مثل هذه الخطوة لفتح السوق الصينية بنشاط للعالم.

وقد اجتذب معرض الصين الدولي للاستيراد هذا العام 284 من قائمة فورتشن جلوبال 500 والشركات الرائدة في هذا المجال. ما يقرب من 90 في المئة من فورتشن جلوبال 500 والشركات الرائدة في الصناعة التي حضرت حدث العام الماضي تعود هذا العام. وتعد ريو تينتو ومجموعة BHP و ThyssenKrupp و Gilead Sciences هي من بين شركات فورتشن جلوبال 500 التي تظهر لأول مرة في معرض الصين الدولي للاستيراد.

السوق الصينية جذابة

وقد انعكست هذه المعنويات المتفائلة بين الشركات الأجنبية أيضًا في أرقام الاستثمار الأجنبي المباشر في الصين. في الأشهر التسعة الأولى من عام 2022، تجاوز تدفق الاستثمار الأجنبي المباشر الصيني في الاستخدام الفعلي 155.3 مليار دولار، بزيادة سنوية قدرها 18.9 في المائة، حسبما أظهرت بيانات من وزارة التجارة ( MOFCOM ).

وفي الفترة من يناير إلى سبتمبر قفز الاستثمار من ألمانيا 114.3 بالمئة على أساس سنوي بينما ارتفع الاستثمار من كوريا الجنوبية 90.7 بالمئة ومن اليابان 39.5 بالمئة والمملكة المتحدة 22.3 بالمئة وفقًا لوزارة التجارة.

تقود الصين العالم في تدفقات رأس المال الأجنبي. وبلغت حصتها العالمية من الاستثمار الأجنبي المباشر في الربع الأول (الربع الأول) من عام 2022 19.5 في المائة، لتحتل المرتبة الأولى في العالم، وفقًا لمنظمة التعاون الاقتصادي والتنمية.

تحسين بيئة الأعمال

في الربع الأول، كان ما يقرب من 90 في المائة من الشركات الممولة من الخارج راضين عن سياسات الصين المتعلقة بالوصول إلى الأسواق، وتعزيز المنافسة في الأسواق، والوصول إلى المباني التجارية والخدمات المالية.

وأظهر مسح منفصل أصدره المجلس الصيني لتعزيز التجارة الدولية في 27 أكتوبر أن ما يقرب من 80 في المائة من الشركات الأجنبية التي شملها الاستطلاع حافظت على حجمها الحالي للإنتاج والأعمال في الصين، في حين أن أكثر من 5 في المائة قد وسعت الاستثمار لأنها تعطي الأولوية للتنمية الاستراتيجية في الصين.

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UN chief calls for renewal of Ukraine grain deal, progress at COP27

UNITED NATIONS— UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for the renewal of the Ukraine grain deal, and for the application of the same spirit of multilateralism at the upcoming UN Climate Change Conference in Egypt, or COP27.

At a press encounter, Guterres called for the renewal of the Black Sea Grain Initiative as Russia has agreed to resume its participation.

“Now that the initiative has fully resumed, I appeal to all parties to concentrate efforts in two areas: first, to renewal and full implementation of the Black Sea Initiative; second, to removing the remaining obstacles to the exports of Russian food and fertilizer,” said Guterres.

“I am fully committed — along with the entire United Nations system — to the achievement of both these essential objectives,” he said.

The initial duration of the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which allows the export of Ukrainian grain and other agricultural products from Black Sea ports, is 120 days and expires on Nov 19. The parties had agreed that the deal could be extended automatically on the condition that no party objects.

The Russian announcement on Saturday of the suspension of its participation in the deal had dampened hopes for its renewal.

Russia announced on Wednesday that it will resume its participation, after days of diplomatic engagement. Guterres had to alter his travel plan to focus on this issue.

The world needs safe and unimpeded navigation for exports of grain, foodstuffs and fertilizer from Ukraine through the Black Sea, and the world needs concerted efforts to urgently address the global fertilizer market crunch and make full use of Russian export capacity, said Guterres.

“Higher fertilizer prices are already affecting farmers around the world. We cannot allow global fertilizer accessibility problems to morph into a global food shortage,” he said.

Over the past few days, the world has come to understand and appreciate the importance of the Black Sea Grain Initiative — for stemming the food crisis, for easing prices and pressures on people around the world, for reducing the risks of hunger, poverty and instability, said Guterres, referring to Russia’s suspension of its participation in the initiative.

“The Black Sea Grain Initiative is making a difference … As of today, 10 million metric tons of grain and other foodstuffs have been shipped through the Black Sea corridor. It has taken just three months to reach this milestone,” he said.

Despite all the obstacles, “the beacon of hope in the Black Sea is still shining,” he said.

Guterres also hailed the signing of an agreement on cessation of hostilities between the federal government of Ethiopia and the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front.

“It is a critical first step that paves the way for the unimpeded delivery of life-saving humanitarian aid and the resumption of public services. The human cost of this conflict has been devastating,” he said. “I urge all Ethiopians to seize this opportunity for peace and I pledge the full support of the United Nations.”

The rescue of the Black Sea Initiative and the signing of the Ethiopian peace agreement demonstrate the power of multilateralism in action and the value of discrete but determined diplomacy, said Guterres.

“We must never give up in the cause of peace and advancing the values of the United Nations. That is the spirit that every country must bring to the UN Climate Conference, COP27, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt,” he said.

COP27 must be the place to rebuild trust and re-establish the ambition needed to avoid driving our planet over the climate cliff, he said.

In the last few weeks, report after report has painted a clear and bleak picture: emissions are still growing at record levels. Instead of going down 45 percent by 2030, greenhouse gas emissions are on course to rise by 10 percent. Meanwhile, temperatures are on course to rise by as much as 2.8 degrees — with the present policies in place — by the end of the century, said Guterres.

“And that means our planet is on course for reaching tipping points that will make climate chaos irreversible and forever bake in catastrophic temperature rise. We need to move from tipping points to turning points for hope,” he said.

That means urgently increasing ambition and trust, especially between North and South. Specifically, it is time for a historic pact between the developed and emerging economies — a pact in which developed countries deliver on the commitment made in Paris and make additional efforts to reduce emissions in line with the 1.5-degree goal, and a pact in which wealthier countries provide financial and technical assistance — along with support from multilateral development banks and technology companies — to help emerging economies speed their renewable energy transition, said Guterres.

“COP27 must be the place to close the ambition gap, the credibility gap and the solidarity gap. It must put us back on track to cutting emissions, boosting climate resilience and adaptation, keeping the promise on climate finance and addressing loss and damage from climate change,” he said.

“Getting concrete results on loss and damage is the litmus test of the commitment of governments to help close all these gaps … There is no way anyone can argue there is no loss and no damage. The world must come together to support developing countries and vulnerable communities,” he said.

COP27 must lay the foundations for much faster, bolder climate action now and in this crucial decade, when the global climate fight will be won or lost. All nations and all people must be on board in these make-or-break next years, starting at COP27, he said.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Scores of al-Shabab Militants Killed in Somalia, Army Forces Say

Aid groups say they are ready to deliver much-needed food and medicine to Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region after the warring sides agreed to a cease-fire Wednesday.

The deal between the Tigray rebels and Ethiopia’s government commits federal officials to ensuring “unhindered humanitarian access” to Tigray, which is in the grip of one of the world’s biggest humanitarian crises.

Some 5 million people there need humanitarian assistance, while doctors at the region’s flagship Ayder Hospital say they have run out of medicines to treat sick patients.

Representatives of the World Food Program and the International Committee of the Red Cross told VOA their organizations were ready to send trucks carrying aid supplies into Tigray but have not been given the green light by the federal government.

Jude Fuhnwi, a spokesperson for the ICRC in Ethiopia, welcomed the signing of the deal Wednesday, saying the conflict has caused “vast civilian suffering” since it broke out two years ago.

“The ICRC remains committed to supporting the population of northern Ethiopia. And we have already made the necessary preparations to immediately dispatch our next humanitarian supplies by air and by road, as soon as the humanitarian routes are open,” Fuhnwi said.

Roughly one-third of children and three quarters of lactating mothers screened for malnutrition in Tigray last week displayed signs of malnourishment.

Meanwhile, fighting has displaced around half a million people in northwestern Tigray. Most of them are cut off from aid distributions.

On Thursday, a spokesperson for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs told reporters that they “are in contact with the government of Ethiopia and others to resume the movement of aid convoys and personnel” to the cities of Mekelle and Shire.

Aid deliveries to Tigray have been severely restricted since the war in northern Ethiopia began. No aid trucks have entered the region since fresh fighting erupted on August 24.

Aid deliveries have resumed to parts of the Amhara and Afar regions next to Tigray that were also affected by the fighting.

Source: Voice of America

UN says hunger crisis in South Sudan escalating amid climate change, conflict

JUBA— The hunger and malnutrition crisis in South Sudan has escalated, fueled by climate-induced disasters like flooding alongside civil strife, the United Nations agencies said.

The World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said in a joint statement released in Juba, the capital of South Sudan, that 62.7 percent or 7.76 million people in South Sudan could face acute food insecurity from April-July 2023 due to a combination of climatic shocks and conflict blighting the world’s youngest republic.

The UN agencies said the proportion of people facing acute food insecurity and malnutrition has surpassed the levels witnessed between 2013 to 2016 when South Sudan was in the grip of civil strife

Other factors that have fueled hunger and malnutrition in the country include poor macroeconomic conditions, spiraling cost of food and fuel linked to the Ukraine conflict alongside the decline in funding for humanitarian programs.

“South Sudan is on the frontlines of the climate crisis and day in, day out families are losing their homes, cattle, fields, and hope to extreme weather,” said Makena Walker, Acting WFP Country Director in South Sudan.

“Without humanitarian food assistance, millions more will find themselves in an increasingly dire situation and unable to provide even the most basic food for their families,” she added.

Meshack Malo, FAO Representative in South Sudan, noted that extensive flooding in central parts of the country has worsened the hunger crisis, adding that livelihood support was crucial to help stave off mass starvation.

According to Malo, despite producing 840,000 tons of cereals in 2021,South Sudan is grappling with a deficit of 541,000 tons which can be bridged once farmers are provided with quality seeds and manure.

There has been some marginal improvement in food security across some parts of South Sudan though all counties except one have demonstrated a decline in nutrition status which could prolong till mid-2023, said Jesper Moller, UNICEF Acting Representative in South Sudan.

Moller added that the population of malnourished children in South Sudan has increased, adding that emergency nutritional support was urgent to shield them from starvation.

Beysolow Nyanti, the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for South Sudan stressed the importance of updated data to inform the roll-out of emergency support for the food-insecure civilians.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Refugees in Malawi Seize WFP Vehicle in Protest Over Food Rations

Refugees in Malawi’s Dzaleka camp who were removed from a food rations list have protested and seized a World Food Program vehicle.

The WFP removed about 600 refugee families from the list for receiving food rations in February saying they were self-sustaining and citing inadequate funding. But more than half the families, mainly from the Democratic Republic of Congo, say they are now struggling with food insecurity.

The refugees started the protests Wednesday, demanding the WFP officials resume providing them with rations, saying that living without food assistance has become unbearable. More than half of the de-listed refugees are holding protests around the camp, challenging the assessment procedure.

“I cannot work so that I can feed my family, but I am very hungry,” said Ndaize Eliwude, a refugee from Burundi who arrived at the Dzaleka camp in 2002. “I am not castigating or insulting them, I am just complaining that they did not do a good job to remove me from the list, because now I am not managing to get some food for my household.”

The protesters are holding on to the vehicle they seized from WFP officials Wednesday during the protests.

“It is just an act of symbolizing that this car belongs to the company that would give us food and it has taken food from us,” Eliwude said. “So now, let us hold it so that the owners can know that we are here and that we are hungry.”

Badre Bahaji, head of communications for WFP in Malawi, said the refugees took the car as the WFP officials left a meeting with partners on the camp premises.

“The meeting went very well but after 11:30 a.m. [the] WFP vehicle and staff were prevented from leaving the camp,” Bahaji said. “So the refugees surrounded the vehicle, preventing it from leaving. The situation was handled without any violence. After a couple of hours the WFP staff left the camp unharmed. But the WFP vehicle is still blocked in the camp.”

The refugees holding the vehicle said they will release it only if the WFP puts them back on the list of food ration recipients.

Bahaji said the WFP will soon conduct a profiling exercise for all households at the camp, which houses about 52,000 refugees.

He said the exercise will provide an opportunity for all the refugees, including those taken off food ration assistance, to explain their food security situation.

Source: Voice of America