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Colombia joins Belt and Road initiative as China courts Latin America
Colombia formally agreed on Wednesday to join China's vast Belt and Road infrastructure initiative, as Beijing draws Latin America closer in a bid to counter the United States.
Latin America has emerged as a key battleground in US President Donald Trump's confrontations with China, and the region is coming under pressure from Washington to choose a side.
China has surpassed the United States as the biggest trading partner of Brazil, Peru, Chile and other Latin American nations, and two-thirds of countries there have signed up to Chinese leader Xi Jinping's Belt and Road infrastructure drive.
On the sidelines of a major gathering of regional leaders in Beijing on Wednesday, Colombia became the latest country to join the vast, global initiative.
Colombia's foreign ministry hailed the agreement as a "historic step that opens up new opportunities for investment, technological cooperation, and sustainable development for both countries".
And after a meeting with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, Xi urged the countries to "take the opportunity of Colombia's formal joining the high-quality Belt and Road Initiative family to promote the quality upgrading of cooperation," Beijing's state media said.
And after a meeting with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, Xi urged the countries to take the opportunity of Colombia joining the "high-quality Belt and Road Initiative family to promote the quality upgrading of cooperation", Beijing's state media said.
Posting a video of the signing to social media platform X, Petro wrote that "the history of our foreign relations is changing".
"From now on, Colombia will interact with the entire world on a footing of equality and freedom," he wrote.
The BRI is a central pillar of Xi's bid to expand China's economic and political clout overseas.
For more than a decade, it has provided investment for infrastructure and other large-scale projects around the world, offering Beijing political and economic leverage in return.
Last year, Xi inaugurated Latin America's first Beijing-funded port in Chancay, Peru -- a symbol of the Asian superpower's growing influence on the continent.
This week's China-CELAC Forum in Beijing has seen China cast itself as the defender of the multilateral order and the backer of the Global South, with Xi pledging on Monday $9.2 billion in credit towards development.
That pledge was part of a broad set of initiatives aimed at deepening cooperation, including on infrastructure and clean energy.
Beijing will also cooperate in counterterrorism and fighting transnational organised crime, Xi said, as well as enhancing exchanges such as scholarships and training programmes.
M.Vogt--VB