Institutional search for global peace and development has been on for decades and is still ongoing. At different times, the world has seen the emergence of bodies like the United Nations, the European Union, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, the BRICS group, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the African Union, ECOWAS, the Belt and Road Initiative and Forum for China-Africa Cooperation, among others.
The common denominator of all those bodies is the concern of how to make member countries and by extension the world and its parts, a much better place for increased stability, peace and prosperity. The goal of promoting unity, development, trade and cultural exchanges is integral to most of the bodies. The cumulative objective, as it were, is to make the global future safer, more secure and enterprising.
Recall that after the 2nd World War in 1945, the global community decided to float the United Nations to entrench more peace, security and development in the ravaged and emotionally stricken world. On the heels of World War II in 1945, nations were in ruins, and the world wanted peace. Representatives of 50 countries gathered at the United Nations Conference on International Organisation in San Francisco, California in the United States between April 25 and June 26, 1945, and two months after, the UN Charter was drafted and signed, and the United Nations was created to help prevent another world war.
The UN officially began on October 24, 1945, after its charter had been ratified by China, France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, the United States and a majority of other signatories.
Now, more than 75 years later, the United Nations is still working to maintain international peace and security, give humanitarian assistance to those in need, protect human rights, and uphold international law. The UN has also set sustainable development goals for 2030 in order to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all, including efforts to address climate action to limit global warming.
In recent times, however, the authority of the UN in delivering its lofty mandates to the world has been challenged by recalcitrant states. We see in Israel’s war on Gaza for instance, the refusal by Israel to obey international humanitarian laws of which the UN is a key custodian. Major countries have at different times been accused of violating international laws, relying on their customary characteristics that make them less enforceable.
Much like the UN, but with local characteristics, the Communist Party of China has taken steps that hope to bring the world much closer to a shared future where peace and development can be accessed by many, if not all societies, and where tangible and concrete outcomes can be delivered to all. This is good news if, as China has promised, the goal of the global development initiatives will not be skewed to give it undue advantage over other countries whether in the short term or the long run.
President Xi Jinping, at different times, has emphasized a “win-win” ideology that will deliver a “shared future” to mankind. This does not sound like manipulative rhetoric because the Chinese President has demonstrated palpable commitments to providing alternative platforms to draw the world much closer with a promise not to interfere in the internal local affairs of participating countries.
In pursuit of this objective, the State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China, in September 2023 came up with a template that will help drive increased empowerment and prosperity for the world. The template identifies that humanity is at a crossroads, and requires interdependence which has been a prevailing trend throughout history.
According to the template, global challenges call for a global response, while the new era calls for new ideas that will speedily transform global society on a path of wealth and prosperity by proffering an answer to the call of the times and a blueprint to secure the future.
The template cites China’s efforts in introducing a new approach to international relations on the basis of the equality of nations. Other key aspects highlighted in the template include the new features of global governance, opening up new prospects for international exchanges, and an outline of a new vision for building a better world.
China’s ideas about a global community of shared future for mankind as captured in the template also highlight the importance of history and cultural traditions in human relations, and promote the fine diplomatic traditions of New China, showcasing the best of traditional Chinese culture under the broad global vision of the Communist Party of China.
Incorporating the outstanding achievements of other civilisations is necessary for global inclusivity, according to the template.
The template also prescribes pressing ahead with a new type of economic globalisation that will follow a peaceful development path, and foster a new type of international relations that will embrace true multilateralism that will promote the common values of humanity. In this respect, China’s action and contribution will involve promoting high-quality Belt and Road cooperation and implementing the three global initiatives which include the Global Development Initiative, Global Security Initiative, and Global Civilisation Initiative proposed by China to guide the advancement of human society across the three dimensions. Resonating and complementing each other, the initiatives have evolved into a crucial cornerstone for building a global community of shared future, offering China’s solutions to major challenges which pertain to peace and development for humanity.
The fundamental aim of the initiative is to accelerate the implementation of the UN’s 2030 agenda for sustainable development. Its core requirement is a people-centered approach, its foremost philosophy is united, equal, balanced, and inclusive global development partnerships, and its pivotal measure entails result-oriented actions to bolster stronger, greener, and healthier global development and jointly build a global community of development by working more with countries and regions of the world.
As observed recently by Cui Jianchun, the Ambassador of China to Nigeria in an article, in building a community with a shared future for mankind, the goal is to build an open, inclusive, clean and beautiful world of lasting peace, universal security and shared prosperity, and that the pathway is promoting global governance that features extensive consultation and joint contribution for shared benefit. The guiding principle is to apply the common values of humanity, the basic underpinning lying in building a new type of international relations, with the strategic guidance coming from the implementation of the Global Development Initiative, the Global Security Initiative and the Global Civilisation Initiative, and the platform for action is high-quality Belt and Road cooperation.
In this respect, China seeks to bring countries together to meet challenges and achieve prosperity for all, and usher in a bright future of peace, security, prosperity and progress for our world. Jinping’s vision of a community with a shared future for mankind offers China’s solutions to meet global common challenges and jointly deliver a brighter future for the world, which has received the extensive support of African countries, including Nigeria.
Over the past decade, as noted by Ambassador Jianchun, building a community with a shared future for mankind has developed from a conceptual proposition to a scientific system; from a Chinese initiative to an international consensus, and from a promising vision to substantive actions. It has been included in resolutions of the UN General Assembly for seven consecutive years, extending to various regions and covering various areas. It has served as a glorious banner leading the progress of the times.
Regarding the Belt and Road Initiative as a road connecting civilisations for the new era, concrete tangible outcomes can be found from Xi’an, China’s ancient capital at the foot of the Qinling Mountains, to Lisbon, the European city on the continent’s western edge; from the coastal city Xiamen in southeastern China to the Port of San Antonio across the Pacific: the Belt and Road Initiative is connecting countries across the globe, where people with different skin colours and speaking different languages proudly nurture their cultures. Living in a world of different civilisations, beliefs and customs, should we progress alone or together? And should we stay behind closed doors or embrace one another? China’s answer is clear: Build a bridge of interaction and mutual learning and make the BRI a road connecting different civilisations.
Over the past decade, Belt and Road partner countries have carried out diverse people-to-people exchanges and cooperation, which have become bridges for mutual cultural appreciation. Initiatives such as the Silk Road International League of Theaters, the International Alliance of Museums of the Silk Road, the Silk Road International Arts Festival, the Silk Road International Library Alliance and the Silk Road International Gallery Alliance attracted close to 100 countries and international organisations by the end of 2022. Luban Workshop, a vocational training programme, is today being conducted in more than 20 Asian, African and European countries to help cultivate a pool of high-calibre technical personnel for the local community. Chinese and foreign archaeologists are working together to explore the cultural relics of the ancient Silk Road and renew the exchanges along the Silk Road with modern-day cultural interactions. The BRI has built a platform for dialogue among civilisations, where the flowers of different civilisations bloom and shine together.
Parts of China’s global development initiatives in Africa include the China-Africa Think Tank Forum, and the Forum for China-Africa Cooperation. Recall that the 13th meeting of the China-Africa Think Tank Forum was concluded in Dar es Salaam with a message that the world is like a village with a shared future and understanding.
In what observers see as a springboard for the continent’s economic and industrialisation agenda, the forum was further focused on exploring China-Africa cooperation mechanisms, strategic initiatives and practical actions in the fields of industrialisation, agricultural modernisation, and human resources training among others.
Hosted by the Secretariat of the Chinese Follow-up Committee of the Forum in China-Africa Cooperation, it was a platform for an initiative on building a China-Africa think tank cooperation network, which is in Chinese, English, and French, calling for the strengthening of China-Africa think tanks’ cooperation and a network promoting mutual understanding and common development between the two sides.
Bello, a media analyst, can be reached via [email protected]