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Brazil
ChinaDiplomacy

Chinese foreign minister’s Brazil stop yields mutual visa deal

  • Wang Yi added the South American country to his new year itinerary, signalling its rising profile with Beijing
  • Beijing and Brasília have been expanding cooperation in trade and on the diplomatic front

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Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira (right) greets his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi at the Itamaraty Palace in Brasilia, Brazil, on Friday. Photo: EPA-EFE
Hayley Wongin Beijing
China and Brazil have agreed to streamline visa processes to revive exchanges between the two countries to pre-pandemic levels.

The agreement came as Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi stopped in Brasília on his first international trip of the year, signalling Brazil’s growing importance to China.

Africa is traditionally the first port of call for China’s foreign minister in the new year and this year Brazil and Jamaica were added to Wang’s itinerary.

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In talks on Friday, Wang and his Brazilian counterpart Mauro Vieira pledged to “restart coordination mechanisms in all areas” while strengthening high-level exchanges, according to a Chinese statement.

“China has always given priority to its relations with Brazil in its overall diplomacy and its diplomacy with Latin America … and hope to strengthen coordination of the developmental strategies and extend cooperation in new areas,” Wang said.

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The talks were the first Foreign Ministerial-Level Comprehensive Strategic Dialogue since 2019.

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