CONCRETE RESULTS
During Xi's stay in Trinidad and Tobago, China and the English-speaking Caribbean country inked a host of agreements on economic cooperation and cultural exchanges.
Both sides agreed to boost trade and investment. Prime Minister Persad-Bissessar said her country's embassy in China would be fully operational by the time of her visit to China later this year.
Xi also attended a groundbreaking ceremony for a children's hospital funded by China in the central city of Couva.
In a luncheon with leaders of Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago, Xi pledged to scale up assistance to Caribbean nations so as to give impetus to cooperation between China and the region.
China will set up one or two technology centers in the next three years to showcase its agricultural technologies, send 100 doctors to the Caribbean region, train 100 part-time postgraduate students and provide scholarships for 1,000 students from the region.
In Costa Rica, leaders of the two sides agreed to push forward pragmatic cooperation.
China pledged to support Costa Rica in the construction of a special economic zone, while Costa Rica welcomed Chinese investment. The two countries are also mulling cooperation in clean energy.
They agreed to strengthen youth and local-level exchanges and implement projects related to overseas studies and Confucius Institutes.
China will continue to provide personnel training for Costa Rica while the Latin American country will simplify visa procedures for Chinese travellers to facilitate people-to-people exchanges.
In Mexico, Xi and President Enrique Pena Nieto agreed to lift their countries' relations to comprehensive strategic partnership.
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