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Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence shape growing Global South, say Sri Lankan experts

XINHUA
發布於 06月29日11:59 • chendongshu wuyue
This photo taken on Feb. 29, 2024 shows an exterior view of the United Nations (UN) Office in Geneva, Switzerland. (Xinhua/Shi Song)

"The five principles are still a very good corrective to the abusers of world power even today," an expert said.

by Chen Dongshu, Wu Yue

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COLOMBO, June 29 (Xinhua) -- The Global South has long desired an equal and orderly multipolar world, and the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence put forward by China have shaped the stance and voice of the Global South today, several Sri Lankan experts told Xinhua recently.

Looking at the past, Uditha Devapriya, chief international relations analyst at the Sri Lankan foreign policy think-tank Factum, said that the five principles emerged when the European colonial powers were fast diminishing, and the United States was becoming a big global superpower in the 1950s.

"So it was a very important intervention when there are perceptions about Western countries meddling in the affairs of emerging countries including China and Sri Lanka," he said.

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"Back then, the Global South wanted a multipolar world that promotes a more just and equitable international order and partner country model, that's why countries across the world widely accepted and recognized the five principles," said Maya Majueran, director of the Belt and Road Initiative Sri Lanka.

Rathindra Kuruwita, a Sri Lankan contributing author for The Diplomat, emphasized that the five principles retain significant relevance in today's multipolar world. This is evident as many nations assert their sovereignty and resist external influence, particularly amidst increasing assertiveness from the West towards the Global South.

"With initiatives like the Belt and Road, China aims to illustrate these principles by promoting economic cooperation and infrastructure development," said Kuruwita.

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Majueran pointed out that the West has historically exerted and continues to exert influence over the global order through its own values and policies, often under the guise of promoting "democracy" and "defending" human rights. This influence includes launching smear campaigns against countries with different political systems and pressuring emerging markets and developing countries to take sides in disputes orchestrated by Western powers.

"The five principles are still a very good corrective to the abusers of world power even today," Devapriya said.

Majueran said that the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, along with the Global Development Initiative, Global Security Initiative, and Global Civilization Initiative, collectively aim to provide strategic direction for shaping a new world order. ■