Highlights of speeches of global leaders at forum


There is a concept that is increasingly being built and repeated — a concept that China has put forth: the dialogue of civilizations.
This stands in contrast to a far-right thesis that has emerged from American sociology, put forward by Samuel Huntington, which posits a clash of civilizations.
It is a concept that decisively moves us toward the possibility of a united humanity, built upon its own diversity. But why do we want a united humanity? Not only for peace — though peace is the fruit of a united humanity — but because we can look even further.
This horizontal dialogue, unlike the vertical one, can be free of authoritarianism, free of imperialism — a true peer-to-peer interaction among civilizations. In this, Europe and Africa would play a fundamental role on one side, and China and Asia on the other.
- Election of Macao's 8th Legislative Assembly commences
- International Universities Rowing Open kicks off in East China
- Beijing takes major step in data infrastructure, digital economic development
- China launches anti-dumping probe into certain US analog IC chips
- China's largest coalbed methane field sees output top 4 billion cubic meters
- China pays its respects to 30 war martyrs