The Vietnamese and Chinese localities share a long border and longstanding people-to-people exchanges, as well as cultural similarities - factors seen as favorable conditions for expanding bilateral cooperation.

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Officials from Cao Bang province of Vietnam and Baise city in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region of China hold talks on May 15.

In 2025, Cao Bang organized 20 working delegations to visit and engage with Baise, while also hosting many delegations from Baise’s agencies and businesses. Cross-border import-export activities remained stable, with total turnover exceeding 360 million USD.

The two sides are exploring a “red tourism” route linking Pac Bo and Meng Mo (China) to promote revolutionary tradition education and strengthen bilateral friendship. They are also stepping up cooperation in human resource development through training exchanges and efforts to improve workforce quality.

Efforts are underway to build a “smart early warning platform” in health care, alongside enhanced information sharing to manage food safety risks, trace product origins and handle cases involving unsafe food. The two sides also agreed to strengthen coordination in monitoring and controlling cross-border public health risks.

Vice Chairwoman of the Cao Bang provincial People’s Committee Ha Nhat Le called for maintaining regular dialogue and expanding delegation exchanges, alongside stronger cooperation in health care and food safety, especially in cross-border disease control, data sharing, and emergency response.

She also urged enhanced border-gate economic cooperation, smoother customs clearance, and upgrades to border crossings and transport infrastructure to boost connectivity.

The two localities agreed to further enhance cooperation in education and training, expand cross-border tourism and strengthen coordination in border management to maintain security and order, towards building a peaceful, friendly, and stable border area with sustainable development.

For her part, Vice Mayor of Baise city Huang Caixue called for closer cooperation in food safety management, including building cross-border monitoring systems, improving business registration and product traceability at border markets, and recognizing business licenses.

She also proposed sharing rapid food testing technologies, developing cross-border culinary corridors, and organizing food showcases at key border gates such as Tra Linh–Longbang and Soc Giang–Longbang.

In health care, Huang urged stronger coordination in preventing and controlling cross-border infectious diseases, enhancing data sharing and risk assessment, and conducting regular joint emergency drills. She also suggested expanding cross-border emergency medical corridors, establishing rapid-response transport for critical patients, and improving cross-border healthcare services.

Regarding education, the two sides agreed to expand cooperation in training officials, step up youth exchanges, and organize regular summer camps and study programs, while exploring “friendship schools,” promoting online Vietnamese–Chinese language learning, and facilitating teacher exchanges.

The localities expressed interest in exploring the application of artificial intelligence and smart monitoring technologies to address shared challenges, particularly in food safety control, health care and education.

Source: VNA