ft.com <https://www.ft.com/content/eeb179ae-9c13-11ea-871b-edeb99a20c6e>  


Pandemic and EU neglect tighten Serbia bonds with China


Valerie Hopkins 12 hours ago

6-8 minutes

  _____  

In mid-May, as most European countries were just beginning to contemplate the 
slow process of reopening national borders in the wake of Covid-19, Serbia’s 
tourism board launched a campaign to attract visitors from China.

President Aleksandar Vucic became the face of the campaign, which the board 
hoped would “save” the tourist season. Chinese citizens have been able to 
travel to Serbia visa-free since 2017, a sign of growing ties. In the first 
half of 2019, the country registered a 36 per cent rise in visitors from China 
compared to the same period in 2018.

The relationship is not limited to tourism. Serbia’s top football league was 
last year named the “Linglong Superliga” after its sponsor, a Chinese 
tyremaker. In March 2019 Linglong started work on its first European factory in 
Serbia’s northern city of Zrenjanin. The nearly $1bn project is emblematic of 
Chinese businesses’ view of Serbia, a candidate for EU membership, as a hub for 
investment.

Since 2012, the western Balkan country of 7m people has received $9.5bn of 
publicly announced Chinese funding and investment, more than half of China’s 
stated investment in the region. In 2019, Chinese companies announced 16 
greenfield projects in Serbia, worth $625m, making China the country’s biggest 
source of such investment, according to fDi Markets, an FT data service. In 
2018, Chinese companies accounted for about 20 per cent of all FDI into Serbia.

Serbia is part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative 
<https://www.ft.com/content/e00426f4-8ead-11ea-af59-5283fc4c0cb0>  and the 17+1 
format, a partnership with central and eastern European countries. The western 
Balkans’ largest economy is at the centre of Beijing’s “hub and spoke” 
strategy, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies 
(CSIS) <https://www.csis.org/analysis/chinas-hub-and-spoke-strategy-balkans> , 
a US think-tank, which described Serbia as a “strategic anchor for China in the 
[EU’s] semi-periphery, where it can invest heavily without EU regulatory 
burdens and showcase its technological and infrastructure projects to 
neighbouring states”.

Chinese companies have bought some of Serbia’s largest industrial facilities, 
including a steel factory in Smederevo, and a copper mine in Bor. Now, Chinese 
investors are focusing on a wave of digital infrastructure, including a “Safe 
Cities” project with 1,000 facial recognition cameras in 800 locations, mostly 
in Belgrade. Of 15 information and communications technology projects in the 
region, nine were started in 2018 and 2019, mostly in Serbia, according to the 
CSIS. However, there remains a big discrepancy between projects announced and 
completed: according to CSIS, only a quarter have come to fruition. “Chinese 
financing often occurs under opaque conditions and through non-competitive 
contracts, reinforcing low governance standards and exacerbating endemic 
corruption, underscoring . . . why western investment was not present at the 
outset,” wrote CSIS.

The investment has come with foreign policy and political alignment. Beijing 
supports Belgrade’s refusal to recognise Kosovo, which declared independence in 
2008, while Serbia backs China’s stance on Taiwan and territories in the South 
China Sea. In December, Serbia’s top official for Kosovo lauded China’s “level 
of protection of minority rights” in Xinjiang, where an estimated 1m Uighurs 
are believed to be in detention. Last year, Chinese police came to three 
Serbian cities for joint patrols.

Stefan Vladisavljev, a foreign policy analyst for the annual Belgrade Security 
Forum, fears that as EU influence is questioned in the region, “the space for 
malign third actors coming from the outside could increase. I am not afraid of 
China coming to do damage, but I am afraid of how Serbian officials could 
misuse the tools they are given.”

Serbia has been an EU candidate since 2012, but has completed only two of 35 
chapters of its accession protocol, and many accuse it of backsliding on 
democratic indicators. Independent US-based watchdog Freedom House no longer 
describes Serbia as a democracy. After the EU updated enlargement methodology 
in February, many like Mr Vladisavljev, wonder if Serbia will ever join.

Elsewhere in the region, Chinese loans have sent public debt soaring. In 
neighbouring Montenegro, a Chinese-built and financed highway has raised the 
country’s debt to 80 per cent of GDP.

Covid-19 has brought Serbia closer to China. The western Balkans were 
originally not exempt from an EU permit scheme for exports of critical medical 
equipment. President Vucic proclaimed that “European solidarity doesn’t exist, 
that was just a fairytale on paper.” The decision “was made by the people who 
lectured us here that we are not supposed to purchase goods from China”. people 
from around Europe who wanted us to adjust the terms of tenders so that price 
should not be the primary condition as their [EU] goods were supposedly much 
better quality. When they needed money, it was like, make tenders and adopt 
conditions so the European companies can get Serbian money. When there is 
torment and pain, the Serbian money is no good.”

He complained that Brussels was paying close Serbian tenders purely for its own 
economic hegemony and accused EU leaders of hypocrisy.

In the post-coronavirus battle of narratives, the “global Chinese propaganda 
was amplified by a Serbian offensive”, says Mr Vladisavljev, who noted that in 
Serbia, it is still unknown how much of the Chinese medical equipment and 
personal protection was donated compared to how much was purchased.

A poll by the International Republican Institute, a US nonprofit focused on 
promoting democracy, found in March that 20 per cent of Serbs saw China as the 
largest donor, and 71 per cent as the most important economic partner. The EU 
is actually Serbia’s largest donor 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/who-gives-the-most-aid-to-serbia-/30660859.html> .

After Serbian premier Ana Brnabic called for a monument of appreciation for 
China, a banner in front of parliament proclaimed: “Serbs and Chinese: Brothers 
Forever”. Serbia now waits to see whether the Chinese tourists will return.

Miners in Bor, eastern Serbia © AFP via Getty Images Chinese and Serbian police 
officers attend a launching ceremony for their first joint patrol in Belgrade © 
Alamy 

 

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