China’s Xi calls for an ‘equal and multipolar world’ as he meets Uruguay’s leader

BEIJING, Feb 3 (Reuters) – China and Uruguay should work together to advance an “equal and orderly multipolar world”, President Xi Jinping told his counterpart Yamandu Orsi on Tuesday, according to a media report.

Orsi’s visit is the first by a South American leader to the Chinese capital since the United States invaded Venezuela in January and captured then-President Nicolas Maduro in a raid.

China and Uruguay should “work together to advance an equal and orderly multipolar world and an inclusive and universally beneficial economic globalization,” Xi said in his remarks, aiming to build a community with a shared future for humanity.

The meeting took place in light of a number of visits to China by Western leaders this year, from British Prime Minister Keir Starmer to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo.

Orsi said his visit aimed to “empower Uruguay in the world and generate opportunities, investment and development” in a Facebook comment on Sunday, after his arrival in Beijing.

He is leading a delegation of 150, including business leaders, on a visit that will last until February 7, which will also take in the commercial capital of Shanghai.

The time is symbolically important for China, said Francisco Urdinez, a professor at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile.

“For Beijing, hosting Orsi … indicates that South American countries remain eager to engage, despite the increasingly polarized geopolitical environment.”

China was the top destination for Uruguayan exports in 2025, taking agricultural products from wood pulp to soybeans and beef. Uruguay had a trade surplus of $187.1 million with China in the first half of 2025.

The South American nation imports machinery, electronics and chemicals from China.

AGREEMENTS SIGNED, DEEPER COOPERATION PROMISED

China and Uruguay signed a joint statement to deepen strategic partnership on Tuesday as well as 12 cooperation documents covering science, technology, environmental cooperation, exports and imports of meat and intellectual property.

Orsi said that Uruguay would like to intensify “trade in goods, especially through diversification, and invest much more strongly in the area of ​​trade in services and investment,” according to the pool’s report.

The strategic partnership of China and Uruguay “is going through its best moment,” he said, adding that it was the responsibility of both countries to “commit to raising it to a new level.”

While traditional export sectors such as meat and soy have played a central role in the relationship, others such as milk present considerable potential, said Dr. Diego Telias, professor at ORT University Uruguay and associate researcher at ICLAC, an institute that studies the impact of Chinese capital in Latin America.

It is also still empty in the field of services exports, he said, “an area in which Uruguay has successfully engaged with markets such as the United States, the United Kingdom and Europe, but not yet with China.”

(Reporting by the Beijing newsroom; Writing by Farah ‌Master; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Clarence Fernandez and Thomas Derpinghaus)

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