ABSTRACT

The China–Indochina Peninsula Economic Corridor, with Nanning, Guangxi and Kunming, Yunnan as the starting points and Singapore as the end, passes through the Indochina Peninsula, covering the 6 major ASEAN members—Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore. The Indochina Peninsula, located between China and the South Asia subcontinent, and between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean, with unique location advantages and geographical advantages, has historically been the pivot of the Maritime Silk Road. The Lancang–Mekong International Waterway and the cross-border traffic and oil and gas networks under construction link the Land and Sea Silk Road closely together. The China–Malaysia Qinzhou Industrial Park and the Malaysia–China Guandan Industrial Park have become the model of cooperation between China and Malaysia. The Cambodia Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone has become a model of the win–win cooperation between China and Cambodia.