China, Africa boost relations
By Li
Ruohan and Yu Jincui
Cooperation
with China is “beneficial” and yields visible results that empower African
countries to realize sustainable growth, amid the challenges of unilateralism
and protectionism, senior officials said on Tuesday, June 25.
The
remarks were made by Chinese and African ministers gathered in Beijing for the
Coordinators’ Meeting on the Implementation of the Follow-up Actions of the
Beijing Summit of Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) from June 24 to
June 25. More than 80 African ministerial-level officials attended the meeting.
In a congratulatory
letter to the meeting of the FOCAC, Chinese President Xi Jinping said that the
2018 Beijing Summit of the FOCAC was a milestone in the history of China-Africa
relations, the Xinhua News Agency reported.
Xi said
he hopes the two sides will use the meeting as an opportunity to make solid
progress in pushing for the implementation of the FOCAC Beijing Summit’s
achievements and to constantly improve the welfare of 2.6 billion people in
China and Africa.
Despite
severe challenges in international markets, China-Africa trade increased 3
percent year-on-year to $84.8 billion in the first five months of the year, and
China’s direct investment to Africa surged 20 percent year-on-year to $1.5
billion, Chinese Vice Commerce Minister Qian Keming said at a press conference
after the meeting on Tuesday.
Qian
said that efforts to implement the eight major initiatives proposed during the
Beijing Summit are yielding results that are benefiting people on both sides.
Agreements
worth $20 billion covering the investment, infrastructure and agriculture
sectors have being signed, Qian said.
Participants
from Africa at the meeting told the
Global Times that there has been a big increase in China-Africa exchanges
and cooperation since the Beijing Summit, with projects being delivered with
strong momentum.
The
recent signing of over 93 agreements between companies in South Africa and
China shows the effect of cooperation such as FOCAC, Naledi Pandor, South
Africa’s Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, told the Global Times.
“Part of
the role of the coordinating ministers is to actually assess where we are with
the undertakings that all of us agreed to, and to ensure that we do not convert
FOCAC into a discussion forum, but that it becomes a true platform for
development,” said Pandor.
Model for cooperation
Every
country has the right to develop, and people from China and African countries
are firmly dedicated to achieving the Chinese Dream and the African Dream via
their own endeavors and through international cooperation, Chinese State
Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said at the opening ceremony of the
coordinators’ meeting on June 25.
China-Africa
cooperation is a model of South-South cooperation. However, some outside forces
have maliciously slandered and obstructed the cooperation with fabricated
narratives of it being akin to neocolonialism or miring countries in debt
traps, Wang said.
Those
false statements fully contradict the facts, show no respect to African nations
and no understanding of China, said Wang. “Only African people have the biggest
say about whether the cooperation with China is good or bad.”
Sarah
Serem, Kenyan Ambassador to China, said on the sidelines of the meeting that
the cooperation with China has “changed the face of Kenya.”
“There’s
a lot of development going on and we are benefiting from this relationship,”
Serem said. Infrastructure projects between China and Kenya have not only
boosted trade and investment, but also enhanced people-to-people connectivity
in Kenya, she noted.
The
building of the Mombasa-Nairobi standard gauge railway (SGR), a flagship
project of the China-led Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI), has driven Kenya’s economic growth by 1.5 percent and created 46,000
jobs for local residents, Xinhua reported in May.
Since
the launch of the railway in 2017, with an average booking rate of 99 percent,
over 2.77 million passengers have traveled on the SGR, and around 4.2 million
tons of goods have been transported.
“China
has never sought to occupy any African country, and its interest has been
developing partnerships which seek to address the key priorities of African
countries,” Pandor said.
“A
colonial power would occupy a country and seek to direct its institutions of
governance and business. There’s been no such practice by China and it can only
be [coming from] those who envy the cooperative relationship that China has
built with Africa,” Pandor said.
Ben
Botolo, secretary for foreign affairs and international cooperation of Malawi’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, stressed that China is not seeking political
influence, but “doing business” which is good for the people in the continent.
He said
that the country is discussing signing a memorandum of understanding with China
on the BRI, and that it hopes to join the initiative soon.
So far,
40 African countries and the African Union Commission have signed BRI
cooperation agreements with China, and more than 880 projects on China-Africa
cooperation will be carried out in the next three years, Wang said.
Source:Global Times
Ministers from China and African
countries attend the opening ceremony of Coordinators’ Meeting on the
Implementation of the Follow-up Actions of the Beijing Summit of Forum on China-Africa
Cooperation on June 25. (Photo by Li Ruohan from Global Times)
China, Africa boost relations
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