China-Africa cooperation writes new chapter of righteous cause
By He Yin
"Let
me reaffirm China’s commitment to its longstanding friendship with Africa. No
matter how the international landscape may evolve, China shall never waver in
its determination to pursue greater solidarity and cooperation with
Africa."
Chinese
President Xi Jinping's remarks made in his speech delivered at the Extraordinary China-Africa Summit On Solidarity Against
COVID-19 indicated the firm resolve of China and Africa to jointly combat
the novel coronavirus pneumonia, and charted the course for the two sides'
pragmatic cooperation in the future.
International
public opinion holds that the summit has built a practical platform for China
and Africa to learn each other's demands, as well as make and implement a task
list.
Huge
impacts have been exerted on Africa's economic and social development by the
pandemic. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the economy in
sub-Saharan Africa is expected to shrink by 1.6 percent this year. The pandemic
will swipe away the positive progress achieved by the region, and even bring
huge pressure on the economic growth of the region in the years to come. A
World Bank report predicted that that overall sub-Saharan Africa's economy will
be between 2.1% and 5.1% smaller by the end of the year, triggering the first
recession in the region over the past 25 years.
Undoubtedly,
African countries are facing double pressure, from both the pandemic and
economy. To support them in pandemic response will help them boost economic and
social development, while to support them in economic and social development
will help them better fight the virus. It is urgent to defeat COVID-19, as promoting
economic and social development remains a fundamental approach to improve
livelihood and well-being for the people.
"To
cushion the impact of COVID-19, it is important to strengthen Belt and Road
cooperation and accelerate the follow-ups to the FOCAC (Forum on China–Africa
Cooperation) Beijing Summit. Greater priority needs to be given to cooperation
on public health, economic reopening, and people’s livelihood." What Xi
said at the Extraordinary
China-Africa Summit On Solidarity Against COVID-19 indicated China's unswerving
determination to advance China-Africa cooperation.
For
those African countries that are hardest hit by the coronavirus and are under
heavy financial stress, China will work with the global community to give them
greater support, as it helps African countries enhance public health spending
to better cope with the pandemic at the critical moment, and is conducive to
Africa's long-term and sustainable development. "China's solidarity with
Africa is a vital part of this effort," said UN
Secretary-General António Guterres. Former South African diplomat Gert
Grobler also pointed out that China has played the role of a responsible major
country with its concrete actions.
Extending sympathy to and helping
each other, China and Africa have embarked on a distinctive path of win-win
cooperation.
China
has been Africa's largest trading partner in the past 10 years, as well as the biggest
financier of the continent's infrastructure. China-built industrial parks,
factories, schools and hospitals are seen everywhere in Africa, and the country
has helped the continent construct over 10,000 kilometers of roads, 6,000
kilometers of railways and over 100 airports, ports, and power stations.
China-Africa
cooperation has greatly promoted Africa's development. To help the continent
get rid of the pandemic as soon as possible, China supports Africa in its
effort to develop the African Continental Free Trade Area and to enhance
connectivity and strengthen industrial and supply chains. China will explore broader
cooperation with Africa in such new business forms as digital economy, smart
city, clean energy, and 5G to boost Africa’s development and revitalization.
These
efforts for China-Africa cooperation will lay a solid foundation for Africa's
development in the post-pandemic era, and further indicate Xi's remarks made at
the FOCAC Johannesburg Summit five years ago: "Friendship and justice,
which defines China-Africa relations, require us to facilitate Africa’s
development endeavor with China’s development and ultimately deliver win-win
progress and common development through mutually beneficial cooperation."
The pandemic
won't impede the progress of China-Africa solidarity and cooperation. This year
marks the 20th anniversary of the FOCAC, as well as a new starting point for
China-Africa joint development. All the ten cooperation plans with Africa
raised by China at the
FOCAC Johannesburg Summit have been implemented, and significant progress has
been achieved regarding the eight major initiatives in close collaboration with
African countries raised by China at the 2018 Beijing Summit of the FOCAC.
The
urgent task remains that China and Africa seize the major opportunities
presented by the Belt and Road Initiative, and see to it that the Belt and Road
Initiative and the AU Agenda 2063, the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development and the development programs of African countries better complement
each other, so as to expand areas of cooperation, unlock new cooperation
potential, consolidate their traditional areas of cooperation, and foster new
highlights of cooperation in the new economy.
Both
parties agreed to chart the course for China-Africa cooperation in a
post-COVID-19 era,
and work together to on the 2021 FOCAC calendar, as they promised in the Joint
Statement of the Extraordinary China-Africa Summit on Solidarity Against
COVID-19.
The
logo of FOCAC indicates peace and development, as well as vitality and
prosperity. It is a vivid description of China-Africa friendship and
cooperation. No matter how the international landscape may evolve, China shall
never waver in its determination to pursue greater solidarity and
cooperation, peace and development, and vitality and prosperity with Africa.
The Extraordinary
China-Africa Summit on Solidarity Against COVID-19 has made a new blueprint for
China-Africa cooperation and injected new energy into Africa's economic
revival, signaling a bright future for the China-Africa community with a shared
future that the two sides have been striving for.
The first train running on
Kenya's Nairobi-Naivasha railway departs on Oct. 16, 2019,
marking the official operation of the phase-1 project of the Nairobi-Malaba
Standard Gauge Railway. Photo by Lyu Qiang, People's Daily |
No comments: