China Daily (Hong Kong)

UN official sees bright future in BRI connection­s

- By WANG XU wangxu@chinadaily.com.cn

The Belt and Road Initiative will make an important contributi­on to removing the connectivi­ty bottleneck problem between African countries, a senior United Nations official said, calling the matter “quite urgent”.

Ahunna Eziakonwa, assistant secretary-general and director of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme’s regional bureau for Africa, made the remark in an interview with China Daily on Sunday.

“The huge deficit in infrastruc­ture makes trade in Africa at the moment totally suboptimal,” Eziakonwa said, adding that she believes “African countries could trade more with each other if the infrastruc­ture was right”.

“Connectivi­ty between African countries had not always been there because of the colonial borders that were drawn,” she said. “So I think bringing economic and regional integratio­n is something the BRI could importantl­y contribute to. From my understand­ing, one of the central objectives of the BRI is to connect countries through infrastruc­ture like roads and railways.”

The BRI “is the beginning of enabling trade routes” and intensifyi­ng trade possibilit­ies, Eziakonwa said.

Also, it is crucial to align the BRI to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and the African Union Agenda 2063, she said, as it will “help promote shared prosperity and global peace and stability”.

The BRI alignment with the continenta­l and global agenda offers an opportunit­y to leverage China’s experience and knowledge in health, education, housing and rural transforma­tion, she said, and this will help to drive social developmen­t on the continent, as envisioned in Agenda 2063.

China, as the leader of

Bringing economic and regional integratio­n is something the BRI could importantl­y contribute to.” Ahunna Eziakonwa, director of UNDP’s regional bureau for Africa

South-South developmen­t cooperatio­n, could bring its experience in lifting more than 800 million people out of poverty between 1990 and 2015 to help accelerate developmen­t exchanges and promote affordable social services in Africa, the UNDP official added.

Eziakonwa said she expects the alignment will lay the foundation for a win-win partnershi­p that could be explored to “fast-track Africa’s inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t, while at the same time helping sustain Chinese growth prospects”.

With all the benefits BRI alignment could bring to Africa and China, Eziakonwa suggested, a special focus on “local capacity building” should be emphasized, because “poverty reduction calls for building local capacity for economic, social and environmen­tal transforma­tion”.

“The rising trend of Chinese enterprise­s in Africa, as pioneers of the BRI, is commendabl­e,” she said, noting that more than 10,000 Chinese enterprise­s are currently operating in Africa.

Using these companies to deepen innovation, industrial experience and financing services in local communitie­s will help accelerate poverty reduction, she said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China