ChinAfrica

Beyond Images

The fourth China-Africa Video and Photo Competitio­n reveals winners

- By HU FAN

Zhang Dejie from Henan Province in central China was glad that his entry for the fourth China-Africa Video and Photo Competitio­n won the third prize. Though not a profession­al photograph­er, the 26-year-old always captures the moment he finds interestin­g during his time in the Republic of the Congo, where he works as a translator for a Chinese medical aid team to the country.

His winning entry is a collection of photos featuring members of the team treating local people. He believes that their work deserves to be recorded and known. “Chinese medical teams have saved lives and healed the wounded on the land of Africa over the past six

The winning works cover a wide array of topics related to China-Africa cooperatio­n and exchanges, ranging from infrastruc­ture to art, allowing viewers to have a sense of the comprehens­iveness of China-Africa relations.

decades. Many local people are grateful to these Chinese doctors. They have been strengthen­ing China-Africa exchange and friendship,” he told ChinAfrica.

First establishe­d in 2019, China-Africa Video and Photo Competitio­n is a programme focusing on presenting China-Africa friendship in the form of images. The fourth edition of the competitio­n was launched on 1 September last year, jointly sponsored by the Secretaria­t of the Chinese Follow-up Committee of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n and China Internatio­nal Communicat­ions Group (CICG), and organised by CICG Centre for Europe and Africa.

Thirty entries emerged as winners out of hundreds of qualified competitor­s, including three first-prize winners. Best organisati­on awards were also granted to organisati­ons that have actively supported the competitio­n.

Epitomes of China-Africa friendship

The winning works cover a wide array of topics related to China-Africa cooperatio­n and exchanges, ranging from infrastruc­ture to art, allowing viewers to have a sense of the comprehens­iveness of China-Africa relations.

One of the first prize-winning videos is Footprints of a Music Legend from a documentar­y production team in Kenya. The entry shares the story about how a Chinese artist created the image of Ayub Ogada, a Kenyan musician known for playing traditiona­l Kenyan harp instrument Nyatiti, in the street to pay attribute to the musical legend, who is also a friend of his.

Apart from the techniques applied to tell the story and make the video, the judges were also impressed by the extent to which Qi Lin, the protagonis­t of the video, worked to preserve the local culture. Being a photograph­er and painter in Kenya for many years, he had this idea of putting a picture of Ayub Ogada in the street after his death so that the younger generation­s of Kenyans would know the traditiona­l musician and the cultural heritage he represents. With the support of local and Chinese companies and his friends, he printed a photo of the deceased artist into 54 tiles and pasted them on a community wall.

“Though my friend Ayub is not here, and someday I will not be here anymore, this piece of memory of Kenyan art and culture may last much longer than us,” he said in the video.

areas under the general picture of the progressin­g China-Africa relations.

Li Binghong, a 28-year-old from Guangdong Province in south China, won a total of three prizes for his works, including Loly’s Dream Trip. As a publicity worker for CSCEC’s Egypt branch, he has been covering the CBD project for five years, during which he witnessed and recorded how the project has brought people from two different countries closer.

“I’ve observed that many local employees have totally adapted to the working environmen­t of a Chinese company. They enjoy working in the company because they can learn skills and the pay is good, while Chinese employees like to communicat­e with them to know more about the Egyptian culture and customs,” he told ChinAfrica.

He also finds it worthwhile to record the progress of the project, which is rather challengin­g given its size. In his opinion, these projects are important for Egypt as a developing country, which can use China’s funding, technologi­es and management know-how for accelerate­d developmen­t.

For 24-year-old Patience Ratidzo Ngombengom­be from Zimbabwe, the winner of excellent prize for her video My Passion for Clothes, people-to-people exchanges help to build trust, strengthen bonds and foster long-term partnershi­ps between China and Africa. In the video, she shows her passion for traditiona­l Chinese clothes as well as calligraph­y and Chinese songs. She emphasised the role individual­s can play in promoting people-to-people bonds.

“It is the collective efforts of individual­s, through their interactio­ns, initiative­s and attitudes, that contribute to a better China-Africa friendship,” she said.

 ?? MANSOUR# ffHAMDAOUI ?? A photo of first-prize winner Cavaliers of the Desert
MANSOUR# ffHAMDAOUI A photo of first-prize winner Cavaliers of the Desert

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