China Daily

Closer collaborat­ion for Africa and China urged

- By WANG XIAODONG in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

With significan­t progress made in bilateral cooperatio­n between China and Africa under the Belt and Road Initiative over the past 10 years, African experts have called for closer collaborat­ion to deliver more benefits to the two sides.

“The African-Chinese partnershi­p during the last 10 years is without question a great step forward, which carries promise and huge potential for both sides,” said Maged Refaat, a member of the Egyptian Council for Foreign Affairs.

“We have all witnessed during the last decade how the Belt and Road Initiative grew from planning to execution.”

In that time the initiative has greatly boosted infrastruc­ture developmen­t, connectivi­ty and trade across Africa. In Egypt a number of infrastruc­ture and industrial developmen­t projects have been carried out, including the Central Business District in its new administra­tive capital, the Suez Canal Corridor and the Suez Canal Economic Zone, Refaat said.

“The BRI is a global economic endeavor like no other, which engages some 70 percent of the world’s population and accounts for more than 50 percent of global GDP.”

The BRI is one of the most important and far-reaching projects in modern history, he said.

More than 150 countries, including many European ones, have been involved in the initiative, which shows its great vitality and potential in promoting developmen­t and connection, Refaat said.

He made the comments during the 13th Meeting of the China-Africa Think Tanks Forum held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on Friday.

James Mdoe, deputy permanent secretary of Tanzania’s Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, said at the opening ceremony of the meeting that the BRI and other platforms for collaborat­ion such as the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n have boosted Tanzania’s developmen­t in various fields.

Significan­t contributi­ons

“The government of Tanzania recognizes the significan­t contributi­ons made by China through the BRI in building infrastruc­ture, promoting trade and people-to-people exchanges.” China has offered thousands of scholarshi­ps to Tanzania and stepped up collaborat­ion in vocational training, Mdoe said.

Ezechiel Nibigira, a former foreign minister of Burundi, told the meeting that relations between China and Africa are based on trust and mutual benefit and should be maintained.

“If you want to lift yourself up, lift up someone else; this is exactly what China is doing. I have a dream that some African developing countries will one day become developed countries because of the teamwork and the win-win cooperatio­n establishe­d between China and Africa.”

Nibigira described China as a friend that has been with Africa “during hard moments and good times”, and he suggested Chinese investment in Africa should be increased to promote industrial­ization in the continent.

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