China Daily Global Weekly

Xi’s letter inspires Kenyan youth

President’s response to grateful African students spurs them on to forge greater bonds with China

- By MO JINGXI mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

Jamlick Mwangi Kariuki, a 26-year-old Kenyan, has always wanted to find a way to express appreciati­on for the great opportunit­ies he has received through his special bond with China, which started in 2018.

Kariuki, who is from Webuye, a town in western Kenya, was among the second group of 100 Kenyans who were sponsored to study engineerin­g in China for four years. They went back after graduation to contribute to the African country’s railway constructi­on and maintenanc­e.

Built with Chinese technology and to Chinese standards, the 480-kilometer Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway, a flagship project of the China-proposed Belt and Road

Initiative, was the first railway constructe­d in Kenya since the nation’s independen­ce in 1963.

“After the completion of the railway line, it was discovered that we lacked the capacity and the expertise to operate and maintain it. So that’s why there was this program to educate Kenyan engineers to be able to take care of the railway line,” said Kariuki, who returned to Kenya after getting a bachelor’s degree in civil engineerin­g at Beijing Jiaotong University.

With the skills gained in China, Kariuki and his Kenyan co-workers were able to maintain the MombasaNai­robi railway as well as the country’s much older meter-gauge railway lines, to provide safe and reliable service.

The job in Nairobi also brought Kariuki a decent salary, so he was able to purchase everything he needed, despite the relatively high prices of goods in the capital.

Kariuki decided to return to Beijing Jiaotong University last year for a master’s degree to fulfill his dream of becoming a railway expert.

Feeling grateful for the opportunit­ies they received, Kariuki and his Kenyan schoolmate­s and alumni at Beijing Jiaotong University came up with the idea to personally thank President Xi Jinping because, Kariuki said, “the Belt and Road Initiative is actually his initiative ... for universal developmen­t”.

Last October, they wrote a letter to Xi to express their pleasure in coming to China to learn about railway operations and management, saying they hope to serve as a bridge of friendship between the two countries.

On Jan 17, Xi responded to them in what Kariuki described as a “very long and personaliz­ed letter”. Xi said that he was glad to see that the Kenyans have bonded with China through this road to happiness, a reference to the railway.

Kariuki said their letter to Xi was to show appreciati­on and not necessaril­y meant to evoke a response, but to their surprise, Xi was able to take time out from his busy schedule to write back.

“It’s really inspiring to me that the Chinese leader still has time to consider the internatio­nal student community as a whole and care about us,” he said.

Washington Aburiri, who is studying logistics at Beijing Jiaotong University for a master’s degree, has witnessed how a close friend of his has benefited from the easier transporta­tion enabled by the railway.

“Now my friend is doing a good business of importing goods from Guangzhou to Nairobi and then transporti­ng them to Mombasa through the railway,” said Aburiri, who is from Nairobi.

Vicky Wangechi Wangari, who is from Nyahururu in central Kenya and is in her final year of graduate study at the university, said the message she wrote to Xi in the letter was “ten thousand thank-yous”.

“Now when I wake up in the morning every day, I feel that I need to study hard not only for myself but for the China-Kenya and China-Africa cooperatio­n,” she said.

The program that Kariuki and Wangari are involved with epitomizes China-Africa cooperatio­n on talent cultivatio­n, which has gathered momentum in recent years.

Kariuki said that besides the letter, they also sent Xi a Nairobi-to-Mombasa railway ticket as a gift, and that the president has acknowledg­ed the gift.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States