China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China-Africa cooperatio­n bearing rich fruit

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BEIJING — At a landmark summit three years ago, President Xi Jinping and African leaders drew an ambitious blueprint for China-Africa cooperatio­n, with Xi proposing eight major initiative­s.

Three years on, China-Africa friendship and cooperatio­n have grown even deeper and closer, and the grand plan is turning into reality, bearing rich fruit across the African continent.

A total of 5,000 jobs and a 15-fold increase in customs revenue were generated by Kribi deep-sea port, the first deep-water port in Cameroon, said Alain Patrick Mpila Ayissi, director of planning and environmen­t at the port.

The port, establishe­d in March 2018 and built by China Harbour Engineerin­g Company (CHEC), is jointly operated by China, France and Cameroon, with its second phase to be completed in 2023.

“Cameroon is on the fast track of developmen­t, and China is accompanyi­ng it,” Ayissi said.

With the port, Kribi has become a thriving city with an expanding population. “This is now really a modern port, and it will benefit future generation­s,” said Armand Guehoada, who joined CHEC eight years ago. “I started with human resources management, and have now become an import and export salesman. I am quite comfortabl­e with my life.”

In 2017, the Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography (XIEG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences signed a memorandum of understand­ing with the Pan-African Agency for the Great Green Wall on promoting the ecological environmen­t in Africa.

The “Great Green Wall” initiative, launched in 2007 and led by the African Union, plans to build a shelterbel­t spanning more than 8,000 kilometers across Africa, from Senegal in the west to Djibouti in the east, in order to prevent the Sahara Desert from expanding southward.

Zhou Na, an assistant researcher at the XIEG, and her colleagues have traveled back and forth between the Taklamakan Desert and the Sahara Desert to share their experience­s. She said it is her wish to “bring China’s experience to the Sahara, promote green developmen­t and improve the livelihood­s of African people”.

In recent years, she and her colleagues have adopted different strategies according to local conditions such as sand control and quicksand fixation technology in Mauritania, ecological restoratio­n of shrub grassland in Ethiopia, and technical support for sustainabl­e management and protection of a shelterbel­t in Nigeria.

Mohamed El Houssein Mohamed Legraa, director of the National Agency of the Great Green Wall of Mauritania, spoke highly of China’s technical support.

“The Chinese are ahead in the fight against desertific­ation. They have turned deserts into forests,” he said. “Here in Mauritania, we are suffering from desertific­ation, low rainfall and the impact of climate change. Therefore, we need Chinese experience very much.”

“The hut has been replaced with a concrete house, and furniture and household appliances have been added. I have made a decent living by planting rice in Wanbao,” farmer Milagre Abel Massingue said proudly of the dramatic changes in his life.

Located in the Xai-Xai district of the southern Mozambican province of Gaza, the Wanbao Mozambique rice farm, invested by the China-Africa Developmen­t Fund, is China’s largest project of its kind in Africa. With vast arable land, a favorable climate, abundant water resources and support from China, the project is scheduled to cover 20,000 hectares (20 square km).

Massingue, one of the more than 500 contractor­s, joined the Wanbao project five years ago by contractin­g for two hectares of land. He said he can at least double the output nowadays with Chinese technology.

“The Chinese government has been supporting Mozambique and this project has enhanced our traditiona­l friendship,” said Dalilo Latifo, provincial director of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t.

The project, added Latifo, effectivel­y promoted the vitality of local agricultur­al production and will strongly boost the agricultur­al developmen­t of Mozambique.

Concilia Owire was one of the first seven women drivers recruited by the Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway (SGR), Kenya, and witnessed the opening ceremony of the railway.

For her, operating a locomotive under the gaze of her country’s president is the “best memory” of her life. In May 2017, the Mombasa-Nairobi Railway, which was built and operated by China Road and Bridge Corporatio­n, was officially opened to traffic.

The railway connects Mombasa, the largest port city in East Africa, and Nairobi, the capital of Kenya, with a total length of about 480 km. It is the first railway built since Kenya’s independen­ce, shortening the journey between the two cities from 10 hours to five hours.

In December 2019, the first phase of the Mombasa-Nairobi Railway extension line was completed and opened to traffic. Owning a modern railway had long been a dream of the Kenyan people. This is the beginning of the transforma­tion which will create jobs, hope, opportunit­ies and prosperity for all Kenyans, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said during a test ride.

Traveling on the Mombasa-Nairobi Railway, Owire also caught the “express train” of her career. She has been successful­ly promoted to a driving instructor, responsibl­e for training students, and her Chinese language proficienc­y has also improved.

As a landmark project of Belt and Road cooperatio­n between China and Kenya, the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR created more than 30,000 jobs during the constructi­on period alone, and contribute­d 1.5 percentage points to Kenya’s economic growth.

Owire said she believes the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR will help revitalize the logistics industry in Kenya and promote economic developmen­t in East Africa. “I believe Kenya’s railway network will get better and better in the future, just like China’s railway network,” she said.

 ?? LI YAN / XINHUA ?? A Chinese train driver (left) coaches a local colleague in Nairobi, Kenya, in March.
LI YAN / XINHUA A Chinese train driver (left) coaches a local colleague in Nairobi, Kenya, in March.

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