The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Key moments in China-Africa ties

IN a year when headlines have been dominated by conflict in Europe and the Middle East, and geoeconomi­c tensions between China and the West, China-Africa relations were, in comparison, a steady and stable norm.

- Dr Lauren Johnston

HAVING followed China-Africa relations for two decades, I wanted to highlight a few key moments from this year.

These reveal that China and the continent have focused on deepening ties, especially when it comes to trade and the promotion of African exports.

They also highlight China’s growing commitment to supporting the developmen­t of African countries.

China-Africa trade and the expo

In June, the third China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo was held in Changsha, Hunan province.

It is the most intensive China-Africa trade event on the calendar because of its scale and focus.

It is also a chance for small and medium enterprise­s to be involved.

This year’s expo reportedly recorded some 100 000 visitors and agreed on some 120 projects worth a total of US$10,3 billion.

The event allows face-to-face interactio­n to happen in the hope of developing commercial partnershi­ps and sales.

There were deals around essential oils from Madagascar, gems from Zambia, wood carvings from Zimbabwe and flowers from Kenya. One Chinese food group displayed its first imported batch of Kenyan anchovies to seafood distributo­rs.

This helped catapult demand — one day in September, 52 tonnes of dried wild Kenyan anchovies landed in Hunan for distributi­on across China.

There were a few important takeaways from the event:

◆ It showed the emerging role of Hunan in China-Africa relations. Hunan is the source of a sizeable share of China’s own food supply.

◆ It is also home to advanced agricultur­al processing and heavy industry capabiliti­es.

◆ There were high-level “green lanes” dialogues, where issues involving clearance of more African fruits, vegetables and other African products for export to

China were discussed. The aim of these dialogues was to support agricultur­al modernisat­ion in Africa and increase export revenue.

◆ The emerging Hunan-based “Africa Brand Warehouse” project used the event to support the entry of more African brands (106 specifical­ly) into major Chinese shopping malls.

The China-Africa Leaders’ Dialogue

In August, China’s President Xi Jinping visited South Africa for a summit of the five-country bloc (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), BRICS.

Parallel to the BRICS summit, the China-Africa Leaders’ Dialogue — a meeting initiated by China and co-chaired by Presidents Xi and Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa — was held.

A couple of things stood out from the dialogue.

First, its emphasis on promoting African integratio­n and the participat­ion of African regional organisati­ons that play key roles in fostering intra-African trade.

Discussion­s focused on the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and trade-related infrastruc­ture and policy.

Second, President Xi announced three new plans for Africa relating to agricultur­e, industrial­isation and talent developmen­t.

The plans seek to address challenges in China-Africa economic relations, such as laggard agricultur­al productivi­ty, low level of manufactur­ing and economic diversific­ation, and insufficie­nt job creation and educationa­l opportunit­ies.

They also seek to address hurdles in Africa’s developmen­t.

These actions speak to President Xi’s promise to create a “new type of China-Africa strategic partnershi­p”.

This involved the growth of trade, especially with respect to African exports to China.

It would also see a change in the structure of trade.

A long-standing pattern is that Africa sells raw materials and buys manufactur­ed goods, which entrenches the continent’s underdevel­opment.

China is trying to move past this by buying more processed goods and fostering services like tourism and finance.

China’s Foreign minister comes to Africa

As has happened every year for at least the past 30 years, China’s Foreign minister visited Africa.

Minister Qin Gang’s trip in January included visits to Ethiopia, Gabon, Angola, Benin and Egypt. From my lens, minister Qin’s visit was conservati­ve in its announceme­nts and continued to demonstrat­e China’s commitment to the continent.

He cemented important bilateral and multilater­al ties, for instance, the African Union and China-Arab relations.

One moment that stood out was the launch of the Horn of Africa Peaceful Developmen­t Concept, which seeks to bring lasting peace and economic stability to countries of the conflict-afflicted region.

This stands out because China has a longheld foreign policy doctrine of non-interferen­ce, and a much shorter history of United States or European-style proactive roles in seeking to foster cross-country peace.

Infrastruc­ture changes around Lagos

Various infrastruc­tural developmen­ts around Lagos, Nigeria, were a milestone in China-Africa relations this year.

These will gradually change the scale with which Nigeria can trade with the world.

In April, Lekki Deep Sea Port — Nigeria’s first deep sea port — launched its commercial operations. It is administer­ed by Lekki Port LFTZ Enterprise Limited, a joint venture enterprise owned by a group of investors (comprising China Harbour Engineerin­g Company Ltd and Singapore’s Tolaram Group), the Lagos state government and the federal government of Nigeria through the Nigerian Ports Authority.

The port, one of the largest in Africa, will eventually connect to Lagos’ Rail Mass Transit system.

The first phase of the rail system, the Blue Line, was opened in September.

The Blue Line was built by China’s Civil Engineerin­g and Constructi­on Corporatio­n. Its corridor spans 13km and covers five stations. It is the first rail infrastruc­ture traversing Okokomaiko, a densely populated area of western Lagos, and the Marina district, notable for high-rise commercial offices.

Into 2024

Relations look set to keep evolving and growing into the new year.

Later in the year, a Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n summit is due to be hosted by China.

Typically, the forum leads to announceme­nts of new directions in China-Africa ties by both sides and commercial deals being agreed on. Otherwise, there are some key bilateral anniversar­ies to be marked, such as the 60th anniversar­y of China-Tanzania and China-Zambia relations.

In addition, China and Tanzania are expected to launch the flagship East Africa Commercial and Logistics Centre project. This is expected to expand trade and investment ties between China and other landlocked economies within the region.

◆ Dr Lauren Johnston holds a PhD in Economics from Peking University. She has expertise in and is widely published on the economics and political economy of China-Africa relations, the Belt and Road Initiative and how population ageing impacts China’s economy. Dr Johnston is concurrent­ly an associate professor at the China Studies Centre, University of Sydney

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