China Daily (Hong Kong)

China lends helping hand to nations

Developmen­t cooperatio­n set to enter new stage

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Tshepo Heqoa’s family was struggling to make ends meet amid a growing number of climate-related woes, such as drought, floods, pests and extreme temperatur­es occurring more frequently.

The 29-year-old lives in Koalabata, a small village in the Berea district of Lesotho in southern Africa, where farmers like him rely on cultivatin­g soybeans, sugar beans, maize and wheat for a living.

“Life had been hard. My mother was a sole bread winner, and she had to pay for the tuition of my college education,” he recalled in an online interview.

Heqoa was introduced to growing mushrooms in 2014 by his peers. But he found the technology difficult to grasp and had only occasional success.

A trip he made to China in 2018, one of the knowledge-sharing tours organized by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, took him to the China National Engineerin­g Research Center at Juncao Technology in Fujian province. “I was blown away. I had a lot of ideas of what to do when I got home. I found the technology amazing and a way to improve livelihood­s in many aspects of life,” he said.

Inspired by the Chinese technology and with help from Chinese experts, Heqoa is now expanding his business from growing mushrooms to producing mushroom spawn — the substance that, like a seed, causes mushroom growth, which gave him revenue of about $1,500 in the past four months, a considerab­le amount in a country with a per capita GDP of $1,118 in 2019.

Heqoa’s case is an example of China’s ongoing efforts in internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n. He was one of some 200,000 beneficiar­ies of training sessions and seminars for foreign officials and technical personnel and in-service education programs that the country hosted between 2013 and 2018.

With China on course to attain its goal of building itself into a moderately prosperous society in all respects this year, its internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n is also set to enter a new stage, according to experts. Stronger emphasis will be given to the building of a community with a shared future for mankind, a vision championed by President Xi Jinping in response to global challenges.

“The primary goal of China’s internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n will be to promote building a community with a shared future for mankind,” said Xu Xiuli, dean of China Agricultur­al University’s College of Internatio­nal Developmen­t and Global Agricultur­e.

She explained that the process would primarily involve enabling a better response to various challenges worldwide, including working together against shortcomin­gs in trust, peace and developmen­t and improving global governance.

The next stage of China’s internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n is set to contribute more to solving global issues such as health challenges, food security and climate change, she said.

According to a white paper titled “China’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Cooperatio­n in the New Era”, issued by the State Council Informatio­n Office last month, China allocated 270.2 billion yuan ($41.8 billion) for foreign assistance in three categories — grants, interest-free loans and concession­al loans — between 2013 and 2018.

A total of 127.8 billion yuan in grants were allocated to help other developing countries build small and medium-sized social welfare projects and to fund such projects as those for cooperatio­n in human resources developmen­t and emergency humanitari­an assistance.

China has been providing developmen­t cooperatio­n to other developing countries over the past seven decades, the paper said.

“China’s approach to foreign assistance gradually coalesced around a set of principles emphasizin­g recipient countries’ sovereignt­y and mutual benefit,” said Cheng Cheng, chief economist at the Made in Africa Initiative, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on dedicated to the industrial­ization of Africa.

With a set of reforms launched in recent years, “China seems to want to integrate into its foreign aid portfolio and the BRI a greater range of socially conscious developmen­t projects, in areas such as agricultur­e, public health and education”, Cheng added.

Xu, the dean, said even though China is now the world’s secondlarg­est economy, it is still a developing country — a key factor that determines that its internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n is conducted under the framework of South-South cooperatio­n.

“Meanwhile, China has always given priority to providing the means for independen­t developmen­t while refraining from attaching political strings or pursuing political self-interest during the process,” she said.

Many officials and experts have hailed the issuance of the latest white paper as a new starting point for China’s developmen­t cooperatio­n.

“This white paper comes at an opportune moment, as China is embarking on a new stage of its journey as an increasing­ly important provider of developmen­t cooperatio­n,” Beate Trankmann, United Nations Developmen­t Programme resident representa­tive in China, said at an online seminar last month.

Trankmann said the white paper highlighte­d a few entry points for more detailed regulation­s, providing stepping stone toward enhancing the effectiven­ess and transparen­cy of China’s aid, a move she welcomed.

Barnaby Willitts-King, a senior research fellow at the Overseas Developmen­t Institute, an independen­t think tank, wrote that the white paper detailed not only China’s role in COVID-19 response but also disaster relief and recovery, support for refugees and food security, which “reflected China’s growing interest in engaging in humanitari­an action”.

Pandemic response

With the COVID-19 pandemic still posing an immense threat to the lives, safety, health and well-being of people worldwide as well as challenges to global public health security, China has made its contributi­on to a global community of health for all a priority in its future internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n, as set out in the white paper.

Key measures include continuing to offer medical supplies to various nations, engaging in cooperatio­n on medical technologi­es and working with the World Health Organizati­on to help developing countries, especially in Africa, to fortify their public health defenses and improve the speed of their response and capacity for disease control.

On Wednesday morning, the first shipment of vaccines from China to a nation in sub-Saharan Africa — a planeload of COVID-19 vaccines bound for Senegal — departed Beijing Capital Internatio­nal Airport.

Zhang Jun, ambassador and permanent representa­tive of China to the United Nations, wrote in an article last week that Chinese vaccine aid has been provided to 14 developing countries and will soon reach 38 more, as part of broader efforts to deliver on its pledge to make its vaccines a global public good.

The country is also slated to deliver 10 million doses of Chinese vaccines to COVAX, a UN facility that aims to ensure all countries have access to a safe, effective vaccine.

With the pandemic also causing a global economic downturn, causing the loss of 114 million jobs and increasing the number of poor people by 131 million worldwide, the importance of China’s role in helping to attain the UN 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Agenda was also highlighte­d by analysts.

Promoting the implementa­tion of the agenda was also listed as one of the priorities for China’s internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n.

“China will make eliminatin­g poverty and improving people’s lives its ultimate objective and implement more projects for improving living standards in developing countries, especially the least developed countries,” the white paper said.

With his enterprise growing and more revenue coming in, Heqoa also expressed confidence in the future of his business.

“I have hired one employee and will be hiring more with time. My future plan is to be the director of the largest mushroom company in southern Africa and to help alleviate poverty by selling mushrooms in a very affordable way,” he said.

 ?? ZOLTAN MATHE / AFP ?? A shipment of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Chinese pharmaceut­ical company Sinopharm arrives at Budapest Ferenc Liszt Internatio­nal Airport in Hungary on Tuesday, making the country the first member of the European Union to receive a Chinese vaccine.
ZOLTAN MATHE / AFP A shipment of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Chinese pharmaceut­ical company Sinopharm arrives at Budapest Ferenc Liszt Internatio­nal Airport in Hungary on Tuesday, making the country the first member of the European Union to receive a Chinese vaccine.

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