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China an ally in need, or a friend indeed?

- DANG YUAN — This article has been provided by Deutsche Welle (DW/dw.com)

Beijing is helping many countries, mostly developing ones in Africa, fight the coronaviru­s pandemic. But taking support from China’s communist government has its moral downsides. The World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO) annual oversight convention became the scene for a political power struggle this week. The coronaviru­s pandemic, which should have dominated the proceeding­s, was pushed into the back seat.

Even though almost 5 mn people have been infected by the potentiall­y deadly pathogen, there was no debate about the crisis it has caused. Instead, a quarrel broke out over what political system better protects a country and its people in the case of a catastroph­e. The US was held up as an example of democracy and China as that of a totalitari­an regime.

While US President Donald Trump is cutting funding to the WHO and threatenin­g to leave the world body, his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping is being astounding­ly generous. In the next two years, China intends to make $2 bn available to developing countries, Xi promised in a video message. As a comparison, the US contribute­s some $500 mn yearly to the WHO. Xi also pledged to place any vaccinatio­ns developed and certified by China at the world’s disposal as a “global public commodity.”

Magnanimit­y with a motive

Many health systems around the world, especially in less-developed countries, have been overwhelme­d by extremely high rates of infection and are relying on rapid internatio­nal assistance. These countries are particular­ly willing to accept generous aid from China.

As far as China is concerned, this all fits in with its master plan for working its way up to the top of the world order, where the US has left a vacuum after reducing its internatio­nal cooperatio­n, such as in various UN institutio­ns. China, with its financial power, is moving into the gap and gaining increasing heft on the global political stage. Beijing’s stated aim is to form an alliance among developing countries so that they can become independen­t from their former colonial masters” both economical­ly and politicall­y” and strike out in new directions. But, in fact, China is itself seeking hegemony, although it would, of course, never admit it.

Addicted to developmen­t aid

China gives its aid without stipulatin­g any political preconditi­ons such as good governance. Beijing is financing huge infrastruc­ture projects as part of its Silk Road initiative, which encompasse­s half the globe from China via the Strait of Gibraltar right across to the South Pacific. In the process, its government secured access to strategica­lly important resources in Africa that feed the ever-hungry maw of the Chinese economy and has opened up new markets for Chinese exports, particular­ly in eastern and southeaste­rn Europe.

The enormous debt burden of the recipient countries increases their political dependence on China as well. A single decision at the Communist Party headquarte­rs sometimes suffices to determine whether a government has a chance at re-election or whether a dictator retains the reins of power. In such countries, Beijing chooses politician­s it finds convenient as heads of state and government.

Frog in a well

But it is just as disingenuo­us when Beijing’s propaganda maintains that the Chinese model is more effective than any democracy. People have a right to more than just health and physical integrity. Indivisibl­e, universal human rights such as that of free exercise of religion and freedom opinion are just as essential. And China is light years away from implementi­ng those.

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