Cape Times

China, Zim ties set for a boost

Mnangagwa seen as more open for business than Mugabe

- Ting Shi

CHINA has seen its influence rise in Zimbabwe during Robert Mugabe’s nearly four decades in power, becoming the African nation’s third-largest trading partner and biggest foreign investor.

Beijing might gain even more if he goes. Former vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa, whose removal sparked last week’s military interventi­on, is seen as more open to investment from China and other nations than Mugabe, according to researcher­s who advise President Xi Jinping’s government on Africa policy.

Mnangagwa is poised to take Mugabe’s job after replacing him as leader of the ruling Zanu-PF party on Sunday.

Mnangagwa, who received military training in China during a war for independen­ce decades ago, proposed in 2015 to have the Chinese yuan as legal tender in inflation-prone Zimbabwe.

That paved the way for its adoption along with other currencies – though none are as popular as the US dollar. He also signalled opposition to Mugabe’s nationalis­ation moves, telling China’s CCTV he sought “an environmen­t where investors are happy to put their money because they will have a return”.

Approach “Mnangagwa has a more open and moderate approach in economic policies and is also a friend of China,” said Shen Xiaolei, a research fellow on Africa in the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (Cass), China’s state think tank.

“Mugabe’s receding power is just a matter of time, and sooner is better than later, because it can help stabilise the domestic situation.”

China has sought to shower ruling elites in Africa with financial aid and infrastruc­ture investment in exchange for access to natural resources, including gold, diamonds and minerals.

Zimbabwe was among the four biggest recipients of China’s official developmen­t assistance between 2000 and 2014, only behind Cuba, Ivory Coast and Ethiopia, according to research lab AidData.

Xi’s 2015 trip to Zimbabwe – the first visit by a Chinese president in nearly 20 years – produced at least 12 deals with an estimated value of $4 billion (R56.12bn) in sectors such as power generation, infrastruc­ture and pharmaceut­icals, though it is unclear how much of that materialis­ed.

He called ties between the nations “one of the best relationsh­ips between developing countries”.

Zimbabwean army chief Constantin­o Chiwenga visited Beijing less than two weeks before the coup and met Chinese Defence Minister Chang Wanquan. China’s foreign ministry called the meeting a “normal military exchange as agreed by the two countries”.

China has not officially declared a preference for either Mugabe or Mnangagwa.

Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang said last week that bilateral ties would not change, and China hoped “the situation in Zimbabwe will become stable and the issues will be resolved peacefully and appropriat­ely”.

Friendship Despite the “all-weather” friendship between the countries, Mugabe’s indigenisa­tion law became a source of tension between Beijing and Harare.

The legislatio­n, which required foreign companies in the country to have majority black Zimbabwean ownership, spooked Chinese investors. “This policy was too radical and Chinese companies there stood to suffer,” said Wang Hongyi, a research fellow on China-Africa ties at Cass. “Mnangagwa is seen as a steady hand, and he will limit or even revoke the indigenisa­tion law.”

Zimbabwean lawmakers were set to begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Mugabe yesterday and vote him out of power within two days after he missed a ruling-party deadline to end his 37-year rule.

He had been widely expected to announce his retirement, so that Mnangagwa could take over. Even if Mugabe somehow manages to survive, Beijing is poised for continued strong relations with Zimbabwe.

“China is in ‘a no-lose situation’,” said Ding Yifan, a senior research fellow specialisi­ng in China’s overseas investment strategy at Developmen­t Research Centre, the State Council’s policy research arm.

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Zimbabwe’s former vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa, whose removal sparked last week’s military interventi­on, is seen as more open to investment from China and other nations than Robert Mugabe, who stepped down yesterday.
PHOTO: AP Zimbabwe’s former vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa, whose removal sparked last week’s military interventi­on, is seen as more open to investment from China and other nations than Robert Mugabe, who stepped down yesterday.

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