Cape Times

Chinese foreign minister on tour to cement ties with five African countries

- HELMO PREUSS Preuss is an economist at Forecaster Ecosa

CHINESE Foreign Minister Wang Yi will pay official visits to Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Botswana and Seychelles from today until January 9.

The visit to African countries at the start of the year is a tradition that dates back to January 1991 and is aimed at cementing ties between African countries and China. Wang’s trip is a striking example of a relationsh­ip built through constancy.

This kind of constancy counts in Africa, and China is well aware of its worth.

The Beijing-based consultanc­y Developmen­t Reimagined estimated that senior Chinese leaders have made 79 visits to 43 African countries over the last decade. In addition, the reverse flow is equally important as Beijing has rolled out the red carpet for the leaders of African countries on numerous occasions.

China’s support for the liberation Struggle in South Africa is even older as Mao Zedong met South African Communist Party members Jusuf Dadoo and Vella Pillay on November 3, 1960.

The strong ties between China and South Africa were entrenched when South Africa hosted the Johannesbu­rg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation (Focac) in December 2015.

It was also the first Focac Summit to take place on the African continent.

As President Jacob Zuma said at the time, the relationsh­ip between Africa and China is not new as it was a long-standing historic relationsh­ip that is based on a history of solidarity and the support South Africa received from China as it fought colonialis­m and apartheid on the African continent decades ago.

“China was there when we needed help most and we will never forget that solidarity and comradeshi­p. That solidarity has laid a firm ground for more focused, friendly and dependable developmen­t co-operation.

“This co-operation is based on the principles that underline the Focac partnershi­p which are sincerity, mutual trust, equality, win-win co-operation and mutual benefit,” Zuma said.

At the summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced 10 priority programmes aimed at addressing three of the primary bottleneck­s hindering Africa’s developmen­t – the lack of

infrastruc­ture, skilled personnel and funding.

The 10 initiative­s specifical­ly identified for co-operation to address these bottleneck­s include industrial­isation, agricultur­al modernisat­ion, infrastruc­ture, finance, green developmen­t, trade and investment facilitati­on, poverty eradicatio­n and people’s wellbeing, public health, people-to-people and cultural exchanges, and peace and security. The 2015 Focac pledged US$60 billion (roughly R880bn) to turn these plans into reality.

2021 marks the last year for the implementa­tion of the 2018 Focac Beijing Action Plan (2019-2021) and Wang Yi’s visit would deepen co-ordination and communicat­ion with African countries to cement the mutually beneficial ties and facilitate economic recovery in African countries while fighting the Covid-19 virus.

The foreign minister’s visits are also aimed at supporting African countries in economic recovery, debt relief and the fight against the epidemic, and promoting the joint constructi­on of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to build a closer China-Africa community with a shared future.

The ties between China and Africa are based on the realistic needs of deepening co-operation and common developmen­t between the two. China is the world’s largest developing country, and Africa is the continent where developing countries are most concentrat­ed. The two are natural partners, as they are complement­ary and have unlimited co-operation space and potential, especially as Africa’s Free Trade Area comes into operation.

That is why China is full of confidence in the prospects for Africa’s developmen­t and the promise of “Africa Rising”.

Wang’s trip will promote China-Africa co-operation to be in the frontline of internatio­nal co-operation with Africa. A total of 44 African countries and the AU Commission have signed BRI co-operation documents with China.

From the Chinese point of view, the world had become less peaceful as the Trump administra­tion reverted to unilateral action and engaged in a trade and technologi­cal war resulting in a new “Cold War” with Huawei at the epicentre.

So Wang’s message on his African trip will be to strengthen ties between China and Africa, praise the benefits of solidarity and safeguard the legitimate rights of the Chinese and African people to oppose outside interferen­ce and lead a better life for all.

Therefore an important part of the trip will be on preparatio­ns for the next Focac Summit in Dakar, Senegal.

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 ?? | EPA-EFE ?? A MAN walks past newspaper headlines on the lockdown in Harare, Zimbabwe, yesterday. Zimbabwe recorded over 1 300 Covid-19 cases during the festive period, prompting the country’s health minister, Constantin­e Chiwenga, to impose a strict lockdown with effect from tomorrow.
| EPA-EFE A MAN walks past newspaper headlines on the lockdown in Harare, Zimbabwe, yesterday. Zimbabwe recorded over 1 300 Covid-19 cases during the festive period, prompting the country’s health minister, Constantin­e Chiwenga, to impose a strict lockdown with effect from tomorrow.
 ?? | Chinese Foreign Ministry ?? CHINESE President Xi Jinping’s special envoy Wang Yi is also the country’s state councillor and foreign minister, at a high-level meeting on co-operation between the United Nations and the African Union.
| Chinese Foreign Ministry CHINESE President Xi Jinping’s special envoy Wang Yi is also the country’s state councillor and foreign minister, at a high-level meeting on co-operation between the United Nations and the African Union.
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