Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

A prosperous China, a shared prosperity

- DOUGLAS OKWATCH Okwatch is a senior editor with CMG Africa based in Nairobi

IT’S all coming together, like the confluence of a river, merging the dreams and aspiration­s of the Chinese people and flowing out to the rest of the world in the spirit of shared prosperity and a common destiny for mankind.

Within the backdrop of the 100th anniversar­y of the founding of the Communist party of China (CPC) last year, and the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) three years ago, 2022 serves as the occasion for the 20th national congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) which charts the path for its socio-economic developmen­t and presides over important political decisions.

In a deeply polarised world with multiple and growing economic and social challenges, including the existentia­l threat to humanity of climate change, China has chosen the path of political continuity to steer it through a global turbulence that has shattered economies, wiped out jobs and shredded livelihood­s.

The disruption­s have been on an apocalypti­c scale. But China aims to emerge under the CPC leadership with renewed vigour and focus, ready to pick up its post-Covid 19 economic pace and spread the benefits of its prosperity across the world.

At the opening of the 20th CPC national congress, Xi Jinping says China strives to create new opportunit­ies for the world with its own developmen­t and to contribute its share to building an open global economy that delivers greater benefits to all peoples.

To Africa, the 20th CPC national congress is of significan­t importance because of the historic ties between China and the African continent. It serves as a moment for deep introspect­ion for many Africans familiar with this history, which includes China’s military and technical assistance in the years of the struggle for liberation.

The building by the Chinese of the Tanzam Railway, which gave the frontline states access to the sea during South Africa’s liberation war against the brutal apartheid regime.

Linking the town of Kapiri Mposhi in Zambia to the port of Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania, it’s part of this quest for freedom.

In a quid pro quo, Africa also helped Beijing get back its status at the UN in 1971, and to reassert its one-China policy.

In the last decade, China and Africa have worked hard at both the multilater­al and bilateral levels to deepen cooperatio­n between them. In terms of commerce, China has overtaken the US as Africa’s top trading partner. Hinged on President Xi’s Belt Road Initiative (BRI), infrastruc­ture developmen­t has become an important nexus between Beijing and Addis Ababa, the headquarte­rs of the AU and various capitals across the African continent.

With the recent launch of the Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area, rails, roads, airports and ports constructe­d with Chinese loans and grants are proving critical in deepening interconti­nental trade, which currently stand at a paltry 12%. The Ethiopia-Djibouti Railway, Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway, Angola’s Lobito-Luau Railway, and Nigeria’s Lagos-Ibadan Railway serve as examples of Chinese engineerin­g excellence in Africa’s nascent transport sector.

Establishe­d in 2000, the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation (Focac) has provided an invaluable platform on which China and Africa transact their multilater­al engagement­s. In 2015, at the Focac in Johannesbu­rg, President Xi unveiled a $60 billion package in developmen­t aid to Africa, to support agricultur­e, infrastruc­ture and training on the continent.

More recently, as Covid-19 ravaged the world and the more developed countries looked inward, later giving rise to what came to be known as vaccine nationalis­m, China, at the very initial stages of the pandemic, when little was still known about it, shipped in health personnel, muchneeded protective gear and tons of other supplies, standing with Africa in its moment of need. In a bid to help African countries recover from post-Covid economic ravages, China has forgiven its loans to some African countries, and moved to restructur­e others on a country-to-country basis.

It’s for the reason of the fruitful co-operation that various African leaders have brotherly and encouragin­g words to share with the country’s leadership and the Chinese people.

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