The National - News

China’s $55bn Middle East deals

Xi also agrees to investment fund for UAE and Qatar

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CAIRO // Billions of dollars in special loans and investment­s to the Middle East was announced by China yesterday – including the establishm­ent of a common investment fund worth US$ 20bn for the UAE and Qatar.

In his address to the Arab League in Cairo, China president Xi Jinping offered $55bn (Dh202bn) of financial support to the region.

Mr Xi also signed deals worth $15bn with Egypt after holding talks with his Egyptian counterpar­t Abdel Fattah El Sisi.

Mr Xi is on his first tour to the Middle East as president as Bei- jing seeks to boost its economic ties in the region. He arrived in Cairo on Wednesday after visiting King Salman in Saudi Arabia, and will travel to Iran today.

“China will offer $15bn as special loans for industrial projects in the Middle East,” he told the Arab League.

Another $10bn would be provided as commercial loans to boost cooperatio­n in the energy sector and an equivalent amount will be offered as preferenti­al loans, he said. An investment fund worth $20bn will also be establishe­d with Qatar and the UAE.

Talking of the $15bn deal, Mr Xi said in a joint statement with Mr El Sisi: “The two sides have agreed to undertake 15 projects ... mainly in sectors like electricit­y, transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture.”

State television broadcast the live signing at a presidenti­al palace in Cairo.

Mr El Sisi said the agreements were the “best evidence of the two countries’ determinat­ion to improve their levels of cooperatio­n”.

Mr Xi had earlier expressed China’s backing for Egypt running its affairs without outside interferen­ce in an article on Al

Ahram, a state-run newspaper. “China supports the people of Egypt in making independen­t choices for the future of their own country,” he wrote.

He also said China supported Egypt “playing an active role in regional and internatio­nal affairs”.

Beijing has long taken a backseat to other diplomatic players in the Middle East.

But analysts say the region is crucial to Mr Xi’s signature foreign policy initiative – known as “One Belt One Road” – touted as a revival of ancient Silk Road trade routes.

China, the world’s second-largest economy, also relies heavily on oil and gas imported from the Middle East.

“We are not setting up proxies or building a sphere of influence in the region,” Mr Xi told the Arab League.

Mr Xi’s visit to Egypt comes just ahead of the January 25 anniversar­y of the 2011 revolution that removed long-time Egyptian au- tocrat Hosni Mubarak. The toppling of Mubarak was followed by unrest and a military removal of his successor Mohammed Morsi, the country’s first freely elected president.

While he was in Saudi Arabia, Mr Xi met King Salman and oversaw the opening of a jointventu­re oil refinery in the Yanbu industrial city on the Red Sea. Saudi Arabia is China’s biggest supplier of crude.

During his visit to Riyadh, Mr Xi had been expected to seek to ease tensions between Saudi Arabia and its Shiite rival Iran.

Saudi Arabia and a number of its Sunni Arab allies broke diplomatic ties with Tehran this month after protesters angry over Riyadh’s execution of a prominent Shiite imam ransacked Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran.

The two countries back opposing sides in a range of Middle East conflicts, including in Syria and Yemen, and there are fears the row could derail diplomatic efforts to resolve them. Mr Xi was expected in Tehran today, just days after sanctions were lifted when Tehran implemente­d its historic nuclear deal with world powers.

China, with the United States, Britain, France, Germany and Russia, was among the countries that reached the agreement with Iran in July to curtail its nuclear activities in exchange for ending internatio­nal sanctions.

Mr Xi is on his first tour to the Middle East as president

 ?? AP Photo ?? Egyptian president Abdel Fattah El Sisi and Chinese president Xi Jinping greet children in Cairo yesterday.
AP Photo Egyptian president Abdel Fattah El Sisi and Chinese president Xi Jinping greet children in Cairo yesterday.
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