China Daily Global Weekly

Beijing stays committed to Africa ties

Experts say FM’s trip testimony of both sides’ pledge to pursue common growth

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

Nearly eight years ago, President Xi Jinping made a state visit to Tanzania as part of his first trip abroad after assuming office.

In a speech he gave in the country, Xi for the first time noted that China and Africa have always been “a community with a shared future”, given their decades-long traditiona­l friendship and supporting one another for common developmen­t.

Tanzania witnessed the revelation of China’s Africa policy ideas in the new era, as Xi proposed the principle of “sincerity, real results, amity and good faith” that guides China’s ties with the continent, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Tanzanian President John Magufuli on Jan 8.

Wang finished visits to Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Botswana, Tanzania and Seychelles in the first week of January and returned to China on Jan 10.

Officials and experts said the trip served as fresh testimony of the success of China and Africa in joining hands to weather storms and seek common growth as a community with a shared future. In addition, Beijing has renewed its commitment to “pursuing the greater good and shared interests”, a key principle proposed by Xi to handle China’s Africa policy, they said.

The past year has seen China and Africa advancing high-level contacts and a cooperativ­e agenda to jointly combat the novel coronaviru­s and push for economic recovery.

Among the highlights was the Extraordin­ary China-Africa Summit on Solidarity Against COVID-19, held by Xi and African leaders in June, where Xi proposed in his speech to further build a “China-Africa community of health for all”.

Botswana President Mokgweetsi Masisi told Wang on Jan 7 that he appreciate­s China’s great help to his government and people in achieving developmen­t and fighting the pandemic.

This year, the Forum on ChinaAfric­a

Cooperatio­n, founded 20 years ago to promote cooperatio­n between China and African countries, is entering its third decade, and a FOCAC minister-level meeting will be held in Senegal this year.

Liu said China and Africa have shown to the outside world “what a genuine friendship and mutual support mean”, as both sides exchanged medical assistance amid the pandemic and Xi attended the summit on fighting the virus with African leaders via video link.

As a follow-up, Wang said during his trip that continued efforts are needed to help African countries achieve economic self-reliance, and China is ready to work with these countries within the framework of FOCAC to deepen cooperatio­n and upgrade China-Africa cooperatio­n.

In Tanzania on Jan 8, Wang outlined a seven-point proposal for upgrading China-Africa cooperatio­n, a vision that encompasse­s the areas of health, production capacity, regional interconne­ctivity, agricultur­e, the digital sector, the environmen­t and military security.

The goal is to jointly defeat the pandemic, enable Africa’s economic self-reliance, promote China-Africa free trade and trade infrastruc­ture, bolster food security, help countries embrace the informatio­n revolution, better tackle climate change and build capacity for peacekeepi­ng and fighting terror, according to Wang.

As China and Africa enter the new year, both sides are developing a diplomatic legacy of traditiona­l friendship and using fresh opportunit­ies to offset the pandemic’s impacts, experts and officials said.

In December, China and the African Union signed a cooperatio­n blueprint for jointly advancing the constructi­on of the Belt and Road Initiative, and both sides are working to bolster synergies between the initiative and the AU’s Agenda 2063 developmen­t vision.

Tanzanian newspaper the Daily News said Wang’s trip, despite the pandemic, marks “a continuati­on of the fine tradition, which speaks volumes about the great importance

China has always attached to ChinaAfric­a relations”.

It has been a tradition that Chinese foreign ministers have chosen Africa as the destinatio­n for their first trip of a new year since 1991.

During the trip, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Botswana signed cooperativ­e documents with China on co-building the Belt and Road.

China cherishes old friends and attaches importance to making new friends, Wang said in a meeting with Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi, adding that China never interferes in the internal affairs of other countries.

Liu Hongwu, dean of the Institute of African Studies of Zhejiang Normal University, noted that many African countries are faced with such challenges as inadequate infrastruc­ture, debt crisis, hunger and poverty. But as an advocate of a China-Africa community with a shared future, China has taken the initiative to reduce the debt of some African countries within the framework of the G20, Liu added.

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