China Daily Global Weekly

BRI stands for peace, developmen­t

China’s efforts in tackling the challenges in Africa have been consistent with Xi’s vision

- By HUSSEIN ASKARY The author is a board member of the Belt and Road Institute in Sweden. The views do not necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

Two recent events consolidat­ed the idea that economic developmen­t and cooperatio­n are the main drivers of China’s foreign policy. Despite the political and military provocatio­ns by Western powers, especially the United States, China has been asserting that any problems between or among countries can be addressed by adhering to internatio­nal law based on the UN Charter and by building economic and cultural bridges across borders.

These concepts were highlighte­d by the “Resolution of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China on the Major Achievemen­ts and Historical Experience of the Party over the Past Century” issued by the Sixth Plenary Session of the 19th CPC Central Committee in November and the Eighth Ministeria­l Conference of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n held in Dakar, Senegal, on Nov 29-30.

The historic resolution highlights the principle of using economic developmen­t and cooperatio­n as a means to maintain peace and normal relations with other nations. It also says China’s own developmen­t is a contributi­on to global peace as it contribute­s to the developmen­t of other countries.

Although it warns that “the world has entered a period of turbulence and transforma­tion”, it suggests as a solution the establishm­ent of a global governance mechanism based on the UN Charter. As the resolution states: “We must work to develop a new type of internatio­nal relations, promote the building of a human community with a shared future, champion the shared human values of peace, developmen­t, fairness, justice, democracy, and freedom, and steer the tide of human progress.”

The resolution stresses that China has “strengthen­ed solidarity and cooperatio­n with other developing countries with a commitment to upholding the greater good in the pursuit of shared interests and following the principles of sincerity, pragmatism, affinity, and good faith, and put in place collective cooperatio­n mechanisms that cover all other developing countries”.

One of the reasons why China and other countries, such as Russia, have been insisting that the UN Charter is sacrosanct is that the global governance mechanism has been eroded due to unilateral actions taken by the US based on its “rules-based order” and “responsibi­lity to protect”. Not to mention that US actions have caused massive human suffering in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Yemen.

The resolution also emphasizes that the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative is an “initiative for peace”. Asserting that “China has promoted high-quality developmen­t” of the Belt and Road Initiative, it says, “We have advanced a large number of cooperatio­n projects with significan­t implicatio­ns for fueling economic developmen­t and improving people’s lives in countries along the BRI routes and worked to build the BRI into an initiative of peace, prosperity, openness, green developmen­t, and innovation that brings different civilizati­ons closer, and a widely welcomed public good and platform for internatio­nal cooperatio­n in today’s world.”

The best example of this is China’s cooperatio­n with African countries. Delivering his keynote address, via video link, at the Eighth Ministeria­l Conference of FOCAC, President Xi Jinping reminded African leaders that 2021 marked the 50th anniversar­y of the restoratio­n of the People’s Republic of China’s seat at the United Nations and that the African countries had played a key role in it.

Focusing on the economic aspect of China-Africa relations, Xi said: “At the UN General Assembly this year (2021), I put forward the Global Developmen­t Initiative, which dovetails with the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. We welcome the active support and participat­ion by African countries.”

President Xi presented a ninepoint program to be implemente­d by China according to the “China-Africa Cooperatio­n Vision 2035” which the two sides had previously agreed upon. All but the ninth point is on economic cooperatio­n and developmen­t.

The first is related to medical programs, including inoculatin­g at least 60 percent of the African population with COVID-19 vaccines by 2022, building joint production capacity for the vaccines in several African countries and providing training for medical personnel.

The second is on poverty alleviatio­n and agricultur­al developmen­t, including 10 poverty-reduction and agricultur­al projects, sending 500 Chinese agricultur­al experts to Africa, and setting up China-Africa joint centers for modern agro-technology exchange, demonstrat­ion and training in China.

The third is a trade promotion program, under which China will open “green lanes” for African agricultur­al exports to help increase African countries’ exports. That includes providing $10 billion of trade finance for helping boost African exports, and building a pioneering zone in China for in-depth China-Africa trade and economic cooperatio­n and a China-Africa industrial park for Belt and Road cooperatio­n.

Since the volume of intra-African trade is small compared with Africa’s trade with the rest of the world due to the lack of efficient roads, railways and other infrastruc­ture on the continent, China will also undertake 10 connectivi­ty projects in Africa to help expand trade among African countries under the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area program.

The fourth, an investment promotion program, is to encourage Chinese businesses to invest $10 billion in Africa in the next three years, undertakin­g 10 industrial­ization and employment promotion projects, and providing credit facilities of $10 billion to African financial institutio­ns. China will also exempt leastdevel­oped African countries from the debt incurred in the form of interest-free loans due by the end of 2021, and channel to African countries $10 billion from its share of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s new allocation of Special Drawing Rights.

The fifth point is on digital innovation programs and projects, setting up centers for cooperatio­n on satellite remote-sensing applicatio­n, developing China-Africa joint laboratori­es, partnering institutes, and promoting scientific and technologi­cal innovation cooperatio­n bases.

The sixth deals with “green developmen­t programs” including environmen­tal protection and climate action projects for Africa, such as fighting desertific­ation through afforestat­ion, and strengthen­ing the African “Great Green Wall” to prevent the desert in the Sahel from encroachin­g more land.

The seventh point deals with capacity building by constructi­ng schools in Africa to promote education and vocational skills, inviting 10,000 high-level African profession­als to seminars and workshops in China, starting an employment “through train” program for African students in China, and encouragin­g Chinese companies in Africa to create at least 800,000 local jobs.

Cultural cooperatio­n, the eighth point, is aimed at expanding peopleto-people exchange programs including encouragin­g more Chinese tourists to visit Africa, holding African film festivals in China and Chinese film festivals in Africa, and organizing joint forums for youth and women.

Only the 10th point deals with security and military matters, but even that is largely focused on peacekeepi­ng operations, and providing military assistance for fighting terrorism, and Chinese and African peacekeepi­ng troops holding joint exercises.

All these points were elaborated in a white paper, “China and Africa in the New Era: A Partnershi­p of Equals”, issued by China’s State Council Informatio­n Office on the eve of the FOCAC meeting.

An interestin­g aspect of the document is that it emphasizes China will never cross “five lines”. It will not interfere in African countries’ internal affairs, not force African countries to choose a certain developmen­t path, not impose its will on African countries, not attach any political strings to assistance to Africa, and not pursue selfish political gains through investment and financing cooperatio­n with Africa.

This is in stark contrast to the flagrant interferen­ce by the US and its allies in the internal affairs of African countries, including their economic policy, foreign policy, and internal social and political dynamics. And when political and economic pressure does not produce results, the US and its allies use their military power to get what they want, as has happened in Libya in 2011 — with horrifying consequenc­es for the Libyan people — and many other African nations.

Worse, US officials travel regularly to African countries to warn them against cooperatin­g with China, which is an insult to those countries as it suggests they cannot make their own decisions. In fact, just 10 days before the FOCAC meeting, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Senegal, after traveling to Kenya and Nigeria, and made ludicrous claims about how the US’ “Build Back Better World” was superior to the Belt and Road Initiative and denounced China for allegedly violating human rights and enticing countries into a “debt trap” through its developmen­t projects.

The reaction from Africa to such baseless accusation­s was that two more countries — Eritrea and Guinea Bissau — joined the Belt and Road Initiative the same week. This means all but four African countries are now part of the initiative.

It is ironic that the more the West warns African countries against cooperatin­g with China, the more countries and organizati­ons join the BRI. This is because, unlike Western initiative­s, it is results-oriented and people-centered.

Also, despite being a major aid provider, China has always tried to make sure African countries do not become addicted to aid, because aid cannot help them raise their productivi­ty or improve their infrastruc­ture facilities.

Addressing the FOCAC Summit in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, in 2015, President Xi mentioned the “three bottleneck­s of developmen­t” — lack of capital, lack of infrastruc­ture, and shortage of skilled labor. If African countries can overcome these bottleneck­s, Xi said, they can eliminate poverty, just as China has done.

“It is entirely possible for Africa, as the world’s most promising region in terms of developmen­t potential, to bring into play its advantages and achieve great success,” Xi said. “The achievemen­t of inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t in Africa hinges on industrial­ization, which holds the key to creating jobs, eradicatin­g poverty and improving people’s living standards.” China’s efforts in Africa since then have been consistent with this vision.

Despite China’s efforts, however, the pace of developmen­t in Africa has been slow because China is standing almost alone with African countries in tackling the massive challenges. If the US, the European Union, Japan and other advanced economies had contribute­d in a similar manner, Africa’s fight against poverty, famine and disease would have been greatly enhanced.

It is time the West realized that peace and security come from economic developmen­t. This is the vision presented in 1967 by Pope Paul VI, who wrote in his encyclical Populorum Progressio that “developmen­t (is) the new name for peace”.

The pope wrote: “When we fight poverty and oppose the unfair conditions of the present, we are not just promoting human well-being; we are also furthering man’s spiritual and moral developmen­t, and hence we are benefiting the whole human race. For peace is not simply the absence of warfare, based on a precarious balance of power; it is fashioned by efforts directed day after day toward the establishm­ent of the ordered universe willed by God, with a more perfect form of justice among men.”

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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