China Daily Global Weekly

Bringing hope, changing lives

Ten years on, China’s BRI lauded by Africans for making a big difference to their continent

- By CHEN YINGQUN chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Ten years ago, when China proposed the Belt and Road Initiative, Andrew Gatera, then a college student in Beijing, could hardly imagine it would play such a big role in his career in Africa.

Gatera returned to his native Rwanda after completing his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Chinese literature and culture at the Communicat­ion University of China in Beijing.

He started a tourism business in 2017 offering internatio­nal visitors safari tours and treks in Rwanda and other East African regions. With his fluency in Mandarin, Chinese tourists have become his biggest and most important customers.

“The BRI has brought lots of opportunit­ies to different countries and built relationsh­ips between partner countries, making it easier to do business with Chinese,” he said. “Moreover, there are a lot of successful projects in Africa set up by Chinese people that bring real benefits to the local people.”

This year marks the 10th anniversar­y of the BRI proposed by President Xi Jinping. So far, 151 countries and 32 internatio­nal organizati­ons have joined the initiative, according to official figures.

Nasser Bouchiba, president of the Africa-China Cooperatio­n Associatio­n for Developmen­t, said China has been helping to build national infrastruc­ture, upgrade industries and improve people’s lives across the world over the past decade.

“The BRI has become a popular internatio­nal public good and a platform for internatio­nal cooperatio­n,

and brings huge benefits to the world, especially to countries that aspire to developmen­t in Africa,” he said. “In the future, the BRI projects will be more specific and clearer to better align with the needs of various countries.”

Ehizuelen Michael Mitchell Omoruyi, executive director of the Center for Nigerian Studies at the Institute of African Studies, Zhejiang Normal University, described the BRI as “a novel worldwide developmen­t model”.

“The BRI, with the developmen­t of African nations, sets a new path for a higher level of China-Africa cooperatio­n that will help to increase foreign investment, expand trade, ultimately reduce poverty, and in turn reshape Sino-African cooperatio­n by supporting connectivi­ty in and between

economies in Africa,” he said.

Within 10 years, he said, the BRI has become a key platform that has proved to be economical­ly effective. Inadequate transporta­tion infrastruc­ture has long been a major economic huddle for Africa’s industries and exports because high transport costs lower the competitiv­eness of goods. Omoruyi also noted China’s rail infrastruc­ture constructi­on in Africa, which has improved trade and transport services among African countries.

“When the West came to the continent, they developed a lot of infrastruc­ture leading out of the continent. China has done the reverse by leading infrastruc­ture inside,” he said.

“Supporting African nations to promote infrastruc­ture developmen­t under the BRI has helped to connect

African nations internally and promote intra-trade,” he said.

Clayton Hazvinei Vhumbunu, a lecturer in the Department of Political Studies and Governance at the University of the Free State, Bloemfonte­in, South Africa, said that, for Africa, the BRI has brought funding opportunit­ies in key priority developmen­t areas of infrastruc­ture developmen­t, industrial­ization, and intra-African trade, which are all reflected in the African Union Agenda 2063, as well as in regional and national developmen­t strategies.

In the energy sector alone, China has funded more than 36 projects, mainly hydroelect­ric and solar power plants, in at least 19 African countries.

Vhumbunu said the BRI focus on energy may be timely for Africa’s industrial­ization agenda as the continent’s energy deficit is slowing production in agricultur­e, mining, manufactur­ing, and other sectors.

“The BRI, if strategica­lly engaged by African countries, may turn out to be the elusive match to ‘light up’ Africa at a time when over 640 million people out of Africa’s 1.4 billion population do not have access to electricit­y,” he said, adding that about 77 percent of people worldwide living without electricit­y are in Africa.

He said there is great potential for cooperatio­n between China and Africa under the BRI framework; for instance, in the telecommun­ication sector. Internet penetratio­n in Africa is still slow when compared to other regions.

Only 22 percent of Africans are internet users, compared with 80 percent in Europe, 68 percent in Central Asia, 66 percent in Latin America, and 44 percent in the Asia-Pacific and the Arab states, according to Internatio­nal Finance Corp, a global developmen­t institutio­n focused on the private sector in developing countries.

“This will go a long way to connecting people and facilitati­ng the digitaliza­tion of continenta­l trade, which increases the scale, scope and speed of trade in goods and services at a time when commercial­ly meaningful trade under the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area is envisaged to commence,” Vhumbunu said.

Omoruyi said the establishm­ent of special economic zones in several African nations under the BRI could be a major engine to connect Africa with the internatio­nal market. He suggested that China should focus more on infrastruc­ture constructi­on in Africa to help propel the free trade area, which has a market of more than 1 billion people and a combined GDP of more than $3 trillion.

 ?? WANG DONGZHEN / XINHUA ?? Workers at the constructi­on site of the Suez Canal Railway Bridge in Ismailia, Egypt, on June 5. Chinese companies have been pushing forward in upgrading this bridge.
WANG DONGZHEN / XINHUA Workers at the constructi­on site of the Suez Canal Railway Bridge in Ismailia, Egypt, on June 5. Chinese companies have been pushing forward in upgrading this bridge.

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