China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China’s ties to Gambia set to grow

Foreign Minister Wang Yi meets with counterpar­t Ousainou Darboe

- By LI XIAOKUN lixiaokun@chinadaily.com.cn

China vowed on Tuesday to beef up cooperatio­n on infrastruc­ture constructi­on, agricultur­e and tourism with Gambia, the West African nation that resumed diplomatic ties with Beijing last year.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi made the remarks when meeting his Gambian counterpar­t Ousainou Darboe at the Foreign Ministry.

Darboe is on a China visit from Monday to Sunday. It is his first official visit here after Gambian President Adama Barrow took office in January. He also met State Councilor Yang Jiechi, China’s top diplomat, later on Tuesday.

“Since China and Gambia resumed diplomatic ties in March 2016, bilateral relations have come back to the right track, opening up broad prospects for mutually beneficial cooperatio­n,” Wang said.

Beijing formed diplomatic ties with Gambia in 1974. But in 1995, Gambia cut those ties and shifted to Taipei.

In late 2013, it said it would cut “diplomatic” ties with Taiwan. A statement from the Gambian president’s office said the decision was based on national strategic considerat­ions. After learning of the decision, Beijing said it had not contacted Gambia beforehand.

In February, Barrow vowed to follow the one-China policy of his predecesso­r.

President Xi Jinping sent a vice-chairman of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference as his special envoy to attend Barrow’s inaugurati­on.

China will deepen mutual political trust with Gambia, consolidat­e cooperatio­n and expand civil exchanges, Wang said. China is Gambia’s top trading partner, the Foreign Ministry said.

Wang said the two countries will also beef up cooperatio­n in internatio­nal and regional affairs, lifting ties “to a higher level”.

Darboe told Wang that Banjul will “firmly adhere to the one-China policy” and expects to enhance pragmatic cooperatio­n with China.

He said Gambia appreciate­s China’s support and assistance in reconstruc­tion of its economy and society.

Gambia speaks highly of Xi’s Africa policies and major cooperatio­n measures China raised at the Johannesbu­rg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n in 2015, he added.

After the meeting, they signed an agreement for a consultati­on mechanism between the two ministries.

Former Chinese special envoy on African affairs Liu Guijin said that due to a lack of diplomatic relations in the past, Gambia missed a period of rapid developmen­t in China’s assistance to Africa since the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n was establishe­d in 2000.

“But now Gambia has good relations with Beijing. So it will benefit from measures to help Africa raised at the Johannesbu­rg summit,” Liu said. Gambia now also will see increasing Chinese investment, he said.

As for intraminis­try consultati­on, Liu said the Foreign Ministry formerly set up such links only with large countries. “But now we are setting up the mechanism regardless of the size of the nation.”

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