China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Focus both immediate and long-term

China and Africa are transformi­ng their cooperatio­n into real health and developmen­t outcomes

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Since the Extraordin­ary China-Africa Summit on Solidarity Against COVID-19 in June, China and Africa have maintained close coordinati­on and deepened their cooperatio­n in the fight against the novel coronaviru­s. The two sides have maintained frequent high-level political exchanges. President Xi Jinping has held telephone conversati­ons with over 10 African leaders. State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi has kept in close contact with his African counterpar­ts using various means. Moreover, both sides have reactivate­d cooperatio­n between their political parties, parliament­s and local government­s.

In the face of the grave public health threat, China has provided several rounds of anti-pandemic supplies to all African countries as well as the African Union. China and Africa together facilitate­d the transporta­tion of anti-pandemic materials to over 20 land-locked African countries. Upon the request of African countries, China has sent public health experts to 11 African countries, and it is sending more teams to countries such as Guinea and South Sudan. In all, 46 Chinese medical teams have shared their experience­s with tens of thousands of African medical staff and people. China is also finalizing the list of 30 hospitals to be paired-up with African hospitals to begin a fresh area of online cooperatio­n. Not long ago, China and the AU signed an agreement on constructi­ng the African Centers for Disease Control (CDC) headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia. China aims to launch this important project by the end of this year.

Efforts are being made to relieve Africa’s debt burden. In line with the G20’s Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI), China has reached oral or written agreements with over 10 African countries on debt suspension. Chinese Vice-Minister of Finance Zou Jiayi has accepted the initiative of the AU to have a video conference with AU envoys for further exchanges. As a market-based financial institutio­n, the China Developmen­t Bank is participat­ing in the debt suspension efforts and its negotiatio­ns with relevant countries are making progress. There is need to note that the debt issue, intertwine­d with economic and social developmen­t, can only be solved in a comprehens­ive manner.

Even in the face of the unpreceden­ted pandemic, China-Africa economic and trade cooperatio­n has not come to a stop. Over 1,100 Chinese projects continue operating in Africa. During the first four months of this year, China’s investment in Africa grew by 4.4 percent, compared with the same period last year. The trade volume between China and Africa reached over $80 billion in the first half of this year. Upon the request of the African side, Chinese investors moved swiftly to build face mask production factories and virus-testing laboratori­es in Africa. In one West African country, upon the requiremen­t of its government, a Chinese chemical plant is planning to send more staff by a chartered plane to resume the local projects and make new contributi­on to this country’s economic and social developmen­t. And we have put forward new guidelines for Chinese projects with a focus on public health, economic reopening and people’s livelihood­s.

This year marks the 20th anniversar­y of the founding of the Forum on ChinaAfric­a Cooperatio­n (FOCAC). It is of great importance to ensure the smooth organizati­on of FOCAC activities within this year and to look forward to the meeting in 2021 with a view to better planning for our cooperatio­n in the next stage, and bringing about more tangible benefits to our two peoples.

The most urgent thing now is a vaccine. To date, six COVID-19 vaccine candidates, including three from China, have entered Phase III clinical trials. Many Chinese people have been vaccinated for emergency use. All of them induced an immune response to the virus without any negative side effects. China has already started the process to conduct vaccine cooperatio­n with some countries including Egypt. As President Xi has promised, once the developmen­t and deployment of a COVID-19 vaccine is completed in China, African countries will be among the first to benefit. This great initiative could not be implemente­d successful­ly without African countries’ participat­ion and cooperatio­n. Africa and China will work hand in hand in this new field of cooperatio­n.

Fighting against the pandemic is the immediate challenge, however stabilizin­g the economy and improving people’s livelihood­s are the long-term tasks. China-Africa

financing cooperatio­n is indeed of mutual benefit. It expands African countries’ access to financing and overcomes the bottleneck problems of Africa’s developmen­t over the years. We fully understand that the African continent is exploring its own developmen­t path, with the guidance of the AU Agenda 2063. China is encouragin­g more Chinese enterprise­s to invest in Africa’s industrial­ization projects or take the innovative means of cooperatio­n like public-private-partnershi­ps or build-operate-transfer. China and Africa should make full use of their comparativ­e advantages to build more special economic zones and industrial parks in Africa, transformi­ng the outcomes of ChinaAfric­a infrastruc­ture cooperatio­n into Africa’s real industrial­ization potential.

Africa has witnessed accelerate­d integratio­n over the years, including the establishm­ent of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area, which is also a great opportunit­y for China-Africa economic cooperatio­n. We encourage more Chinese businesses to localize their production in Africa and help Africa create jobs, rather than focus on the raw material trade or low value-added manufactur­ing.

Last but not least, Africa is a young continent and a region full of developmen­t potential. New businesses such as e-commerce and mobile payments are growing fast. We should blaze new trails in the digital economy and add new impetus to China-Africa cooperatio­n on the Belt and Road Initiative. China is taking seriously the concern of African countries on climate change and we are ready to take actions with Africa to that end.

The world today is at a crossroad, facing more uncertaint­ies and instabilit­ies. China and Africa are bound together by common interests in safeguardi­ng multilater­alism and upholding internatio­nal fairness and justice. The two sides are more than ever committed to upholding the multilater­al system with the United Nations at the core, and supporting the WHO in playing a bigger role in the global fight against COVID-19.

The author is the director-general of the African Affairs Department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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