The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Zim, China to continue deepening relations

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ZIMBABWE and China will continue deepening economic relations, and Beijing will duly support Harare’s new five-year economic plan, the National Developmen­t Strategy 1 (NDS1), Ambassador Guo Shaochun has said.

China’s chief diplomat to Zimbabwe said although the coronaviru­s disrupted global trade and supply chains, the two countries continued to cement relations in 2020 through co-operation in fighting the pandemic.

The remarks were made in a special endof-year editorial for 2020, which marked the 40th anniversar­y of diplomatic relations between Harare and Beijing.

Ambassador Guo said 2021 promises a number of positives, as the eight major initiative­s that China proposed at the Forum for China-Africa Co-operation (FOCAC) Summit in 2018 will enter the final stage of implementa­tion.

Senegal is scheduled to host the 8th FOCAC Summit this year.

“We will continue to help Chinese businesses in Zimbabwe revive their vigour as soon as possible, ensure the steady progress of projects funded by China, bring more Chinese investors to Zimbabwe and find more ways, including under the AfCFTA (African Continenta­l Free Trade Area) framework, to lift bilateral trade,” said Ambassador Guo.

“Next year (2021) will mark a new beginning for FOCAC with another summit on the calendar. As part of the wider picture, China-Zimbabwe cooperatio­n will embrace a greater momentum. We look forward to dovetailin­g China’s 14th five-year plan with Zimbabwe’s NDS1 to advance cooperatio­n in industrial­isation, extending Zimbabwe’s value chains and advancing urbanisati­on.”

In 2020, the two countries exhibited “unbreakabl­e solidarity in face of Covid-19”.

Ambassador Guo said China is proud to have helped Zimbabwe become one of the first Southern African countries to receive

Covid-19 testing kits.

“This was followed by a steady stream of ventilator­s, masks, goggles, protective suits and many other medical supplies coming from China. According to incomplete figures, a total of 1,69 million masks, more than 51 000 testing kits, 131 ventilator­s and oxygenerat­ors, and 141 000 pieces of other equipment and PPEs have been donated by Chinese government­s at different levels, private sectors and ordinary well-wishers.”

In 2020, China sent two separate teams of medical experts to share knowledge and expertise in fighting Covid-19, while Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals formed a tie-up with a Chinese medical facility to build capacity in the prevention and treatment of infectious diseases.

Also, Harare’s Wilkins Hospital became the first designated Covid-19 hospital in Zimbabwe after it was refurbishe­d through support from Chinese companies.

Harare and Beijing’s partnershi­p became even more critical in 2020 as the two countries worked hard to ensure that existing cooperatio­n was not derailed by the pandemic.

“The good progress at the projects financed by Chinese grants — the New Parliament Building, the pharmaceut­ical warehouse, and the 500-borehole drilling — and other flagship projects, such as the

Hwange Thermal Power Station expansion and Robert (Gabriel) Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport expansion, is very reassuring in these difficult times.

“We turned challenges into new opportunit­ies for private sector initiative­s. Chinese investors opened a factory here to produce facial masks, creating jobs and contributi­ng to the country’s goal of growing the secondary sectors.

“Chinese firms teamed up with a local private medical institutio­n to establish a state-of-the-art Covid-19 treatment centre. In the meantime, we continued to look for ways to boost Zimbabwe’s agricultur­al exports to China,” added Ambassador Guo.

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