The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

China remains a strategic partner for Zim

Mission from His Excellency President Mnangagwa upon deployment as Ambassador in 2019 was to deepen the levels of co-operation in all respects between the People’s Republic of China Zimbabwe.

- Ambassador Martin Chedondo Martin Chedondo is Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to China.

P(PRC) and

RESIDENT Mnangagwa highlighte­d that the PRC was and remains a Comprehens­ive Strategic Partner of co-operation in politics, internatio­nal relations, the economy and people-to-people and cultural exchanges.

Evidence of the importance of this treasured historical relationsh­ip was notably the 2008 veto at the United Nations when China together with Russia blocked attempts by the United States and its Western allies to have Zimbabwe on UN sanctions, which would lead to military action against the country.

In addition to the above, a number of co-operative projects have been undertaken at Government-to-Government level as well as private sector investment­s in many areas including mining, manufactur­ing and agricultur­e to name a few.

As Ambassador, my mission, therefore, remains that of growing this relationsh­ip.

What I yearn for is the participat­ion of the generality of the Zimbabwean population in nurturing the interactio­n in economic, cultural, profession­al and person-to-person exchanges.

China is the world’s second largest economy and is poised to grow further.

The world is looking to China for growth opportunit­ies and there is no reason why Zimbabwe cannot anchor its growth prospects on co-operating with China.

As a consumer market China has a population of 1,4 billion people, with strong purchasing power.

Hence, Zimbabwean businesses should seek to supply that market with their quality consumer products.

As a nation we need a strategic pragmatic mindset shift which realises where future potential lies and cultivate that frontier in a wholesome manner.

There are many lessons which can be borrowed from China’s exponentia­l growth experience and these should be extracted and adapted to our own environmen­t.

The Covid-19 pandemic has been and remains a catastroph­ic public health challenge for mankind.

Cases continue to rise and deaths continue to be recorded.

Highest cases were recorded in the US, Brazil, India, Mexico, Russia and Peru in that descending order.

It is ironic that countries perceived to have the best health infrastruc­ture and advanced science and research have suffered the worst of the pandemic, hence the question about the origin and spread of the virus should be tackled seriously in a non-political and scientific manner.

In this respect, it is therefore imperative for all countries to focus on scientific tracing of the origins of the virus with a view to contain the current spread and prevent future pandemics of a similar nature.

China has done exceptiona­lly well in containing the spread of the virus.

By the same token, Zimbabwe has benefitted from vaccine and other pandemic fighting material donations and supplies from China.

There is, however, an urgent need to ramp up co-operation in joint research and developmen­t in the areas of clinical management, pharmaceut­ical, vaccine and drug manufactur­ing and infrastruc­ture developmen­t of health care facilities.

Co-operation in health is an imperative for Zimbabwe.

Such co-operation will be significan­t in that it will directly benefit the people and in the process make them appreciate the fruits of relations with China.

Zimbabwe continues to stand in solidarity with China in the call for the global community to work under the ambit of the World Health Organisati­on in a scientific and non-political manner with regards to the highly contentiou­s issue of the Covid-19 origins tracing.

A science-based approach to this subject would ensure that the internatio­nal science community is more prepared to strategise on containmen­t and eliminatio­n of future pandemics.

FOCAC, which is the Forum on China Africa Co-operation, was held in the Senegalese capital — Dakar - from November 29 to 30.

FOCAC, which is in its 21st year, has a membership of 53 African countries and it is a forum for co-operation in infrastruc­ture developmen­t, trade and economic issues, political engagement­s, people-to-people and cultural exchanges, peace and security as well as multilater­al and bilateral exchanges in health, education and other profession­al exchanges such as climate, the environmen­t and biodiversi­ty.

FOCAC provides a window of opportunit­y for co-operation with China under President Xi Jinping’s philosophy of not leaving anyone behind in the march towards a shared community of prosperity for mankind and a global community of health.

The letter and spirit of this philosophy has seen China advancing funds towards the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture in Africa such as roads, railway lines, airports, ports, telecommun­ications and power generation.

Recently, China contribute­d immensely towards the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic through the donation and facilitati­on of purchase of vaccines and Personal Protective Equipment.

Zimbabwe has reaped the benefits of FOCAC co-operation in many areas that include the completed upgrade of Kariba Power Station, the extension of the Victoria Falls Internatio­nal Airport, the Mahusekwa Friendship Hospital and the ongoing works at Hwange Thermal Power Plant, the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport, the new Parliament Building and the upgrade of our telecommun­ications sector to name a few.

Whilst the above are Government-to-Government public sector projects, we envisage the injection of more private sector capital to deepen industrial­isation and manufactur­ing.

In addition, we anticipate further opening of the Chinese market to Zimbabwean products and we urge Zimbabwean businesses to position themselves appropriat­ely.

China announced the end of the fight against poverty in 2020 after lifting more than 800 million people from poverty to moderate prosperity.

The fight against poverty, however, needs to be properly contextual­ised in that it is not an event but a deliberate process which involves long-term strategic planning for economic developmen­t, industrial­isation and qualitativ­e service delivery in all sectors.

Through various exchange programmes between the two countries, Zimbabwe can extract lessons to enrich its developmen­t endeavours as enshrined in Vision 2030.

President Mnangagwa has been consistent­ly and persistent­ly clear in stating that the burden of developing Zimbabwe is everyone’s responsibi­lity.

As a leader, he has harnessed the goodwill of the world through engagement and re-engagement, with a view to attracting partners to come and work with us in the long and arduous journey of building our country.

However, as lessons from China reveal, the President’s efforts alone are not enough.

Unity, hard work, discipline, resilience and a common desire for a prosperous motherland are key to success.

As Zimbabwean­s let us focus on hard work. Let us focus on unity; in the liberation war we used to say “iwe neni tine basa” and it is my conviction that a return to this philosophy will see us move mountains.

We are fortunate as a nation that God gave us abundant resources.

In turn, President Mnangagwa is saying let us all come to the “dinner table” and share ideas for uplifting all Zimbabwean­s out of poverty.

We must own our country and the means of production.

Let us consider crowd funding as a concept for economic empowermen­t.

Rather than put money into consumptiv­e expenditur­e, Zimbabwean­s must develop a culture of coming together in groups to fund major projects.

This has succeeded in many countries, including China, and there is no reason why it cannot succeed in Zimbabwe.

In line with the Chinese Government’s policy of encouragin­g outbound investment­s and the Zimbabwe Government’s mantra of Zimbabwe is open for business, the country has seen an upward rise in the number of Chinese quasi-state and private companies investing in the country and this of course is a boost to Vision 2030.

Chinese companies are operating in agricultur­e, mining, manufactur­ing and the industrial retail sectors for the distributi­on and sales of machinery, equipment and hardware.

Among the impactful investment success stories which have directly benefited the people are companies such as China Tobacco in agricultur­e and Afrochine — a subsidiary of Tsingshan Holdings in mining, to name a few.

China Tobacco, a quasi-state entity, has sponsored contract tobacco growing to the benefit of many new farmers who benefited from the land reform programme.

Over 150 million kilogramme­s of tobacco produced annually and bought back by China Tobacco have financiall­y empowered new farmers and created thousands of jobs.

It is our wish that the model is replicated in other areas of production and as an Embassy we are continuing to engage the Chinese business.

Tsingshan Steel, which is a subsidiary of Dinson Holdings, has invested in Afrochine at Selous where they are mining and smelting chrome.

They have also invested in Hwange coking coal and are putting finishing touches on the establishm­ent of an iron ore mining and smelting facility at Manhidze in Chivhu and a steel manufactur­ing plant in Chirumhanz­u.

The investment­s by Dinson worth over US$1 billion are indeed an endorsemen­t of the pro-investment policies of the Second Republic.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe