|
Back to Index
CHINA:
Winning friends and influence in Africa
Antoaneta
Bezlova, Inter Press Service (IPS)
November
01, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=35326
BEIJING - Accused
of supporting corrupt African regimes to facilitate its imports
of oil and raw materials from the resource-rich continent, China
is staging a grand diplomatic forum to defend its dealings with
Africa.
Leaders and
officials from 48 African countries will attend the two-day Beijing
summit this week meant to highlight China's role of benefactor in
Africa. Beijing hopes to promote its development model and foreign
policy credo, scoring diplomatic marks as well as winning trade
opportunities.
"This is a milestone
event in China-Africa history," Xu Jinghu, director-general of the
Department of African Affairs of the Foreign Ministry told the media
ahead of the Nov. 3-5 summit.
While the forum
officially celebrates the 50th anniversary of the beginning of China's
diplomatic ties with the continent, it is the last six years of
booming bilateral trade and intensified cooperation that provide
the background for the meeting.
Driven by its
need for ever-increasing quantities of raw materials China has built
a significant presence in Africa, investing about 6.72 billion US
dollars by the end of last year, and building ports, railways, roads
and dams. It has used soft loans and millions of aid to secure natural
resources -- oil and precious metals, to feed its fast-growing economy.
China imported
38 million tonnes of oil from Africa last year, making up about
30 per cent of the country's total oil imports. The bilateral trade
has jumped from 10 billion US dollars in 2000 to 40 billion last
year.
But this unbridled
expansion has drawn criticism for overlooking human rights abuses
in countries like Sudan and has been described by detractors as
a wave of "neo-colonialism".
As Sudan's largest
foreign investor and an important oil client, China has tried to
block UN efforts to impose sanctions on the regime and halt the
violence in the war-torn country.
In August, Beijing
abstained from a vote on a United Nations resolution that would
allow the world body to assume control over the peacekeeping mission
in Darfur from the African Union whose mandate was to expire on
September 30.
China has rejected
criticism that its involvement in the African country has hindered
international efforts to stop the bloodshed that has taken some
200,000 lives over the past three years. By contrast, Beijing asserts
that adhering to its diplomatic line of non-interference in other
countries' affairs has helped their right to self-determination.
"Chinese investment
in Africa has promoted economic growth, increased job opportunities
and improved living standards," Wei Jianguo, vice-minister of commerce
told reporters last week. "It has greatly benefited local people
and has been very popular among them".
To accuse China
of "neo-colonialism" when appraising its involvement in the African
continent is to use "cold-war mentality", argues Shen Jiru, an international
affairs expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He points
out that China has recently forgiven 10 billion worth of yuan-denominated
loans. "What kind of neo-colonialism is that?"
Multilateral
bodies like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have
raised concerns that lending by China to poor countries that have
recently benefited from debt relief could drive them into debt again.
But rather than
defend its record on this score Beijing hopes that the China-Africa
summit would provide a public forum for African leaders to voice
their support for Beijing in person.
"We have nothing
to lose but our imperialist chains," the Zimbabwean president, Robert
Mugabe, was quoted as saying by the Xinhua News Agency.
Securing the
presence of so many African leaders at a single event - the first
of such magnitude that China has ever hosted, is already seen here
as a big diplomatic success. The five nations in the 53-strong African
Union, which don't have diplomatic relations with China but maintain
ties with Taiwan, have also been invited to send observers.
The meeting
would cement a "tacit understanding" that China has with the 48
African nations to support each other in the United Nations, according
to professor Xu Tiebing of China Media University in Beijing.
"The backing
of these African countries in international areas, and particularly
in the United Nations is of great importance to China," Xu said.
China claims
Taiwan, home to 23 million people, as part of its territory and
has vowed to reunite it by force should the island declare formal
independence. In the past five years China has used financial incentives
and diplomatic means to persuade Taiwan's African allies to switch
allegiance to Beijing.
Since hosting
the first China-African summit on cooperation in Beijing in 2000,
the number of Taiwan's diplomatic allies in Africa has decreased
from eight to five. Those five are Burkina Faso, Swaziland, Malawi,
Gambia and Sao Tome and Principe.
"Because
of its growing international clout China is emerging as the winner
in this battle of interests," said He Wenping, an African export
at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. (END/2006)
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|