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Diamond-financed
Defense College deal exposes Zimbabwe's China ties
Sandra
Nyaira, VOA News
June
16, 2011
View
this article on the VOA website
Controversy over a US$98 million Chinese loan to Zimbabwe to build
a defense college, funded by Harare's share of revenues from a diamond
mining deal with a Chinese firm, became a case study of the questions
around China's burgeoning economic relations with Africa just days
after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton raised the issue.
Interviewed in Lusaka,
Zambia, Clinton expressed misgivings about Beijing's potentially
negative influence on governance across Africa and warned against
a "new colonialism" developing as Beijing sought African
resources to fuel its industrial expansion.
Touring three African
countries to promote trade between the United States and Africa,
Clinton said Chinese foreign aid and investment on the continent
have not always been consistent with international norms for transparency
and good governance. She said Beijing is pursuing its own interests,
not advancing Africa's - a sentiment that was echoed soon after
by Zimbabwean Finance Minister Tendai Biti.
"It is easy to
come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave.
And, when you leave, you don't leave much behind for the people
who are there," Clinton told her Zambian television interviewer.
"You don't improve the standard of living. You don't create
a ladder of opportunity. We don't want to see a new colonialism
in Africa."
A few days later,
Biti addressed Zimbabwe's Parliament
to question the deal involving a $98 million loan from China to
build a military college outside Harare, funded by the cash flows
from Anjin Investments, a joint venture between the Zimbabwean government
and Chinese construction company Anhui Foreign Economic Construction
Group.
Biti told Parliament
that the deal was "criminal." But backers of the deal
within President Robert Mugabe's long-ruling ZANU-PF party noted
however that he signed the deal in March along with three other
commercial agreements with China.
Biti told VOA that he
signed the loan documents in March because they were presented to
him with three other agreements in the presence of the Chinese Vice
Premier Wang Qishan, and he "didn't want to create a
diplomatic furor" though he had misgivings.
"The agreements
were presented before me in the presence of the Vice Premier, and
I didn't want to embarrass Zimbabwe and embarrass the Vice
Premier of China." But the finance minister added, "I
think China is capable of assisting Zimbabwe."
Though Zimbabwe needs
the funding, Biti said the terms of the four loans for a total of
US$500 million are problematic. He said the interest rate is too
high, and he added that Zimbabwe has more urgent needs to address
than the lack of a defense college.
Another sore point for
some Zimbabwean is that the college is being constructed not by
a local concern but by Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Group.
The agreement
states that "the goods, technologies and services purchased
by using the proceeds of the Facility shall be purchased from China
preferentially and also from Zimbabwe where this will benefit the
project and end user."
Biti says he wants to
renegotiate the deal so ordinary Zimbabweans will benefit from the
Anjin diamond operation, not just Beijing and the Zimbabwean military.
He said he has written to the Export-Import Bank of China seeking
reduced interest rates.
But some are skeptical
he will be able to undo what was signed and sealed in March.
"It seems that
it is all too late for any such hope," commented Harare economist
John Robertson. He noted that if there were going to be a meaningful
parliamentary debate on the project "it should have happened
maybe a year ago."
Though declining
to comment specifically on the deal, Mines Minister Obert Mpofu
said it was an example of the success of President Robert Mugabe's
"Look East" policy.
"The technical
details of that contract [are] agreeable to Zimbabweans,"
Mpofu said.
"This is a deal
that will see our academy developing its technological expertise
through collaboration with China. It is a deal that is really one
of the best deals that this country has ever entered into since
independence. We are very grateful for that."
Mpofu blamed
Washington for what he termed hype against the agreement, saying
the Americans are worried the Chinese will brush them aside in Africa.
China recently
replaced the United States as Africa's largest trading partner.
Chinese trade with the continent rose more than 40% in 2010 to around
$127 billion.
Mpofu also accused
the United States of being hypocritical by doing business with China
while discouraging
Chinese
investment and commercial development in Africa.
Deputy Prime
Minister Arthur Mutambara told Parliament that Harare should take
a fresh look at all the deals it has signed with China. Like many
in Zimbabwe, he said the deals largely benefit China rather than
the impoverished Zimbabwean people.
China's
expanding role in the Marange
diamond field is of particular concern to many in the country
and around the world who have noted the almost total lack of transparency
in general in Zimbabwe's development of the rich alluvial diamond
deposits.
Little is known
about any of the five companies, including another Chinese-Zimbabwe
venture, operating in Marange. But Anjin remains the least transparent.
The terms of
the Sino-Zimbabwean joint-venture are protected from public scrutiny
by a non--disclosure agreement. A report on Chinese investments
in Zimbabwe by the Labor and Economic Development Research Institute,
an arm of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, said many Chinese
companies in Zimbabwe were highly secretive.
Such companies told trade
union researchers they did not need to share any information because
"their deals were more on a government-to-government basis."
An ongoing controversy
over the commercialization Marange diamonds in the Kimberley Process
Certification Scheme is keeping these rough stones from being sold
openly to major dealers. The companies operating in Marange are
seeking a consensus in Kimberley's inter-sessional meetings
next week to let them sell without oversight.
But the lack
of Kimberley certification has not prevented Marange stones from
entering the international diamond market through smuggling. Mpofu
told VOA that Anjin is not yet selling its rough stones. In April
Anjin announced that it has stockpiled a million carats of diamonds.
But sources suggest far more than that has already been shipped
by air to China given that Anjin has been operating in Marange since
early 2010.
While other companies operating in Marange must find buyers willing
to deal without a Kimberley certificate. But a Chinese state enterprise
mining diamonds in Marange has a vast home market into which it
can sell large quantities of stones, no questions asked.
China has been aggressively
seeking to acquire rough diamonds across Africa in a bid to displace
India as the world's top cutter and polisher of the precious
gems.
Partnership Africa Canada
Research Director Alan Martin says Anjin has shadowy ties to the
Chinese and Zimbabwean militaries. "We've had information
that the deal is actually military to military," Martin said.
"One of the concerns people have about Anjin is that it has
not done what is expected of every other foreign company in Zimbabwe,
which is to register itself with the relevant authorities ... Anjin
has skirted the current Zimbabwean laws which are applicable to
every other foreign company."
Parliamentary Legal Committee
Chairman Shepherd Mushonga led spirited efforts by the Movement
for Democratic Change formation of Prime Minister Tsvangirai to
block the defense college deal - with little success as Biti had
already signed off on it.
Asked why MDC members
of Parliament ratified the agreement, Mushonga offered an explanation
similar to Biti's: "There were visiting Chinese military
leaders, they were sitting in the gallery. It was going to be a
very embarrassing scenario."
Moreover, the defense
college is nearly completed. Biti said that when he had signed the
deal he was just "legitimizing what was taking place de facto."
Mushonga confirmed that the construction of the defense college
began about a year ago, a little after rumors emerged that a Chinese
company was actively mining in Marange.
Economist John Robertson
said Zimbabwe will not benefit much from the deal.
"Most of the projects
I've heard about do not employ Zimbabwean people, they bring
their laborers with them from China and they don't involve
many Zimbabweans at all in any of the projects that they have engaged
in, even the sports stadium in Harare was built with Chinese laborers
they didn't employ any Zimbabweans."
Mushonga noted that the
deal does not adhere to the country's new indigenization law
requiring a 51 percent stake in foreign enterprises for local black
investors. "Going into that agreement, there is nothing for
Zimbabwean companies. There is totally nothing."
It remains to be seen
if Biti can undo or rewrite the deal or whether, as in so many other
instances in Marange, the ZANU-PF and military officials who control
access and the development of the zone will have their way. But
the seemingly expanding Chinese role in the Marange diamond zone
could fuel Zimbabwean resentment at the disappearance of a precious
resource that could meet many crucial needs - but is not doing so.
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