Hiiraan Online
3/28/2024
Today from Hiiraan Online:
Home
Somali Map
Sports
Opinion
RSS
Somali Music
Contact Us
Facebook
Twitter
Google Plus
advertisements
Chinese president to head to Africa
Tuesday, December 01, 2015
French President Francois Hollande, left, greets China's President Xi Jinping as he arrives for the COP21, United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Le Bourget, outside Paris, Monday, Nov. 30, 2015. (Loic Venance/Pool Photo via AP)
advertisements
Some immigration signs at Zimbabwe's main international airport are in Chinese, a sign of China's deep economic inroads in Africa, which Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit this week.
Xi arrives Tuesday in Zimbabwe before heading on Wednesday to South Africa. There, he will attend a forum on cooperation between Africa and China, whose investment on the continent has soared in the past decade. Zimbabwe, whose economy is faltering, would like to get a bigger piece of it.
China's overall trade with Africa topped $200 billion last year but has slowed over the past two years as the weakening Chinese economy demands fewer of the continent's oil, copper and other raw materials.
Chinese-built roads, bridges and power installations are found across Africa, often paid for in resources or through loans from China that must eventually be repaid.
Along with those looming debts, some African nations have expressed anger over Chinese companies' use of Chinese workers and other practices that fail to benefit local economies.
Inexpensive Chinese goods have long been popular in Africa, and in the last decade Chinese merchants have started eliminating the middle man and setting up retail outlets of their own, much to local merchants' chagrin. In 2011, riots in the Ugandan capital of Kampala largely targeted the city's foreign merchants.
There are about a million Chinese living in Africa, mostly engaged in commercial work, according to the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce in Africa.
Xi's visit to Zimbabwe is his first and he'll meet President Robert Mugabe, who has been quoted by Zimbabwean state media as saying they will discuss "some of the projects and programs we want China to assist us in undertaking."
Despite the collaboration, Mugabe has expressed concern in the past, telling the Chinese in 2012 to respect Zimbabwe's investment and labor laws.
"To our Chinese friends we say, 'You don't just come, you have to respect our rules," the Zimbabwean leader said at a gathering of the ruling party.
China pumped $600 million into Zimbabwe in 2013, making it the biggest foreign investor with interests ranging from gold, diamond and platinum mining to tobacco, nickel, chrome, construction, energy and telecommunications, said Chinese ambassador Huang Ping.
Zimbabwe's economy is battered by mass company closures, high unemployment, low liquidity and foreign direct investment and food shortages. The government has been struggling to raise money to pay its workers, often shifting pay dates. Over two-thirds of Zimbabweans survive on informal trade, according to the African Development Bank.
Xi travels to South Africa where he will be from Wednesday through Saturday on his second state visit to that country. In addition to attending the China and Africa forum security will also be on his agenda. Three Chinese were among 20 people killed in an Islamic extremist assault on a hotel in Mali last week.
China has said it is holding discussions with Djibouti on setting up a naval logistics center in the Horn of Africa nation to service Chinese anti-piracy patrols in the Gulf of Aden and other regional missions. It hopes the center could ease difficulties in refueling and replenishing Chinese navy ships and provide recreation for officers and sailors.
Like India, China has looked to African states to bolster its profile. South Africa has been especially supportive on the political front, twice barring entry to the Dalai Lama, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who is derided by Beijing as an advocate for Tibetan independence from Chinese rule.
Germany donates €500,000 for sustainable development in Baidoa town
- HOL
After a year of service, Djibouti rotates its AU troops in Somalia
- HOL
U.S. Tightens Visa-Waiver Program in Bid to Deter Militants
- Nytimes
Djibouti: Governor of Obock Thanks the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
- Spa
Brig Okiring to head UPDF troops in Somalia
- Newvision
Suspected British jihadi hunted by Kenyan police over links to terror group al Shabaab
- Mirror
Experts warn of pirate attacks as Indian Ocean security level is reduced
- Arabian Business
Facebook network and stress levels may be tied together
- Reuters
Obama: 'Let's Get to Work' on Climate Change
- VOA
UPDF captures Somali territory from Al-Shabaab
- Newvision
Kenya-Somalia Border Wall To Shut Out Al-Shabab Under Construction Amid Debate
- Ibtimes
Somalia fighting: 30 dead, 40 000 flee
- News24
Terror drill ends in death of woman
- Sky News Au
Police: Muslim Taxi Driver Shot After Being Asked About ISIS
- CBS Pittsburgh
Clashes force 40,000 people out of homes in Somalia: UN relief agency
- Xinhua
Home
Email