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China-Africa Co-operation: News and Discussions

China and France create €300M fund to invest in Africa, together
Wednesday, 16 November 2016

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(Ecofin Agency) - China and France announced on November 15 the official launch of a €300 million investment fund to finance joint projects in Africa and Asia. The fund was launched on the sideline of the visit of China’s deputy Prime Minister, Kai ma, to France.

Managed by CDC International Capital (CDC IC), subsidiary of Caisse des Dépôts dédiée aux partenariats d’investissements directs, and backed by the China Investment Corporation (CIC) sovereign fund, the new fund could reach a capital of two billion Euros, by opening up to other Chinese and French institutional investors.

It will mainly target the renewable energy, health and infrastructure sectors. “This new alliance, sealed with this fund, aims to foster economic cooperation between our countries. Rather than competing in Africa, we will now work together,” said Laurent Vigier, CEO of CDC IC.

It will also ease our entry in Asian markets which are still difficult to penetrate,” he added commenting the partnership.​

Let’s recall that China and France signed in June 2015 a declaration of partnership for third country markets under which the two nations committed to win, together, new markets in Africa and Asia.

Moreover, under the same declaration, the two countries are to work together on infrastructure and energy projects and develop “new cooperation formulas for co-production and co-financing” which will target “mainly Asia and Africa”.

http://www.ecofinagency.com/finance...create-300m-fund-to-invest-in-africa-together
 
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Thank God, a good step. Africa always neglected by west and they just use it for their benefits. Now China changes this tradition.
 
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Thank God . a good step . africa always neglected by westcand they just use it for their benefits . now china changes this tradition


Due to colonial history, the French has good knowledge in several African nations, and that helps making investments more effective. Partnership is a good idea, we saw consensus was agreed when Premier Li Keqiang visited France last year, and now official inception of this new fund.

China, France Prioritize Partnership in Third-Party Markets
(Xinhua-Agencies) Updated: 2015-07-01 09:39

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"... Li, who is on a four-day official visit to France, said the two countries should deepen financial cooperation to provide support for exploring third party markets and enhance exchanges and cooperation in supervising their banking sectors ..."

Read more at http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/2015liattendcelm/2015-07/01/content_21149044.htm
 
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Blah blah blah, after the France media badmouthing China investment in Africa as colonies action. Their government make a 100% U turn and cooperate with China.
 
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Great news! China and France should work together to create a better economic environment for Africa! keep up the good work! :yahoo:


Yes, there are several nations where France's participation may help, including Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Benin and Niger.

West Africa is a resources rich region, both China and France have alot of opportunities to co-operate. Take Niger as an example, the country is world's 4th largest producer of uranium. Major investors in Niger uranium industry includes China National Nuclear Corp (China Nuclear International Uranium Corporation, or "Sino-U"), Areva NC of France, Overseas Uranium Resources Development Company of Japan, Korea Resources Corp (KORES).

The Azelik mine, which has resources of 13,000 tU at 0.2%, is the first of CNNC's overseas interests to enter production, under the control of its subsidiary China Nuclear International Uranium Corporation (Sino-U). Trial operation began at Azelik on 10 December 2010, with the first barrel of yellowcake being produced on 30 December, now running at 700t/yr, targeting to reach 5000 t/yr by 2020. Azelik is owned by Societe des Mines d'Azelik SA (SOMINA), a joint venture established in 2007 in which the government of Niger has a 33% interest and Sino-U holds 37.2%. The remainder 29.8% of the company is owned by Chinese investment management company ZXJOY Invest, and China-based private mining and investment firm Trendfield Holdings.
 
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Chinese premier eyes more cooperation with Sierra Leone
2016-12-03 08:56 | Xinhua | Editor: Wang Fan

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (R) meets with Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 2, 2016. (Xinhua/Ma Zhancheng)

Premier Li Keqiang met with Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma on Friday, calling on both countries to enhance cooperation in infrastructure development and production capacity.

Hailing the fruitful bilateral cooperation since establishing diplomatic relations in 1971, Li said China hoped to further deepen political mutual trust, practical cooperation and coordination in international affairs with Sierra Leone.

"China is willing to tap the potential of the two countries' economic complementarity by focusing on infrastructure development cooperation, industrial production capacity cooperation as well as partnership in mining, agriculture and fishery in line with market principles," the premier said.

Li said China will also cooperate more with Sierra Leone in public health, hospitals and medical staff training and continue to send medical teams to the country.

Koroma thanked China for the aid sent to his country during the Ebola outbreak in 2014.

Sierra Leone will learn from China's experiences of development, strengthen cooperation with China in infrastructure building, mining, agriculture, telecommunication, public health and tourism, Koroma said.

Koroma is on a state visit to China from Nov. 30 to Dec. 6 at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping.
 
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Yearender: Major Chinese projects in sub-Saharan Africa in 2016
2016-12-29 16:38 | Xinhua | Editor: Li Yan

From electrified railways to hydro power plants, a number of Chinese projects continued to spring up and boost development in Africa this year amid blossoming Sino-African cooperation.

The following is a Xinhua review on major Chinese-built or Chinese-funded infrastructure projects that began or finished construction in sub-Saharan Africa in 2016:

ETHIOPIA-DJIBOUTI RAILWAY

Ethiopia on Oct. 5 launched its first electrified railway linking its capital and Djibouti, with officials hailing the Chinese-built rail as the latest testament to the Sino-African friendship.

The 752.7-km Ethiopia-Djibouti railway, also known as Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway, will avail landlocked Ethiopia a faster access to the sea (via Djibouti port), reducing travel time from seven days on roads to about 10 hours.

The railway was hailed by Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang as the "Tazara railway in a new era," referring to the railway linking Tanzania's Dar es Salaam with Zambia's Kapiri Mposhi that China sent over 50,000 workers to build in the 1970s despite its own economic difficulties.

Constructed by China Railway Group and China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, the railway features the use of a complete sets of Chinese equipment and standards. It is also the second trans-national railway built by Chinese in Africa, following the Tazara.

NAIROBI-NAIVASHA RAILWAY

Kenya on Nov. 19 launched the Nairobi-Naivasha Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) Project, being built by China Communications Construction Company (CCCC) and funded by China's Exim Bank.

The project is the phase A of Nairobi-Malaba SGR Project and an extension of the Nairobi-Mombasa SGR. The 120.4-km line starts from the Kenyan capital city to Malaba, a border city between Kenya and Uganda.

Speaking at the launch ceremony, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said the modern railway line would catalyze Kenya's industrial transformation and position the country as an investment hub.

ABUJA-KADUNA RAILWAY

The Abuja-Kaduna standard gauge railway, linking Nigeria's capital Abuja and the northwestern state of Kaduna, was open for commercial operation in July.

The 186.5-km line was built by China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation with nine stations and a designed speed of 150 km per hour.

The railway is part of the railway modernization initiative by Nigeria to replace the existing narrow gauge system with the wider standard gauge system, while allowing high-speed train operations on the railway network.

NYERERE BRIDGE

Tanzania's commercial capital Dar es Salaam added a new urban landmark on April 19 when the Chinese-built Nyerere Bridge, or Kigamboni Bridge, opened to traffic as the largest cable-stayed cross-sea bridge in East Africa.

The 680-meter-long, six-lane bridge now offers a shortcut from Dar es Salaam's CBD to the Kigamboni district. Prior to its opening, many local residents have relied on wooden boat ferry to cross the creek separating the two places.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli has named the bridge Nyerere in recognition of the country's founding leader -- Julius Nyerere.

It was built by China Railway Construction Engineering Group in a joint venture with China Railway Major Bridge Group.

GIBE III HYDRO POWER PLANT

Ethiopia on Dec. 17 inaugurated the Gibe III hydro power plant, which will further enhance the country's reputation as a hydro powerhouse in East Africa.

The Gibe III project boasts a generating capacity of 1,870 MW, which will raise Ethiopia's power generation capacity to more than 4,260 MW.

Located in the Southern Regional State, Gibe III has been contracted by Salini Impregilo of Italy for the civil works, and Dong Fang Electric Corp. of China for the electromechanical works. A loan from the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) financed 60 percent of the cost.

VICTORIA FALLS AIRPORT

Zimbabwe's Victoria Falls International Airport, upgraded and expanded with support from China, was commissioned on Nov. 18 with the hope of ushering in more tourists to the country.

The upgraded airport can now handle 1.5 million passengers per year, up from 500,000, and boasts new facilities including a new international terminal building, a new 4-km runway, extended parking areas for aircraft and new road networks.

The airport is the gateway to Victoria Falls, a world heritage site.

The project was done by China Jiangsu International and financed through a 150-million-U.S.-dollar-loan from China EXIM Bank.

TEMA PORT AND KOTOKURABA MARKET

Ghana's eastern port of Tema on Nov. 16 began expansion, undertaken by the China Harbor Engineering Company, amid a drive to become a more efficient gateway to Africa.

Under the project, a total of 120 hectares of land would be reclaimed from the sea. The project will also see the upgrading of the two-lane Tema-Accra Expressway into a six-lane road to ease traffic flow.

Ghana on Nov. 29 commissioned the new Kotokuraba market, whose construction was financed by China EXIM Bank and undertaken by China Railway Construction Engineering Group.

The market in the ancient capital Cape Coast features modern facilities including a 200-capacity parking lot, a solar system for emergency lighting and CCTV security cameras.

The market renovation and construction is expected to ease congestion in the former Kotokuraba market, which had suffered two major fires with heavy losses.

BURUNDI'S DIGITAL TV MIGRATION

Burundi on Dec. 19 inaugurated a digital television project by Chinese media company StarTimes after its construction completed. The project has helped Burundi to become the first in the East African Community to achieve a complete migration from analog to digital television.

The project will allow broadcasting of high-quality images and sounds and a wider national, regional and international coverage of the Burundi national television.

On the same day, Chinese tech giant Huawei also marked the completion of its metropolitan area network project in Burundi, which involves laying 220 km optical fiber in the capital Bujumbura.
 
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Chinese foreign minister to visit five African countries
Source: Xinhua | Published: 2017/1/3 21:04:35


Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will follow a two-decade-long diplomatic tradition to make Africa his first overseas destination in 2017, a spokesperson said Tuesday.

Wang will pay an official visit to Madagascar, Zambia, Tanzania, Republic of Congo and Nigeria from Jan. 7 to 12, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang announced at a news briefing.

"Relations with developing countries, including in Africa, is the bedrock of Chinese diplomacy," Geng said. "Chinese foreign ministers have visited Africa during their first foreign trips each year over the past two decades. The practice has become a much treasured diplomatic tradition for China."

Wang will discuss the implementation of President Xi Jinping's consensus with African leaders and the outcome of the 2015 Forum on China-Africa Cooperation in Johannesburg, to help the revival of Africa and enhance solidarity and common development among developing countries, Geng said.

"China hopes to comprehensively upgrade cooperation with Africa in 2017," the spokesperson said.

At the 2015 summit, China announced 10 major plans for China-Africa cooperation over three years, backed with a 60 billion US dollar package. As of last July, China and Africa had signed 245 various cooperation agreements worth a total of 50 billion US dollars.

A batch of early successes related to the summit were achieved in 2016, including the opening of the Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway and progress on the Mombasa-Nairobi line, as well as development of industrial parks and special economic zones, Geng said.
 
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China’s Foreign Minister To Explore More FOCAC Implementations in Africa
By Fredrick P. W. Gaye in Monrovia (People's Daily Online) 14:57, January 06, 2017

China’s Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, will pay official visits to five African countries on January 7-12, 2017. The countries include Madagascar, Zambia, Tanzania, Congo and Nigeria.

The main purpose of Minister Wang's visit is to further explore on how to implement the major consensus reached between President Xi Jinping and African leaders as well as the outcomes of the Johannesburg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing said.

It is against the backdrop of new changes emerging in international political and economic situations and new challenges turning up in African countries so as to assist Africa's rejuvenation and development, boost the upgrading of China-Africa cooperation and contribute to solidarity and common development among developing countries.

China’s Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson Geng Shuang told a regular press briefing in Beijing on Tuesday, January 3, 2017, that Minister Wang chose the five countries as the destination of his first overseas visit in the new year.

“China's diplomacy is rooted in strengthening relations with developing countries, including those in Africa. The foreign minister's first trip of every year usually takes him to Africa, a practice that has been in existence for over two decades, already establishing itself as a fine diplomatic tradition,” Mr. Geng said. He noted that 2017 will witness China-Africa cooperation marching forward and upgrading in an all-round way.

According to him, 2016 was the inaugural year of China-Africa cooperation in the new age, with China and Africa making positive efforts to implement the outcomes of the Johannesburg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) and reaping a bunch of important early harvests.

Mr. Geng named a new railway in Ethiopia linking Addis Ababa to the city of Djibouti, the fast progress in building Mombasa-Nairobi railway in Kenya, and several industrial parks and special economic zones that are being planned out as few examples.

He recalled that, from January to September 2016, China's non-financial direct investment to Africa registered a year-on-year 31% increase.

“Between the end of the Johannesburg Summit and the end of last July, 245 cooperation agreements worth more than US$50 billion covering various fields were signed between the two sides. Mutually beneficial cooperation between China and Africa has shown a sound momentum of transforming and upgrading,” the spokesman added.

Under the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping as the core, Geng reaffirmed China’s commitment to break new grounds in forging a major-country diplomacy with Chinese characteristics.”

Geng mentioned several activities in China’s continuing diplomatic engagements: First, China will strive to foster a sound external environment to ensure the success of the 19th National Congress of the CPC. Second, China will do her utmost to be a good host of two major diplomatic events, one being the International Cooperation Summit Forum on the Belt and Road Initiative, the other the 9th BRICS Summit. Third, the country will promote the sustained, steady and sound development of major-country relations, including China-US, China-Russia and China-EU relations, maintain a stable neighborhood, and continue to enlarge China's circle of friends. Fourth, "the overseas livelihood projects" must be moved forward so as to better complement China's national development and reform and opening-up.

He summed up as saying that China’s diplomatic efforts in 2017 will continue to safeguard the country's sovereignty, security and development interests, serve her cause of reform, development and stability, and make China's contributions to world peace and development.

Meanwhile, the Vice Chairman of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), Mr. Wang Zhengwei, is expected to participate in the inauguration of Ghanaian President-elect, Nana Akufo-Addo, on January 7, 2017, in Accra. Mr. Wang is participating as a special envoy of Chinese President Xi Jinping.


About the author

Fredrick P. W. Gaye is a news editor of In Profile Daily Newspaper in Liberia and a 2016 fellow of China Africa Press Center (CAPC) in Beijing. Mr. Gaye can be reached at: fgaye.inprofile@gmail.com.
 
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Chinese doctors conduct medical camp for the disadvantaged
2017-01-08 11:13 | Xinhua | Editor: Yao Lan

A team of Chinese doctors on Saturday conducted a medical camp for the disadvantaged orphans in Huruma Children's Home, about 28 kilometres southwest of the Kenyan capital Nairobi.

Professor Tian Shengxun told Xinhua that the camp targeted over 200 orphans who can not access quality medical services.

"Our aim is to ensure that all people have access to medical services regardless of their socio-economic status," Tian said, adding that the team will be diagnosing patients for different ailments.

The team is extending medical services as part of Sino-Kenya cooperation and will focus efforts on children, the elderly as well as the most vulnerable members of society.

The Chinese team plans to roll out the medical camps to all regions of Kenya. Tian said that all those diagnosed with ailments will receive free medicines to ensure their health is fully restored.

According to the Chinese medics, health is a right for every individual. "We will therefore do our best to extend our outreach services to the most remote regions of Kenya," he said.

Professor Wang Lei, who is the deputy head of the Expert group on the Qifei Project, which is a collaborative project between China's Ministry of Science and Technology and Kenya's ministry of health, said that the greatest joy of a doctor is to treat those who are sick.
 
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China rolls out railways across the continent
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On a cold day in November 2015, as passengers streamed out of the high-speed train from Beijing to Tianjin, a municipality adjoining the Chinese capital, one person stood out among the casually dressed Chinese commuters in her flamboyant black overcoat with its bright red collar and yellow headwrap striped with green and maroon.

It was Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, the African Union Commission (AUC) chair, who was on a six-day visit to discuss greater cooperation between the AU and China with President Xi Jinping’s government. The agenda included high-speed trains.“China is helping a lot and cooperating with our countries in building highways. That’s why we now want to cooperate in building the high-speed rail,” she said. “Africa is a huge continent. It needs fast transport. And it has a large number of people. So there will be a need to move big numbers of people across the continent.”

With 121,000km of track at home by 2015, including 19,000km of high-speed rail built largely in the last decade, the Chinese Government thinks it has the expertise to meet this need. Supported by the government and Chinese banks, Chinese rail companies are fanning across the continent.

Transforming economies

The Addis Ababa–Djibouti railway, which opened for freight in October, has been one of the most-talked about of China’s railway projects. Africa’s first cross-border electric line, it allows trains to cover 752km in 10 hours.

“This railway line will change the socio-economic landscape of our two countries,” said Ethiopian prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn as he inaugurated the line alongside Djibouti’s President Ismail Omar Guelleh. “It will play a significant role in transforming Ethiopia’s industry and contribute to Ethiopia reaching middle-income status [by 2030]. It would resolve import and export bottlenecks and enhance Ethiopia’s competitiveness in international markets.” With nearly 90% of landlocked Ethiopia’s foreign trade conducted through the Port of Djibouti, the new railroad will slash transport costs as well as time.

Zemedeneh Negatu, Ernst & Young’s managing partner in Ethiopia, describes the immediate advantages: “For both international and domestic investors, this is a very substantial reduction in transportation and logistics costs. Also, from an efficiency perspective, you can now get your goods to the port much quicker. Whoever is placing orders, for example, sitting in Europe, can now manage their supply chain much more efficiently and reliably because they know the train will be there in 10 hours.”

There are long-term benefits too. By 2020, Ethiopia plans to build a 5,000km regional rail network, running through Kenya, Sudan and South Sudan. It will boost trade and bring in greater foreign investment since many companies interested in setting up factories in Africa are deterred by the logistical hurdles. In 2016, Ethiopia received around $2bn in foreign direct investment. In 2009, it had been just $108m.

From the Chinese perspective, it is an opportunity to establish Chinese standards and designs abroad, which is essential to join the league of international railway companies. The Addis Ababa Light Rail, which opened in September 2015, has been built by the China Railway Group, funded by the Exim Bank of China, and managed by China’s Shenzhen Metro Group.

It’s a similar story with the Addis Ababa–Djibouti rail project. China Railway built it with China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation and the duo will also operate the railway for five years, during which time they will train Ethiopian and Djiboutian railway officials and technicians to take over.

The Exim Bank of China loaned 70% of the nearly $4bn project while two more Chinese companies supplied the locomotives and a third made the wagons and coaches. From January the train, painted in the distinctive red, yellow and green of the Ethiopian flag, will start passenger services. It can carry up to 5,600 passengers daily as well as 3,500 tons of goods at a time.

China’s rail diplomacy will be strengthened when the plan to build a railway institution in Ethiopia, the first of its kind in Africa, is implemented. Currently, Ethiopians have been receiving training in rail engineering, management and maintenance in China, Russia and the UK. The institute will give Beijing an edge.

Railways have played a significant role in Sino–African cooperation since the 1970s when despite a floundering domestic economy, China under Mao Zedong agreed to build the 1,900km Tazara Railway connecting Tanzania and Zambia. The railway is a symbol of one of the earliest Chinese assistance projects in Africa and a matter of pride for a succession of Chinese governments.

At the Forum on China–Africa Cooperation in Johannesburg in 2015, President Xi reiterated his government’s commitment to develop three major networks in Africa – roads, railways and aviation. As part of that commitment, China Communications Construction Company is replacing Kenya’s dilapidated narrow gauge with a broad gauge line that will become operational in 2017.

It will connect Mombasa with Nairobi and eventually become another regional rail network, linking Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan. In West Africa, China Railway Construction Corporation is building a 1,400km railway in Nigeria. In the south, South Africa’s state-owned ports and rail company, Transnet, has awarded a $4.26bn contract for locomotives to manufacturers.

While some of the Chinese wheel power in Africa is attributed to the Chinese government’s political clout and competitive cost prices. Luke Xu, a Luanda-based journalist, also attributes it to sheer persistence.

“Chinese contractors have worked through civil war, terror attacks, diseases and predatory animals, undertaking projects others were not willing to touch,” says Xu. “During the construction of the 1,300km Benguela Railway in Angola, for example, which opened in February 2015, 20 Chinese workers were killed.”

Connecting capitals

There will be more railways built by Chinese companies, with the AUC and China signing an agreement on 5th October. The five-year plan envisions an integrated high-speed railway network in Africa, a key component of Agenda 2063, the AU blueprint for Africa’s development. The target is to connect all African capital cities and other major cities by high-speed rail.

Tourism especially is crying out for improved rail links. Sandra Rwese, China director of Kampala-based tourism consultancy G&H, says the absence of railways curbed cross-country and cross-border travel in Africa for decades.

“Short-distant flights in Africa are ridiculously expensive,” says Rwese. “Rail travel will create inland corridors allowing adventure seekers to enjoy new experiences in greater numbers and at much more affordable rates. Rail network expansion directly employs talent, distributes wealth throughout the country, and makes it possible to explore exciting destinations never seen before.”

Sudeshna Sarkar
See more at: http://africanbusinessmagazine.com/...ilways-across-continent/#sthash.xlYoIRi5.dpuf
 
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China continues to stand with 'African brothers': spokesperson
2017-01-13 19:38 | Xinhua | Editor: Wang Fan

China said Friday it would continue to stand together with its "African brothers" in the future, as Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi concluded a routine visit to Africa at the start of the year.

China has a 27-year-long diplomatic tradition of making Africa the first overseas destination for its foreign ministers each year. During the 2017 trip, Wang visited Madagascar, Zambia, Tanzania, the Republic of Congo and Nigeria.

"China will continue to stand together with 'African brothers' and other developing countries in the future, no matter what level of development China is in," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang said at a regular news briefing.

The visit showed that closer cooperation with developing nations, including Africa, is "the foundation of Chinese diplomacy," Lu said.

Lu said that China and the five African countries had reached consensus on deepening bilateral ties, implementing the outcomes of the Johannesburg summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation in 2015 and upgrading China-Africa cooperation.

He said that leaders of the five African nations had reaffirmed their commitment to the one-China policy and welcomed China's greater role in African peace and development.

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