guardian.co.uk,
Reuters in Beijing, Thursday 19 July 2012
Chinese
president Hu Jintao with South African president Jacob Zuma at the Great Hall of
the People in Beijing. Photograph: Andy Wong/AFP/Getty Images
Chinese
President Hu Jintao has offered $20bn (£12bn) in loans to African countries
over the next three years, boosting a relationship that has been criticised by
the west and given Beijing growing access to the resource-rich continent.
The loans
offered were double the amount China pledged for the previous three-year period
in 2009 and is the latest in a string of aid and credit provided to African
countries.
The pledge
is likely to boost China's good relations with Africa, which supplies it with
oil and raw materials such as copper and uranium.
But the
loans could add to discomfort in the west, which criticises China for
overlooking human rights abuses in its business dealings with Africa,
especially in Beijing's desire to feed its booming economy.
Hu brushed
off such concerns in his speech at the Great Hall of the People, attended by
leaders including South African president Jacob Zuma and Equatorial Guinea's
Teodoro Obiang Nguema, a man widely condemned by rights groups as one of the
world's most corrupt leaders.
"China
wholeheartedly and sincerely supports African countries to choose their own
development path, and will wholeheartedly and sincerely support them to raise
their development ability," Hu said.
China will
"continue to steadfastly stand together with the African people, and will
forever be a good friend, a good partner and a good brother", he added at
the summit held every three years since 2000.
Hu also
pledged to "continue to expand aid to Africa, so that the benefits of
development can be realised by the African people". He did not provide an
amount.
Hu said the
new loans would support infrastructure, agriculture, manufacturing and
development of small and medium-sized businesses in Africa.
Aid history
Critics say
China supports African governments with dubious human rights records as a means
to get access to resources.
The EU has
rejected what they call China's cheque book approach to doing business with
Africa, saying it would continue to demand good governance and the transparent
use of funds from its trading partners.
Such
criticism draws rebukes from China that the west still views Africa as though
it were a colony. Many African countries say they appreciate China's no-strings
approach to aid.
"Africa's
past economic experience with Europe dictates a need to be cautious when
entering into partnerships with other countries," Zuma told the forum.
"We
are particularly pleased that in our relationship with China we are equals and
that agreements entered into are for mutual gain," Zuma added.
"We
certainly are convinced that China's intention is different to that of Europe,
which to date continues to intend to influence African countries for their sole
benefit."
China's
friendship with Africa dates back to the 1950s, when Beijing backed liberation
movements in the continent fighting to throw off western colonial rule.
Chinese
state-owned firms in Africa also face criticism for using imported labour to
build government-financed projects such as roads and hospitals, while pumping out
raw resources and processing them in China, leaving little for local economies.
"Certainly
quite a number of us are thinking we need to move into more value
addition," South African's trade and industry minister Rob Davies said.
"We
need to export mineral products in a more processed form ... We need to bite
this bullet very seriously."
Trade has
jumped in the past decade, driven by Chinese hunger for resources to power its
economic boom and African demand for cheap Chinese products.
China's
trade with Africa reached $166.3 billion in 2011, according to Chinese
statistics. In the past decade, African exports to China rose to $93.2 billion
from $5.6 billion.

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