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China could help lift Africa from poverty-UN adviser

2006/08/25

 

Marketplace News, Namibia

Business Report, South Africa

August 16, 2006

 

BEIJING - China could make a unique contribution to raising Africa from chronic poverty, a top United Nations adviser said in Beijing yesterday, rejecting claims that China's growing presence rankles many Africans.

 

Jeffrey Sachs, who directs the UN Millennium Project to reduce global poverty and is a special adviser to UN Secretary General Koffi Annan, said China's rising investment and aid across Africa were welcomed by most Africans.

 

"The overwhelming feeling toward China is gratitude for support," Sachs told a forum.

 

"China gives fewer lectures and more practical help," he added.

 

As China has turned to Africa as a source of minerals and oil and market for cheap exports, some development advocates have said Beijing is underwriting human rights abuses, corruption and misrule through its investments, especially in Sudan.

 

China's trade with Africa reached US$39,7 billion in 2005, a rise of 35 per cent from the previous year and almost four times higher than in 2001, according to Chinese statistics.

 

Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao both visited the continent this year.

 

Sachs said China's experience of rapid economic development, massive rural population and pragmatic approach to assistance could give it a unique role in bringing modern farming, medical care and communications to the African countryside.

 

"Chinese technology could make all the difference," Sachs said of many African countries' stagnant crop yields.

 

"I believe that China has a unique role to play in this because China has the fastest escape from poverty of any sizeable country," he added.

 

A Chinese diplomat responsible for African affairs, Cao Zhongmin, told the forum it was "difficult to avoid friction as trade rises" but most Chinese trade was welcomed.

 

But some Africans say worries about China go deeper than teething problems and threaten to make the Asian power a target of popular rancour. Last month, miners working for the Zambian copper producer Chambishi Mining Plc destroyed property in a protest during which Chinese managers opened fire, wounding five workers, according to miners and police.

 

Complaints that cheap Chinese products are swamping the continent and extinguishing local jobs have been raised by African trade unions.

 

And some African officials have said Chinese aid projects employ too many Chinese workers, excluding locals from opportunities.

 

Ghana's ambassador to China, Afare Apeadu Donkor, told the Beijing meeting that China needed to "partner concretely with those on the ground" to avoid attracting resentment as its presence grew.

 

But China's experience of rising from economic stagnation and lifting hundreds of millions of farmers out of poverty nonetheless leave it well placed to help guide Africa, said Sachs, a professor at Columbia University.

 

Beijing's s reluctance to tie aid to political demands for reform was generally an asset, not a liability, he later told reporters.

 

"The idea that aid should be heavily conditioned with political conditions was a mistake," he said of the approach favoured by many Western countries.

"The best way to end conflict is to end poverty".

 

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