BEIJING, China
Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday pledged over $50 billion in financing for Africa over the next three years, promising to deepen cooperation in infrastructure and trade with the continent as he addressed Beijing's biggest summit since the pandemic.
More than 50 African leaders
and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres are attending this week's
China-Africa forum, according to state media.
African leaders already
secured a plethora of deals this week for greater cooperation in
infrastructure, agriculture, mining, trade and energy.
Addressing the leaders at the
forum's opening ceremony in Beijing's ornate Great Hall of the People on
Thursday, Xi hailed ties with the continent as in their "best period in
history".
"China is ready to deepen
cooperation with African countries in industry, agriculture, infrastructure,
trade and investment," he said.
"Over the next three
years, the Chinese government is willing to provide financial support amounting
to 360 billion yuan ($50.7 billion)," Xi said.
Over half of that will be in
credit, he said, with $11 billion "in various types of assistance" as
well as $10 billion through encouraging Chinese firms to invest.
He also promised to help "create at least one million jobs for Africa".
The Chinese leader pledged
$141 million in grants for military assistance to the continent as well.
Beijing would "provide
training for 6,000 military personnel and 1,000 police and law enforcement
officers from Africa", Xi said.
Also addressing the meeting,
UN chief Guterres told African leaders that growing ties between China and the
continent could "drive the renewable energy revolution".
"China's remarkable
record of development -- including on eradicating poverty -– provides a wealth
of experience and expertise," he said.
China, the world's number two
economy, is Africa's largest trading partner and has sought to tap the
continent's vast troves of natural resources including copper, gold, lithium
and rare earth minerals.
It has also furnished African
countries with billions in loans that have helped build much-needed
infrastructure but sometimes stoked controversy by saddling governments with
huge debts.
Analysts say that Beijing's
largesse towards Africa is being recalibrated in the face of economic trouble
at home and that geopolitical concerns over a growing tussle with the United
States may increasingly be driving policy.
But bilateral meetings held on
the sidelines of the summit delivered a slew of pledges on greater cooperation
in projects from railway to solar panels to avocados.
Following meetings on
Wednesday, Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema said he had overseen a deal
between the country's state-owned power company ZESCO and Beijing's PowerChina
to expand the use of rooftop solar panels in his country.
Nigeria -- one of Beijing's
biggest debtors on the continent -- and China inked a joint statement agreeing
to "deepen cooperation" in infrastructure, including
"transportation, ports and free trade zones".
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