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Chinese President Hu Jintao gives a
speech at the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summit of the Forum on
China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) at the Great Hall of the People in
Beijing, Nov. 4, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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Full text of President Hu Jintao's
speech
BEIJING, Nov. 4 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu
Jintao Saturday announced a package of major assistance, investment, trade and
other key cooperation projects with Africa in an effort to forge a new type of
strategic partnership and strengthen cooperation in more areas and at a higher
level.
While addressing the opening ceremony of the Beijing
Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), President Hu listed
eight steps China will take in years to come, which include:
---Double its 2006 assistance to Africa by
2009.
---Provide 3 billion U.S. dollars of preferential
loans and 2 billion U.S. dollars of preferential buyer's credits to Africa in
the next three years.
---Set up a China-Africa development fund which
will reach 5 billion U.S. dollars to encourage Chinese companies to invest in
Africa and provide support to them.
---Build a conference center for the African
Union to support African countries in their efforts to strengthen
themselves through unity and support the process of African integration.
---Cancel debt in the form of all the
interest-free government loans that matured at the end of 2005 owed
by the heavily indebted poor countries and the least developed countries in
Africa that have diplomatic relations with China.
---Further open up China's market to
Africa by increasing from 190 to over 440 the number of export items
to China receiving zero-tariff treatment from the least developed countries in
Africa having diplomatic ties with China.
---Establish three to five trade and economic
cooperation zones in Africa in the next three years.
---Over the next three years, train 15,000
African professionals; send 100 senior agricultural experts to
Africa; setup 10 special agricultural technology demonstration centers in
Africa; build 30 hospitals in Africa and provide 300 million yuan of grant for
providing artemisinin and building 30 malaria prevention and treatment centers
to fight malaria in Africa; dispatch 300 youth volunteers to Africa; build 100
rural schools in Africa; and increase the number of Chinese government
scholarships to African students from the current 2000 per year to 4000 per year
by 2009.
Hu also offered five-point proposal to cement closer
ties between China and Africa.
First, China will deepen political relations of
equality and mutual trust with Africa, Hu said. "We will maintain high-level
contacts and mutual visits, establish a regular high-level political dialogue
mechanism and conduct strategic dialogue to enhance mutual political trust and
traditional friendship and achieve common progress through unity," he said.
Secondly, China will broaden win-win economic
cooperation with Africa. "We will give full play to our respective strength,
enhance economic and trade ties, broaden areas of cooperation, support
cooperation between our business communities, upgrade cooperation in human
resources development and explore new ways of cooperation so that both sides
will share the benefits of development," Hu said.
Thirdly, China will expand exchange for cultural
enrichment with Africa. "We will strengthen cultural and people-to-people
exchanges to increase mutual understanding and friendship between our two
peoples and particularly between the younger generation. We will enhance
exchanges and cooperation in education, science and technology, culture, public
health, sports and tourism to provide intellectual motivation and cultural
support for China- Africa cooperation," he added.
Fourth, China will promote balanced and harmonious
global development together with Africa, he said, adding "We will enhance
South-South cooperation and promote North-South dialogue. We urge developed
countries to honor their promises on market access, aid and debt relief. We
should strive to meet the Millennium Development Goals and steer economic
globalization in the direction of creating prosperity for all."
Fifth, China and Africa will strengthen cooperation
and mutual support in international affairs, he said. "We are committed to
upholding the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, respecting diversity of
the world and promoting democracy in international relations. We call for
enhancing international security cooperation based on mutual trust and benefit
and addressing each other's concerns through consultation and coordination so
that we can jointly respond to threats and challenges to global security."
"Without peace and development in China and Africa,
there will be no global peace and development," Hu noted.
Hu said China and Africa enjoy trust and cooperate
closely to uphold the legitimate rights and interests of the developing world,
adding that China has firmly supported Africa in winning liberation and pursuing
development, and it has also received great support from African countries.
"China has trained technical personnel and other
professionals in various fields for Africa. It has built the Tanzara Railway and
other infrastructure projects and sent medical teams and peacekeepers to Africa.
All this testifies to the friendship cherished by the Chinese people towards the
African people," said Hu.
"We in China all not forget Africa's all support for
restoring the lawful rights of the People's Republic of China in the United
Nations. Nor will we forget the sincere and ardent wish of African countries and
people for China to realize complete and peaceful reunification and achieve the
goal of building a modern nation," said Hu.
President Denis Sassou-Nguesso of the Republic of the
Congo, while addressing the opening ceremony of the summit, expressed Africa's
appreciation to China for its announcement of eight new actions.
"The Chinese government has, as always, fulfilled its
commitment and the African people have benefited a lot from China's generosity,"
said Sassou, whose country chairs the AU for the 2006 session,
Sassou said the two documents -- the Beijing
declaration and an action plan for the year 2007 to 2009 -- cover various
aspects of China-Africa relations and will upgrade their cooperation to a new
level in the coming three years.
The documents had already been discussed and passed
at Friday's ministerial conference of the FOCAC and are expected to be signed on
Sunday.
"We are glad to learn from the documents that China
will continue to offer assistance to Africa, especially in the fields of
implementing the New Partnership for Africa's Development, meeting the
Millennium Development Goals and restarting the WTO Doha Round of talks," Sassou
said.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Ato Meles Zenawi told the
opening ceremony that the China-Africa partnership forged 50 years ago must be
renewed to address immediate challenges of fighting poverty and backwardness and
seeking economic independence.
Ethiopia is the co-chair country of the forum
Meles said the economic complementarity between
Africa and China was huge. "Africa provides to the growing Chinese economy a
reliable field for investment, trade and the utilization of natural resources
for mutual benefit. China provides for Africa a source of successful development
experience, technology transfer, trade and investment."
The prime minister said that African people had "very
high expectations" from the renewed Sino-African strategic partnership and
"welcomed" China's tremendous progress in the economic and other fields.
The two-day Beijing Summit of FOCAC focuses on
"friendship, peace, cooperation and development", and the Chinese and African
leaders will review the development of China-Africa relationship and blueprint
future cooperation.
FOCAC, launched in 2000, is a mechanism for
collective dialogue and cooperation jointly established by China and Africa to
cope with new challenges and facilitate common development.
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