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Rapid progress marks China-South Africa ties

By Lucie Morangi | China Daily | Updated: 2018-04-28 16:02

South Africa is also eager to learn how China was able to lift 700 million people out of poverty since reform and opening-up. "This is in addition to capacity-building policies that have seen it build one of the biggest talent pools in the world," Genge said.

While cognizant of Western countries' wariness over China's growing influence in Africa, Genge says the engagement is two way and continuous. "We sit behind closed doors and agree on the direction our relations are going. It is not one way, but we do not shout about it," he adds.

He describes warnings by Western nations as condescending and paternalistic. "Africa knows what it wants and it knows when it is treated badly, and the good thing about the rise of China is that it has given Africa options."

He says African countries pushed for the elevation of Forum on China-Africa Cooperation discussions from ministerial level to presidential level. He believes FOCAC has become a crucial platform in Africa's renaissance, since it allows the continent to negotiate and align its priorities with the platform's goals. In 2015, when South Africa hosted the summit, China pledged $60 billion to be geared toward the continent's economic independence. Key issues addressed were inadequate infrastructure, a shortage of human capacity and lack of funds.

"FOCAC in a consultative process," says Genge.

He says the forum breaks away from Africa's previous relationship with traditional partners who gave conditions alongside aid. "This was not sustainable and ended up impoverishing many economies. No African country today can be stuck by the stifling conditions inflicted by the World Bank and the (International Monetary Fund)," he says.

He says accusations that China is practicing "neo-colonialism" reflect Western countries' fears of China's growing influence on the continent and Africa's efforts to increase its global participation, especially in trade. Through the African Union, the continent has a development blueprint, Agenda 2063, and is using this to engage developing partners. "Although the developments are sluggish, we are on the right track," Genge says.

The China-Africa relationship has seen a more confident continent emerging, and "the engagement is practical and tangible," he says, adding that ties have moved away from aid toward trade.

On the continental front, China has helped the continent spruce up its dilapidated infrastructure, Genge says.

"During my four-year tour of duty in (the Republic of Congo), there were no roads from the capital city of Brazzaville to the port city of Pointe-Noire. You had to take a flight. But when I completed my assignment, the Chinese had connected the two cities with a road. The small airport I arrived at was expanded by the Chinese. When I was in Sudan, the Chinese were working with the government to build a dam in Darfur that addresses their water needs. This is very practical. If you want to look at the footprints, they are there."

However, there is concern about South Africa's trade deficit with China, Genge says, adding that the two countries are making efforts to address the issue.

Genge also believes Africa has much to learn from China, including in poverty alleviation, anti-corruption and food security, and says more effort is needed to learn how to open its markets to investment.

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