The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 17, 2025
Today: April 17, 2025

Xi Jinping had one message for dozens of visiting African leaders: choose China

September 07, 2024

Beijing (CNN) โ€” Xi Jinping had a clear aim as he hosted delegates from more than 50 African countries for a major summit in Beijing this week: proving beyond doubt that China is the continentโ€™s premier foreign partner.

The Chinese leader made his case with ceremony on Thursday when, flanked by dozens of African leaders and the UN secretary general in the Great Hall of the People, he vowed to elevate ties between China and the continent to an โ€œall-weather community with a shared futureโ€ โ€“ a status that Beijing reserves for its staunchest diplomatic allies.

He also made a raft of promises to the continent, to be fulfilled over the next three years: more than $50 billion in financial support; the creation of one million jobs; tens of millions in food and military aid โ€“ while vowing to โ€œdeepen cooperation with Africa in industry, agriculture, infrastructure, trade and investment.โ€

Leaders including South Africaโ€™s Cyril Ramaphosa, Kenyaโ€™s William Ruto and Nigeriaโ€™s Bola Tinubu assembled in the Chinese capital this week for the three-day forum that Beijing hailed as its largest diplomatic gathering in years.

Xiโ€™s bid to African governments comes as China appears to be reining in its previously free-flowing funding for Africaโ€™s development โ€“ amid its own economic slowdown and criticism its lending there had helped to saddle countries with unsustainable debt.

Now, other powers like the United States are ramping up their own efforts to boost ties with the resource-rich continent, as they seek to counter Chinaโ€™s political influence and secure access to critical resources key to powering the green energy transition.

The three-yearly forum on China-Africa cooperation, which wrapped Friday, was a key opportunity for Xi and his officials to telegraph their commitment to the continent, whose backing has only grown in importance for Beijing in the face of its mounting friction with the West.

Here are the main takeaways from Xiโ€™s pitch to the continent this week.

End of the infrastructure drive?

Xi and Chinese officials appeared keen to show that Chinese investment, including in African infrastructure, was not over โ€“ even as data show Chinese lending for Africaโ€™s development and big-ticket infrastructure has fallen substantially in recent years.

The Chinese leader announced a commitment to back 30 infrastructure connectivity projects across unspecified countries and ambitions for โ€œa network of land-sea links.โ€ He said China would launch 30 clean energy projects, seen as part of a push from Beijing to make Africaโ€™s market a destination for its green tech like solar panels and electric vehicles that now face tariffs in the US and Europe.

Deals cut in a procession of bilateral meetings this week also included infrastructure. China, Zambia and Tanzania inked a memorandum of understanding to โ€œrevitalizeโ€ the existing Tanzania-Zambia Railway Authority line on Wednesday, and Nigeria and China referenced developing the West African countryโ€™s โ€œtransportation, ports and free trade zones,โ€ in a joint statement.

However, such projects and Chinaโ€™s overall pledge of roughly $50 billion in financial support for the continent, while heftier than that of the last forum in 2021, was still less robust than those of the previous decade, observers said.

โ€œIt is not insignificant, but if you look at the details, it is not as striking as it used to be,โ€ said Yun Sun, director of the China program at the Stimson Center think tank in Washington, noting that this amount would be spread across many countries and a number of areas of cooperation from health to green technology.

โ€œIt also means the funding for hard infrastructure will be reduced across the board. There might be a few major projects, but the more funding they take, the less there will be for other things,โ€ she said.

African country leaders had arrived in China seeking seeking investment, trade, and support industrializing their raw commodity sectors to create jobs. They are expected to be closely watching for follow-through on Beijingโ€™s wide-ranging promises in the coming years, with analysts saying fulfillment of past commitments have been difficult to track.

A debt crisis loomed large

This yearโ€™s gathering also played out under the shadow of a debt crisis across a number of African countries, which have struggled under heavy foreign debt, including from Chinese loans, in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic โ€“ and raised questions about Chinaโ€™s role in fueling the issue.

Analysts have largely debunked earlier โ€œdebt trapโ€ claims that Beijing was purposefully seeking to indebt countries in order to gain leverage over their assets, as it lent toward the construction of highways, rail lines and power plants across Africa under Xiโ€™s flagship Belt and Road Initiative.

African leaders have also pushed back on the premise while in Beijing, with South Africaโ€™s Ramaphosa rejecting the โ€œnotion that when China (invests), it is with an intention of, in the end, ensuring that those countries end up in a debt trap or in a debt crisisโ€ in comments to reporters.

China is also not seen by observers to be the main cause of African debt distress in most cases, with debt to its lenders making up a comparatively small portion of the continentโ€™s overall public debt.

But the influx of Chinese loans increased the debt burden, and while Beijing has defended its lending practices and its efforts to ease debt repayment, observers suggest it has moved too slowly or been inflexible in cases helping countries that are heavily indebted to it get relief.

These realities โ€“ along with Chinaโ€™s own economic slowdown โ€“ are seen to have reduced its appetite for such lending. Even before the pandemic, Chinese lenders had already been slashing funding for the big-scale infrastructure projects and touting a transition to so-called โ€œsmall yet beautifulโ€ investments, with smaller budgets and environmental or social impact.

Xi highlighted such projects while laying out Beijingโ€™s plan for supporting the region in the coming years, but did not address the debt shouldered by countries in his public remarks.

Competing visions

Instead, the Chinese leader reached back into history to paint the West as the driver of challenges both for China and for Africa โ€“ part of what observers say is Beijingโ€™s effort to portray the continent as firmly on its side when it comes to its broader geopolitical rivalry with the US.

China, Africa and other developing nations have for decades โ€œbeen endeavoring to redress the historical injusticesโ€ of Western modernization, Xi told visiting delegations, in an apparent allusion to colonialism and exploitative practices in centuries past.

Now, Xi predicted, China would, along with African countries, โ€œset off a wave of modernization in the Global South.โ€

Analysts say Beijing sees the continentโ€™s backing as crucial to Xiโ€™s aim of positioning China as a champion of the Global South โ€“ and an alternative global leader to the US.

Playing up that backing was also a likely motivation behind Chinaโ€™s elevation of diplomatic ties with attending African countries to a โ€œstrategicโ€ level and its designation of the โ€œall-weather China-Africa community with a shared future for the new era,โ€ observers say.

The US and its Group of Seven (G7) allies have launched their own effort to fund infrastructure in developing countries, with US officials saying African countries should have โ€œchoicesโ€ when it comes to their partnerships.

Noting that โ€œmore countriesโ€ were increasing attention on ties with African nations, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Thursday said Beijing โ€œwelcomesโ€ such support for the continent โ€“ as long as itโ€™s not done with a โ€œcondescending approach.โ€

Visiting leaders at the summit also rebuffed the idea of competition defining the relationship. Speaking on the summitโ€™s sidelines, Senegalโ€™s Foreign Minister Yassine Fall said that there would always be global competition, but noted that โ€œAfricans today are saying that China is on our side.โ€

African country leaders, however, are unlikely to be willing to choose between Washington and Beijing.

โ€œOverall (at the forum), the African side created the impression that China remains pivotal,โ€ said Paul Nantulya, a senior China specialist at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies in Washington.

โ€œBut this does not mean that they will ditch the US and others. They clearly do not want to isolate themselves from opportunities and multiple engagements and partnerships,โ€ he said.

The-CNN-Wire
โ„ข & ยฉ 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Share This

Popular

Africa|Arts|Celebrity|Entertainment

Davido's '5ive' welcomes the Afrobeats megastar into an era of change and growth

Davido's '5ive' welcomes the Afrobeats megastar into an era of change and growth
Africa|Political|World

UN envoy urges Security Council to try to prevent renewed civil war in South Sudan

UN envoy urges Security Council to try to prevent renewed civil war in South Sudan
Africa|MidEast|Political|World

No final agreement at London Sudan conference with Arab powers at odds

No final agreement at London Sudan conference with Arab powers at odds
Africa|Europe|MidEast|Political|World

EU issues list of 'safe countries' for migrant returns that includes Egypt, Tunisia

EU issues list of 'safe countries' for migrant returns that includes Egypt, Tunisia

World

Americas|Crime|Political|US|World

Maryland Sen. Van Hollen meets with El Salvador's vice president in push for Abrego Garcia's release

Maryland Sen. Van Hollen meets with El Salvador's vice president in push for Abrego Garcia's release
Asia|Economy|Political|US|World

Top US, Indonesian diplomats discuss tariffs, defense in meeting

Top US, Indonesian diplomats discuss tariffs, defense in meeting
Asia|Political|World

North Korea criticises US for deploying B-1B strategic bomber in South Korea

North Korea criticises US for deploying B-1B strategic bomber in South Korea
MidEast|Political|World

Israeli defense minister says troops will remain in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria indefinitely

Israeli defense minister says troops will remain in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria indefinitely