2015-01-12 08:16
Beijing - China will not follow the path of "Western colonists" in
Africa, its foreign minister said during a five-nation tour of the
continent, parrying criticism that his country's hunger for resources
has led to one-sided policies and damaging projects.
China is
Africa's biggest trade partner, and has sought to tap the region's rich
resources to fuel its own economic growth over the past two decades.
But
Beijing's involvement has been called "neo-colonial" by some African
leaders, who fear projects bring little benefit to local people, with
materials and even labour being imported from China.
"We
absolutely will not take the old path of Western colonists, and we
absolutely will not sacrifice Africa's ecological environment and
long-term interests," Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Chinese Central
Television while in Kenya.
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His comments were published on the ministry's website late on Sunday.
Beijing has previously said its cooperation with African nations covers farm, health and infrastructure-related projects.
In July, China said more than half its foreign aid, of more than $14bn between 2010 and 2012, went to Africa.
China
says there are no strings attached to its aid, but some of its projects
have drawn attention for their support of governments with poor human
rights records and lack of transparency, such as Zimbabwe, Sudan and
Angola.
Wang's trip includes stops in Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Speaking
to reporters in Sudan on Sunday, Wang defended China's mediation
efforts in South Sudan, rejecting the idea they were intended to
safeguard its own oil interests.
China is the biggest investor in
the oil industry in South Sudan, which split from Sudan in 2011. It has
played an unusually large diplomatic role in the country and committed
about 700 UN peacekeepers amid a civil war that has killed more than 10
000 people.
"China's mediation of South Sudan issues is
completely the responsibility and duty of a responsible power, and not
because of China's own interests," Wang said in comments posted to the
foreign ministry's website on Monday.
Reuters
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