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→ Chinese foreign minister hails Africa as 'golden ground'

wait, notice the inflation is 10 times between Namibia and China? (3.2-2.5 million in Euro= 20 million renminbi)

peopleofthesouth:

WINDHOEK - Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi on Thursday hailed Africa as a “golden ground” for foreign investment, and vowed to work with Chinese firms to ensure they comply with local labour laws.

“Africa is a fertile place for foreign investors and it is a golden ground for Africa to attract foreign investors, especially for infrastructure which is the blood and muscle of a country,” Yang said during a visit to Namibia.

Yang spoke after meeting with his Namibian counterpart Utoni Nujoma in Windhoek, on the last leg of an African tour that also took him to Niger and Ivory Coast.

China has aggressively moved into African markets, tapping into natural resources to fuel its own economy but also taking a major role in building roads, bridges and other infrastructure across the continent.

The arrival of Chinese companies and workers has sometimes stirred conflict with locals, with Namibians complaining that some Chinese firms fail to respect the minimum wage and other labour laws.

“I am not saying every Chinese company here behaves in a perfect way. If not, I hope Namibia tells us and we do our best to solve it,” Yang told reporters. “We told our companies to adhere to laws here.”

After their 90-minute talks, the two ministers signed a technical cooperation agreement that included a 20-million-renminbi ($3.2-million, 2.5-million-euro) loan for projects that Namibia can decide upon later.

Yang started his five-day African tour on Monday to visit Niger and Ivory Coast before arriving in Namibia late Wednesday. It is his first visit to Namibia.

Last month China and Namibia signed a deal on animal health, which will allow Namibia to export fish and beef to China later this year, and Chinese firms have also sought greater stakes in uranium mining here.

China has in recent years expanded its aid to Namibia, building roads, schools and hospitals in remote areas, although the costs are not made public.

According to latest figures from the Business Journal of the Namibia Chamber of Commerce and Industry, 27 Chinese state companies are active in Namibia in construction, mining, engineering, information technology and financial services.

According to a World Bank report last month, about 35,000 Chinese nationals live in Namibia. The country has a population of about two million.



© news.asiaone.com
Posted 4 months ago with 98 notes via npr


  1. calloutgouranga reblogged this from peopleofthesouth and added:
    Dear China, GET THE FUCK OUT OF NAMIBIA. K thanks bye.
  2. fortnightjournal reblogged this from npr
  3. drkwb reblogged this from npr and added:
    A must read for my global studies class
  4. fromoneplacetoanother reblogged this from npr
  5. fionadjanae reblogged this from b-sama
  6. jwalworth reblogged this from npr
  7. cocoabeanchloe reblogged this from npr and added:
    wait, notice the inflation is 10 times between Namibia and China? (3.2-2.5 million in Euro= 20 million renminbi)
  8. thatblckgrl reblogged this from npr
  9. luxuryailments reblogged this from npr and added:
    Conflicted and embarrassed. :| Seeing countries and regions referred to as “markets” rather than as people nauseates me,...
  10. schmumbler reblogged this from npr
  11. penelopesdad reblogged this from npr
  12. accented-e reblogged this from npr and added:
    Ill and specific language about blood and muscle. Meh… still sounds like the “Magnificent African Cake” shit King...
  13. 4juicy reblogged this from npr
  14. naoward reblogged this from npr
  15. chokolatecrzy reblogged this from npr and added:
    Readers should know that this is occurring after Burma said NO to China. China wanted to build a dam that would supply...
  16. pussyfoot reblogged this from npr
  17. wentforthproceed reblogged this from npr and added:
    When I was a Griffith Observatory this past week, I told my friend that, as awful as this might sound, it would probably...
  18. dailydosageofblah reblogged this from npr and added:
    YES! Please help Africa not by exploiting our poverty but by investing is us!
  19. cindypiano reblogged this from npr
  20. tionam reblogged this from npr
  21. fknabert reblogged this from npr
  22. justletithappenco reblogged this from npr
  23. kendence reblogged this from npr
  24. radiothom reblogged this from npr and added:
    One day, there will be no natural resources left in Africa. This should concern everyone. (Your cell phone. Your diamond...