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China says its FM’s African tour to boost partnership
BEIJING—Chinese Foreign
Minister Yang Jiechi’s upcoming African visit will jointly promote the
new type of strategic partnership between China and Africa, Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said here Thursday.
The purpose of the visit is to increase mutual understanding, expand
mutually beneficial cooperation and carry out the consensus reached at
the Beijing Summit of Forum on China-Africa Cooperation in 2006, Jiang
Yu said. Yang will pay official visits to South Africa, the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC), Burundi and Ethiopia from Jan. 7 to 11,
according to Chinese Foreign Ministry.
Jiang said Yang will meet with state leaders and hold talks with his
counterparts of the four countries. Trade between China and Africa
surged in 2007, boosted by lower tariffs and other beneficial policies
agreed on during the Beijing Summit.
Zhai Jun, Chinese assistant foreign minister, said in a recent interview
that friendly cooperation between China and Africa had a “bright
future.” “China and Africa have more than 50 years of friendly relations
and it is an important part of China’s foreign policy to consolidate and
strengthen cooperation with African countries,” Jiang said. Chinese
Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi will pay formal visits to South Africa, the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Burundi and Ethiopia from January
7th to 11th, foreign ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu announced Wednesday.
Yang’s visit are arranged upon invitations by South African Foreign
Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, DRC Foreign Minister Mbusa Nyamwisi,
Burundian Minister of External Relations and Cooperation, Antoinette
Batumubwira, and Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin, she said.—Xinhua |