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In snub to Washington, Kenyan president visits China, Russia first

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NAIROBI — Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta begins a visit Sunday to the nation that is fast becoming this East African nation’s biggest economic engine. It’s not the United States, one of Kenya’s biggest aid donors. Nor is it former colonial power Great Britain. It’s China.

Kenyatta’s choice of Beijing as one of the first places outside Africa to pay an official state visit to since his inauguration in April speaks volumes about China’s growing presence in Kenya. It also highlights the United States’ waning influence in a country vital to U.S. interests, say analysts.



“The Chinese government and people are eagerly expecting the arrival of President Kenyatta,” wrote Liu Guangyuan, China’s ambassador to Kenya, in a recent opinion piece published on Kenya’s Capital FM Web site.

“As long as we work hand in hand, China-Kenya friendship will become more magnificent than Mount Kenya, and the prospect of China-Kenya mutually beneficial cooperation will become broader than Maasai Mara,” added Liu, referring to Kenya’s tallest mountain and one of its best-known game parks, respectively.

Given what has unfolded over the past few months in Kenya, it’s not surprising that Kenyatta, 51, has chosen to visit China, as well as Russia, before Washington. He stopped in Moscow late last week before heading to China.

Both China and Russia have been silent over allegations that Kenyatta and his vice president, William Ruto, committed crimes against humanity at the time of Kenya’s disputed 2007 elections.

Kenyatta and Ruto are accused of orchestrating and funding mobs to kill and pillage. Both men face charges at the International Criminal Court in The Hague; Ruto is scheduled to face trial next month, Kenyatta in November. Both have said they are innocent.

During the run-up to this year’s elections, Johnnie Carson, then the U.S. assistant secretary of state for African affairs, cautioned that Kenyans’ choice for president would have consequences because the victor “must work with the international community.” That prompted Kenyatta and his advisers to declare they would look to China if the United States and its allies were unwilling to work with his government.

President Obama’s decision this summer to bypass his ancestral homeland of Kenya during his first extended visit to sub-Saharan Africa since taking office provoked anger and frustration among many Kenyans. Many Kenyans felt Washington was punishing them for electing Kenyatta and Ruto. Senior White House advisers said Obama was reluctant to visit Kenya and meet with Kenyatta because of the ICC charges, though Washington remains willing to work with him.

China has no such concerns. In fact, Liu is seeking to elevate China’s diplomatic relationship with Kenya to a strategic partnership, which only a few African nations enjoy, according to local news reports. In his op-ed, Liu touted how Chinese investment in Kenya had reached $474 million, representing Kenya’s largest source of foreign direct investment, and how bilateral trade had reached $2.84 billion last year.

Today, China is Kenya’s second-largest trading partner, and its investment has created thousands of jobs for Kenyans while building up Kenya’s infrastructure, repairing roads and erecting schools across the country. Chinese media organizations have set up offices in Kenya, and the Chinese government offers more than 200 scholarships to Kenyan students annually, Liu wrote.

“Analysts will likely confirm the long-held viewpoint that Kenya looks to China as a counterweight to the fallout with the West, particularly in the wake of the ongoing arraignment of President Kenyatta and his deputy, William Ruto, at the International Criminal Court,” wrote political analyst Bob Wekesa in China Daily last week. “From one viewpoint, Kenya’s look-East stance is seen as a means of fashioning alternative sources of development assistance in view of strained relations with the traditional Western sources.”

The Chinese have been more engaged across sub-Saharan Africa than the United States, and this is happening at a time when the continent is becoming more important than ever to the United States, analysts say. The Obama administration is increasingly concerned about Islamist movements and terrorism on the continent. The region is also an important source of oil and other mineral resources, and home to six of the world’s 10 fastest-growing economies.

The Chinese have been making several high-level visits a year to African countries, including at the presidential level. Kenyatta is visiting China at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Kenya wants to strengthen ties with China and Russia “to grow new markets that focus on the East,” according to a statement released Thursday by Kenyatta’s office. Accompanied by 60 Kenyan business people, Kenyatta also plans to sign economic agreements and gain support from China for a planned $2.5 billion railway from the southern Kenyan port of Mombasa to neighboring Uganda, as well as a nearly $1.8 billion dam, according to the statement.

In other words, by the time Kenyatta leaves Beijing, ties between the two nations will be that much closer.

In snub to Washington, Kenyan president visits China, Russia in first official visit outside Africa - The Washington Post
 
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Kenyan President Expects Visit to China to Deepen Bilateral Ties

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta on Friday said he will seek to deepen ties with China during his upcoming visit to the Asian country, hoping the trip will promote the development in infrastructure, manufacturing, technology and tourism in his country.

The president told China's official Xinhua News Agency that he believes that his visit to China will bring the bilateral relations to a new stage and that closer bilateral ties will benefit Kenya.

The Kenyan leader made the remarks ahead of his Aug. 18-23 visit to China, his first as the president of East Africa's biggest economy and the third to the emerging power house of the world economy in Asia.

His trip also coincides with the golden jubilee of Kenya's independence and the establishment of diplomatic relations between Kenya and China.

"I have been to China twice. This is my third visit. I personally like their hard work ethic, I like their discipline, I like the fact that they are like Kenyan enterprising and looking to the future," said President Kenyatta.

The fourth president of Kenya, Kenyatta, who just inaugurated in April, spoke highly of relations with China.

China was very supportive when Kenya was striving for independence, the president said. Since Kenya gained independence in 1963, the two countries have maintained close relationship, both in cultural exchanges and economic cooperation, he added.

With the development of cultural exchanges between the two countries, the Confucius Institutes in University of Nairobi, Kenyatta University and Egerton University attract thousands of Kenyan students, of whom many have opportunities to study in China with scholarships from the Chinese government.

Speaking of the Chinese enterprises in Kenya and their contributions to the Kenyan economy, Kenyatta said China is helping in infrastructure development involving roads, energy and ports.

Among the key objects being built by Chinese firms in Kenya are the eight-lane Nairobi-Thika superhighway and the expansion of the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, the president said.

The Chinese firms have won admiration from the Kenyan public for their efficiency and speed, which have helped upgrade the country's road network from its dilapidated state a few years ago, he told Xinhua.

According to the statistics from the Chinese Embassy in Kenya, China has become the second largest trade partner to Kenya, with bilateral trade rising to 2.84 billion U. S. dollars.

China has also invested 474 million dollars in Kenya, becoming its biggest foreign direct investment source.

More and more Chinese tourists are flocking to Kenya in a sign of boom in its tourism. In 2011, around 370,000 Chinese tourists travelled to Kenya, 31.4 percent higher than in the previous year. In 2012, a total of 41,000 Chinese tourists visited Kenya, which is expecting an even higher figure in the future.

Kenyatta said his government is providing the necessary incentives to tap the potential in China to realize the target of 5 million tourists annually.

The president sees Kenya and China in common where both countries are seeking the economic growth to ensure most of the people enjoy prosperity.

"We are both countries that are outward thinking, but recognize our development is based on mutual respect and mutual understanding," he said.

Kenyan President Expects Visit to China to Deepen Bilateral Ties
 
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Kenya too?

President Obummer really has been instrumental in the erosion of US foreign policy and influence. I can see why more and more Americans are disgusted to have him as their leader.

Americans need a mixture of Republican and Libertarian governance.

More on topic - there's always a disconnect between State Departments and the security apparatus - the latter which tends to be more oriented towards influence and the former which tends to be so fixated on "human rights" when it best suits them.
 
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Kenyan entrepreneurs bets on
China to fulfill dream of success


She is ecstatic and eagerly waiting for time to lapse so that she can relocate to her new home- - China.
Sandra Rwese, a Kenyan, will be moving to the Asian nation in September, where she hopes to start a new life that will involve linking Chinese tourism firms to African markets and vice versa.

For her, it is a dream come true, as her efforts have paid off. “I will be based in China’s Xiamen Island in Fujian Province. I am happy that this time I am not going to visit, but to stay there and work,” excited Rwese says.

For several years, Rwese has been running Chinese Business Trainers (CBT), a consulting firm which she used to help link Kenyan companies in the tourism and hospitality sector to Chinese clients.


“The aim was to help Kenyan companies reap from business opportunities brought about by the coming of the Chinese in Kenya. The number of Chinese nationals in Kenya has grown, but local firms in the hospitality sector have benefitted from the visitors, “ said Rwese.

The firms, according to Rwese, miss opportunities because they do not know how to deal with Chinese.


“They do not have workers who understand Chinese culture and languages. Thus, they cannot attend to tourists or businessmen from China, which means they lose great opportunities,” she said.

Besides that, the 38-year-old noted that local firms are not selling themselves to the Chinese market.


“Our efforts to market tourism activities are concentrated in Europe and America, yet the Chinese are coming here in droves. Major players in the tourism sector do not have websites written in Chinese languages to attract potential tourists in China,” she said.

Through CBT, Rwese focused on advising businesses on global strategies, innovation and Chinese cross-cultural skills.


“Some of the things she taught people in the hospitality industry about the Chinese were how to host and organize conferences. This included packaging folders, arranging seats, color schemes to use and issuing gifts,” she said.

“One of the things I ensued they knew was that the Chinese prefer banners made in blue and when giving out gifts, one should not arrange things in sets of fours or issue out clocks. A clock to a Chinese given as a gift may signify death,” she said.

For accommodation, Rwese noted that Chinese should not be offered rooms on fourth floor.


“When I was teaching about this, people get shocked. Chinese have superstitions about number four, which one should avoid. Again, their hotels rooms should have wooden beds and one should avoid photos of lonely things like an animal or Maasai on the wall, “ she said, noting British love such photos.

Other things she trained firms in were Chinese spending and travelling habits, their cuisine, their like and dislikes and cultural expectations.

Above all, she encouraged the workers and bosses to attend Chinese language schools, which are available in the capital Nairobi.


“You cannot engage the Chinese if you do not speak their language. Speaking their language is important for business,” she said. Rwese’s “love affair” with China began in 2008 when her sister advised her to study Chinese.

“I enrolled at University of Nairobi Confucius Institute and studied Chinese. This spurred my interests in China, especially Chinese business. I started to do research in the area. This saw me visit China, where friends hosted me,” she said.

During her visits to China, she toured Guangzhou and Hong Kong. “My tours in the two cities were an eye-opener. I stayed there for three weeks and learned a lot about the Chinese people and the way they do business. This inspired me to start CBT.”

Her cultural experience in the Asian country was phenomenal. “I learned how to eat using chopsticks. At first, it was difficult but I got used to it. I can say I am now an expert. I also learnt how Chinese parents raise their children, the financial training their offer them and how they live,” said Rwese, who practices some of the Chinese aspects.

As a consultant in Chinese business matters, Rwese has also developed business strategies for tourism firms in Germany and Denmark.


“I came up with strategies that helped companies in the two countries tap the Chinese market,” she said. The work made her win a Silver Award for Product Innovation in the Chinese Tourist Welcoming (CTW) awards last year.

“I entered my business concept and emerged tops. There were hundreds of organizations across the world taking part in the competition organized by a German company,” said Rwese.

In China, Rwese will work as a consultant in Chinese-Africa tourism innovation.


“My job will be to help Chinese and Africa firms and people in the tourism sectors ‘understand’ each other. I will draw blueprints for businesses both in China and Africa to enable them reach out to potential clients,” she said, adding that in Africa, she will work with firms in Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa.

Rwese is excited about what awaits her in China. “This is what I love to do most. China has given me opportunity to fulfill my dreams. I have always loved China and its people. I now have an opportunity to work as a citizen of the world integrating Africans and Chinese.”

According to Rwese, no nation can ignore China if it wants to boost its economy.


“China is the world’s second largest economy in the world and has over 150 million middle-class population. These people have a travel market value exceeding 55 billion U. S. dollars annually. This is a market any country that wants to boost its tourism sector, including Kenya, must not ignore,” she said.

Rwese believes that China’s influence across the world will last the next five decades. “I am happy that I will play a role in linking Africa to China,” she concluded.

Coastweek - The most from the coast
 
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Yes- this will result in our superpower status being affected. we are disappointed he did not choose to visit the US first. Congrats China on the powerful Kenya visiting you first :lol:

Meanwhile we will trudge along as a developed country and the sole superpower in the world with heavy hearts :cry:

Now only if we could get your countrymen out of our country and your blind dissidents not forcing China to send them to us. I wonder how many countries actually are brought to their knees and have their own citizens sent off to another country? hmmm
 
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Yes- this will result in our superpower status being affected. we are disappointed he did not choose to the visit the US first. Congrats China on the powerful Kenya visiting you first :lol:

Meanwhile we will trudge along as a developed country and the sole superpower in the world with heavy hearts :cry:

Now only if we could get your countrymen out of our country and your blind dissidents not forcing China to send them to us. I wonder how many countries actually are brought to their knees and have their own citizens sent off to another country? hmmm

every time when I see the word we in your post I get this

4286.jpg


you might as well look the part braindead go get some of this
rjnp.jpg
 
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Kenya too?

President Obummer really has been instrumental in the erosion of US foreign policy and influence. I can see why more and more Americans are disgusted to have him as their leader.

Americans need a mixture of Republican and Libertarian governance.

I agree with your statement above.
 
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