What's new

Yes, thank China for food aid, but learn from her

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China
Yes, thank China for food aid, but learn from her

Published on 11/09/2011

By Peterson Magara

The world’s most populous nation and second largest economy rushed to the Horn of Africa’s drought-hit nations’ aid months ago in a quiet but massive humanitarian relief initiative that has gone largely unreported.

Already, China has donated food aid worth Sh1.9 billion following Kenya’s appeal for support towards mitigating the debilitating effects of the worst drought in two decades.

The Government of China increased its relief food donations to Kenya by Sh1.3 billion.

At the same time, China has given Ethiopia 353.2 million Yuan ($55.28 million), one of the largest single gifts to a foreign country in Chinese history, to help Ethiopia and other African drought-stricken regions to solve the current famine crisis.

Premier Wen Jiabao made the pledge while meeting visiting Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

"China will stay with Ethiopia to cope with the current crisis, beef up co-operation and strive for common development," Wen said.

China had already announced plans to provide 90 million yuan ($14 million) worth of emergency food assistance to countries in the Horn of Africa in late July.

China is paying close attention to the eastern Africa famine crisis, described by the United Nations as the worst to hit Africa since a 1991-1992 famine in Somalia. The UN says 12 million people are in danger of starvation in the region.

China, which has over the past decade and-a-half proven itself to be Africa’s most symbiotic development partner of the 21st Century, was responding to both regional and UN distress calls for emergency food aid.


African pundits have noted that Chinese emergency relief differs from Western interventions as markedly as its development partnership differs from the West’s model. The generous and timely Chinese humanitarian aid is not accompanied by negative multimedia reportage-cum-commentary or intrusive video coverage of the disaster that border on preying on the stricken.

Africa has much to learn from China, until a generation ago virtually a Third World country. The Chinese have recorded the world’s most stupendous example of rising from poverty to prosperity, overtaking the Japanese a few years ago as the world’s second biggest economic power.

The secret of China’s success is that it has harnessed the information communications technologies (ICTs) revolution of the past two decades and the Knowledge Economy that it has given rise to like no other nation.

The Chinese have doggedly concentrated on putting the infrastructure of the Knowledge Economy in place, even as the West’s government and media sectors have constantly sniped at them and harped on the fact that Beijing restricts or discourages access to certain Internet sites and domains.

It has not been lost on thinking Africans that the sites the West defends to the hilt and describes all opposition to as "authoritarian" include explicit pornography (including child **** and bestiality, or sex with animals), satanism, gambling, money laundering, drug dealing and addiction.

No country, and indeed no continent, can lift itself out of poverty in a generation by having its younger people being diverted by access to such degenerate fare on the World Wide Web.

The rise of China and the decline of the West are actually almost entirely attributable to the ways that ICTs are used in both regions and the ways the Knowledge Economy is being used and abused.

Unfettered access to instant gratification, sybaritic, narcissistic, bent, basically criminal and thoroughly decadent Internet sites in the West has not resulted in any value-adding expansion of the democratic space, far from it. It has, instead, resulted in a constriction of the economic space that has thrown the West’s economies into a tailspin of debt-driven crises.

The Chinese concentration on deploying the Internet for development-oriented ends and means is a lesson Africa too needs to learn in a single great-leap-forward generation.

Banish poverty

Africa is even better-endowed with resources than China and it too has at least a billion souls. ICTs are history’s greatest gatherer and store of knowledge, knowhow, expertise, specialisation and entrepreneurship.

The Internet, far from being about anyone’s belly button, vice or addiction, is history’s greatest engine of prosperity.

As we in the Horn of Africa thank our Chinese brothers and sisters for their prompt, selfless and non-demonstrative food aid in our hour of drought-stricken need, let us also learn from them.

That way, we, too, can banish poverty and famine in one human generation.
 
. .
Senators: US losing sway in Africa as China rises
November 1, 2011 8:31 PM

(AP) WASHINGTON — Senators voiced concern Tuesday that the United States has lost influence with African governments as China has emerged as the continent's main trading partner and a major source of investment for infrastructure development.

Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations African affairs subcommittee, said the U.S. goal of promoting open societies in Africa was being challenged by China offering no-strings-attached investment for repressive regimes.

Coons said about 70 percent of Chinese assistance to Africa comes in the form of roads, stadiums and government buildings, often built with Chinese material and labor, while 70 percent of U.S. government spending there goes toward crucial but less visible support for people, particularly to fight AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and other diseases.

"We may be winning the war on disease, while losing the battle for hearts and minds in Africa," Coons told a subcommittee hearing on China's role in Africa and its implications for U.S. policy.

Coons' comments echo a common theme among U.S. policymakers, that China's rise as an economic and political power challenges America's global predominance.

Lawmakers criticized China's state-backed support for governments with poor human rights records.

"China is interested in their own goals and has very little concern about the governance of the countries that they deal with," Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md.

But experts told the panel that by supplying loans for infrastructure development, often in return for exports of commodities China needs for its own economic growth, the Asian power was responding to what African governments want, and filling a need unmet by Western nations.

David Shinn, adjunct professor at George Washington University and former U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia and Burkina Faso, gave the example of Angola, which had unsuccessfully sought Western investment after its civil war, and instead turned to China, which helped develop infrastructure in return for the promise of oil exports.

Deborah Brautigam, a professor at American University, said Chinese investment was often perceived to have a negative impact on human rights and democracy, principally because of Beijing's support of Zimbabwe and Sudan. But she said there was no evidence that political rights and freedom had declined in general across the continent.

Shinn, however, believed Chinese investment had to some degree undermined Western goals of promoting democracy, good governance and human rights. He said there also was evidence of Chinese companies importing technology to enable certain governments, such as Zimbabwe and Ethiopia, to restrict the flow of information on the Internet.

He said China passed the United States as Africa's most important trade partner in 2009. In 2010, China-Africa trade totaled $127 billion, compared with U.S.-Africa trade of $113 billion. China also possibly is investing more in Africa than any other single country, he said.

Stephen Hayes, president of the Corporate Council on Africa, a group representing U.S. businesses in Africa, told the hearing that U.S. embassies should do more to advance American commercial interests. He also wanted the U.S. aid program to promote U.S. businesses as a partner in African development.
 
. . .
West continues to help China win new friends in Africa
By MUKHISA KITUYI
Saturday, November 5 2011 at 20:00

This past week, the US Senate Foreign Relations African Affairs subcommittee held a session on China’s role in Africa and its implications for US policy.

The committee chairman, Senator Chris Coons, set the tempo of the meeting with his observation that while China overwhelmingly invested in prestigious infrastructure projects, US was concentrating on the less visible projects like fighting malaria and HIV/Aids.

“We may be winning the war on disease while losing the battle for hearts and minds in Africa,” he said. For some time now, the West has been wondering how to stem the rising profile of China in Africa and the related decline of Western influence.

The news that China has overtaken the US as the single largest trading partner of Africa over the past two years does not help matters either.

The usual banter about China embracing repressive regimes and Western emphasis on open society ever yielding diminishing friends recurred at every turn.

The West continues to be confounded by why governments they help around Africa continue to tilt towards China. How the African intelligentsia, overwhelmingly educated in the West and major consumers of Western cultural products like movies, music and lifestyles appear to have their heads turned to a China whose language and habits are profoundly alien to them.

Many good arguments about strategy have been made. But one little matter appears to elude the eye of Western analysts. Africa craves a respect China offers that the West does not.

Most Africans appreciate Western technology and ingenuity. Yet a perverse expectation that Africans will be friends on the basis of gifts and mutual embrace of Western habits is ill-advised.

The Sino-Africa conference on trade and development is the masterpiece of Chinese trade diplomacy with Africa.

For this parley, China brings together the largest gathering of African presidents to meet the top leaders of China and discuss the premier frontiers of aid and investment for the coming years.

Each head of state has a brief photo session with the hosts, and country-specific programmes are announced. Every leader feels appreciated.

The African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) is a law setting out a basket of preferential market access for African exports to the US.
 
. .
China Overtakes World Bank in Development Lending

China is reported to have overtaken the World Bank as the biggest lender to developing countries.
Feb 22, 2011

According to research by the Financial Times newspaper, China Development Bank and Export-Import Bank agreed loans of at least $110bn in the past two years.

That is about 10% more than commitments made by the World Bank.

Analysts say the figures are an indication of China's growing economic reach and its drive to secure access to natural resources.

Meanwhile, China's central bank has reportedly cut its 2011 lending target for banks by 10% from last year in a bid to slow down loose lending and tame inflation.

Even though there are widespread expectations that China will not publicly issue a 2011 lending target after these targets were ignored by banks in 2010, many analysts believe the central bank will still restrict lending from behind the scenes.
 
.
Not trying to belittle China, but propaganda on humanitarian assistance (what beijingwalker is doing) should be avoided.

AFP: US pledges $100 million in East Africa hunger aid

Numbers count: China: 1.9 Billion Shillings (= USD 19 million)

USA: USD 100 million

Thanks to both USA and China.

With the good harvests, I believe even India could offer 5 or 10 million USD worth of food aid.
 
.
China now is Africa's biggest trading partner,direct donation is just one thing,and what China is also doing now is to build up African countries and that's why US admits that they lost the battle for African's hearts and minds to China.

And charity starts at home,I hope all donations should be made based on countries' abilities.
 
.
The West is losing Africa because of their squeamishness on human Rights and democracy. And China is taking full advantage of that. After all its nothing personal, jst business.

Unfettered access to instant gratification, sybaritic, narcissistic, bent, basically criminal and thoroughly decadent Internet sites in the West has not resulted in any value-adding expansion of the democratic space, far from it. It has, instead, resulted in a constriction of the economic space that has thrown the West’s economies into a tailspin of debt-driven crises.

This is just plain BS. If you go by the degeneracy, Japan and Germany have to be worst economies in the world.
 
. . . .
First step of partnership is mutual respect, where you treat your partners as equal regardless of your differences.

Western colonists, imperialists and capitalists lost influence because of their blind believe of their own exceptionalism, believing their political and economic system is inherently better, and that Africans are just there to receive charity.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom