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    Hu seeks to boost ties with Africa

    DIPLOMATIC OFFENSIVE: The Chinese president will start his eight-nation trip in Cameroon and visit Sudan and South Africa before returning to Beijing

    AFP, BEIJING
    Wednesday, Jan 31, 2007, Page 4

    With genocide, oil, aid and booming trade just some of the issues on his agenda, Chinese President Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) departed yesterday for a pressure-packed 12 days traversing eight African nations.

    Hu's trip, his third to Africa since becoming president in 2003, is part of China's mission to deepen political and economic ties on the continent.

    Emphasising its commitment to Africa, China said on Monday that it would write off debts owed by 33 African countries as part of a multi-billion-dollar pledge made last year to help fast-track the continent's development.

    China's courting of Africa has caused tremors in the West in recent years as Chinese influence there has risen significantly.

    While Western businesses have seen Chinese firms secure contracts to exploit Africa's natural resources, human-rights groups and some governments have urged China to stop cooperating with regimes accused of rights abuses.

    Beijing has made no apologies for its policy of engagement with Africa and Hu has chosen on this trip to visit Sudan, where a four-year conflict in its western Darfur region has been described by the US as genocide.

    While insisting China would continue its military cooperation with a Sudanese government accused of war crimes, Chinese officials said it was hoped Hu's visit to Sudan could help lead to a lasting peace in Darfur.

    "I believe this visit will not only boost bilateral ties, but also peace and stability in this region," Vice Foreign Minister Zhai Jun (翟俊), who travelled to Sudan's capital, Khartoum, ahead of Hu's trip, told journalists last week.

    Hu will start his African journey in Cameroon, then travel to Liberia, with Sudan the third leg of his visit. He will also travel to Zambia, Namibia, South Africa, Mozambique and the Seychelles.

    Beijing is adamant that its policies are helping to drive development on the continent. Trade between the two sides reached US$55.5 billion last year, a more than five-fold increase from US$10.79 billion in 2001, according to official Chinese figures.

    At a summit last November that brought leaders from 48 African nations to Beijing, Hu pledged to double aid to the continent and offer US$5 billion in loans and credits by 2009.
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