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盧旺達總統卡加梅 捍衛非洲與中國建立夥伴關係的權利

(2023-08-09 12:08:35) 下一個

卡加梅捍衛非洲與中國建立夥伴關係的權利

https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/tea/news/east-africa/kagame-backs-china-loans-as-us-woos-africa-4058116

2022 年 12 月 18 日星期日

盧旺達總統卡加梅表示,非洲有權尋求合作夥伴,中國正在填補投資缺口。 

東非報

盧旺達總統保羅·卡加梅是非洲尋求擴大與中國經濟夥伴關係的直言不諱的捍衛者,他表示非洲大陸有權尋求合作夥伴,而中國正在填補投資缺口。

在此之前,喬·拜登總統的政府試圖扭轉人們的看法,即本周的峰會旨在與中國競爭,而中國在與非洲的貿易和經濟合作方麵已經超過了美國。

在12月13日至15日舉行的美非領導人峰會上,中國是不言而喻的因素。

“我認為我們不需要被迫做出或采取選擇——在美國或中國之間做出選擇; 這真的不關我們的事。 我認為我們需要雙方和其他人作為合作夥伴,隻要他們尊重我們並理解我們可以做出一些貢獻,”卡加梅總統在接受新聞網站 Semafor 采訪時表示。

非洲國家當務之急是解決自身發展挑戰,中國正在填補空白,西方應該加大投資,而不是抱怨。

債務陷阱查詢相關

在另一次 Semafor 采訪中,中國駐美國大使秦剛駁斥了債務陷阱的說法,認為非洲國家欠西方機構的債務是西方機構的三倍。

“中國不是非洲最大的債權國。 中國擁有的債務隻是很小的一部分。 你可以看到醫院、高速公路、機場、體育場館。”秦說。

盡管人們越來越擔心中國可能讓非洲國家陷入債務困境,但卡加梅總統表示,責任應該是雙方的,因為各國應該謹慎借貸。

由於美國已經落後於歐洲和中國,人們對拜登政府將在多大程度上改變美非貿易關係的地位仍持懷疑態度。

致力於消除不公正債務造成的貧困的英國慈善機構債務正義 (Debt Justice) 2022 年 7 月的一份報告顯示,非洲各國政府欠西方銀行、資產管理公司和石油交易商的債務是中國的三倍,而且收取的利息是中國的兩倍。

外債

報告指出,根據世界銀行的數據,非洲政府的外債中隻有 12% 是欠中國債權人的,而這一比例是欠西方私人債權人的 35%。

“西方領導人將非洲債務危機歸咎於中國,但這是一種幹擾。 事實上,他們自己的銀行、資產管理公司和石油交易商的責任要大得多,但七國集團卻讓他們擺脫了困境。 中國在疫情期間參與了二十國集團的債務減免計劃,但私人貸款機構卻沒有參與。

如果沒有私人貸款機構的參與,就不可能找到有效的債務解決方案。 英國和美國應該出台立法,迫使私人貸款機構參與債務減免,”債務正義政策主管蒂姆·瓊斯表示。

當拜登總統宣布為思科係統公司和一家名為 Cybastion 的小公司簽訂價值 8 億美元的新合同,“以保護非洲國家免受網絡威脅”時,這與華為的主導地位形成了鮮明對比。華為是一家中國科技公司,其手機和計算機係統在非洲無處不在。 該公司在非洲大陸率先推出 5G 互聯網,引發了人們對北京可能利用它們進行網絡間諜活動的擔憂。

間諜指控

美國參議院周三晚間以語音投票方式通過了一項法案,禁止聯邦雇員在政府擁有的設備上使用中國擁有的 TikTok。 共和黨參議員馬可·盧比奧周二宣布兩黨立法禁止中國流行的社交媒體應用程序 TikTok,因為美國擔心該應用程序可能被用來監視美國人並審查內容。

分析人士還對拜登總統的 550 億美元非洲計劃提出質疑,稱這一數字與非洲的需求相比微不足道。

“拜登的承諾總額為550億美元; 芝加哥洛約拉大學法學教授詹姆斯·T·加蒂 (James T. Gathii) 表示:“與居住在海外的非洲人匯款相比,2021 年將達到 960 億美元。與 2022 年中國在非洲投資的基礎設施項目相比,價值 840 億美元。” 在華盛頓參加峰會

“如果考慮到每年來自非洲的非法資金流動損失超過 840 億美元,那麽三年內 500 億美元的承諾就微不足道了。”

Kagame defends Africa’s right to a partnership with China

https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/tea/news/east-africa/kagame-backs-china-loans-as-us-woos-africa-4058116

SUNDAY DECEMBER 18 2022 

Rwandan President Paul Kagame

Rwandan President Paul Kagame who says that Africa has a right to seek partners and China is filling a gap for investment. PHOTO | KEVIN DIETSCH | GETTY

By The EastAfrican 

Rwandan President Paul Kagame was a vocal defender of Africa’s quest to expand its economic partnership with China, saying the continent has a right to seek partners and China is filling a gap for investment.

This is after President Joe Biden’s administration sought to deflect the perception that its summit this week was aimed at competing with China, which has surpassed the US in trade and economic cooperation with Africa.

In the US-Africa Leaders’ Summit held between December 13-15, China was the unspoken factor.

“I don’t think we need to be bullied into making or taking choices – choosing between the US or China; it’s really none of our business. I think we need to have both and others as partners as far as they respect us and understand that we have something to contribute,” President Kagame said in an interview with news website Semafor.

The priority for African countries is solving its own development challenges, he added, pointing out that China is filling a gap, and the West should step up investments instead of complaining.

Debt trap queriesRelated

Coronavirus hate claims rock Africa, Chinese ties

In a separate Semafor interview, China’s ambassador to the US Qin Gang dismissed suggestions of a debt trap, arguing that African countries owe three times more debt to Western institutions.  

“China is not the biggest creditor of Africa. The debt owned by China is only a small amount. You can see hospitals, highways, airports, stadiums,” Qin said.

While there is increasing concern over the possibility of China trapping African countries in debt, President Kagame said the blame should be on both sides as countries should borrow cautiously.

Scepticism lingers about how much the Biden administration will alter the status of America-Africa trade relations, as the US has lagged behind Europe and China.

According to a July 2022 report by Debt Justice, a UK charity working to end poverty caused by unjust debt, African governments owe three times more to Western banks, asset managers and oil traders than to China, and are charged double the interest.

External debt

The report pointed out that just 12 percent of African governments’ external debt is owed to Chinese lenders compared to 35 percent owed to Western private lenders, based on World Bank data.

“Western leaders blame China for debt crises in Africa, but this is a distraction. The truth is their own banks, asset managers and oil traders are far more responsible, but the G7 are letting them off the hook. China took part in the G20’s debt suspension scheme during the pandemic, private lenders did not.

There can be no effective debt solution without the involvement of private lenders. The UK and US should introduce legislation to compel private lenders to take part in debt relief,” said Tim Jones, head of policy at Debt Justice.

When President Biden announced $800 million in new contracts for Cisco Systems and a smaller company named Cybastion “to protect African countries from cyberthreats,” it offered a counterpoint to the dominance of Huawei, the Chinese technology firm whose cellphones and computers systems are ubiquitous across Africa and which is pioneering 5G internet on the continent, stoking fears that Beijing could use them for cyberespionage.

Espionage claims

The US Senate late on Wednesday passed by voice-vote a bill to bar federal employees from using Chinese-owned TikTok on government-owned devices. Republican Senator Marco Rubio on Tuesday announced bipartisan legislation to ban China’s popular social media app TikTok amid US fears the app could be used to spy on Americans and censor content.

Analysts have also challenged President Biden’s $55 billion plan for Africa saying the figure is marginal compared to the needs of Africa.

“The total pledges by Biden is $55 billion; compare that with remittances sent by Africans living abroad –$96 billion in 2021. Compare that with the infrastructure projects China has invested in Africa in 2022, worth $84 billion,” said James T. Gathii, a professor of law at Loyola University Chicago, who was in Washington for the summit

“If one considers that more than $84 billion is lost in illicit financial flows from Africa each year, this promise of $50 billion over three years is peanuts.”

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