China Launches Mining Program in Zambia
By JOSEPH J. SCHATZ (Associated Press Writer)
From Associated Press
February 04, 2007 6:59 PM EST
LUSAKA, Zambia - Chinese President Hu Jintao launched a copper mining
partnership with Zambia on Sunday and won praise from Zambia's finance minister for
his focus on economic investment rather than politics.
Hu planned to travel Monday to Namibia - his fifth stop on an eight-nation
African tour intended to increase Chinese investment in the continent, which
is rich in natural resources although it suffers from widespread poverty.
Zambian Finance Minister Ng'andu Magande told the Associated Press Hu's
visit was "one of the most successful visits by a foreign head of state."
Other donors, he said, have political agendas. "People come here and talk
about U.N. reform and conflict zones," he said. "China has decided they will
take a different route, they will take an economic route."
China has gained a reputation for striking deals with African nations
without demanding political reforms - such as respect for human rights - sought by
Western donors.
But Chinese investments have led to accusations of exploitation in Zambia, a
nation of 11.5 million in southern Africa.
Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa was all smiles Sunday as he and Hu launched
an economic partnership zone centered around the Chambishi copper mine in
Zambia's Copperbelt Province. The partnership is designed to draw $800 million
in mining investment from scores of Chinese companies and create 60,000 jobs.
China already has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into Zambia's
copper sector, which accounts for 60 percent of the country's exports.
Addressing a crowd that included Chinese managers and Zambian miners in
orange suits and red helmets, Hu and Mwanawasa said the new economic zone would
be the first of several around the continent.
The walls and stage at a local conference center where the event was held
were festooned in red, featuring a huge sign reading "Hail to Sino-Africa
New-Type Strategic Partnership," red banners in Chinese lettering, and a huge map
of the proposed economic zone. Zambian and Chinese dance troupes performed
outside.
A member of the Chinese delegation cued the audience when to applaud.
Mwanawasa said the zone would "change the face of the Copperbelt and,
indeed, the Zambian economy in that our raw materials will now have chance to enjoy
value addition of unimagined proportions."
Mwanawasa sounded one cautious note, however, asking Chinese investors to
partner with local Zambian firms and to give priority to local suppliers for
goods and services.
Since the late 1990s, Chinese investments in the southern African nation
have soared and now total $500 million - the third largest after those of South
Africa and Britain.
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