Africa > 中国与非洲关系

中国与非洲关系在Africa

  • Commodity dip hits China’s little Africa

    CHINA, 2016/07/04 With few customers at his wholesale jeans store in Guangzhou these days, Nigerian trader Brien Chuks busies himself looking next his three-month old baby. “Last year I sold 12 shipping containers of jeans back to west Africa but this year I haven’t managed to fill a single one,” says Mr Chuks, who operates from the Canaan market in China’s third-biggest city, like a lot of other Africa-focused exporters. “The Nigerian economy depends on oil so with the crude price having fallen so low, business is very hard.” In a sign of the circularity in the world economy, the Africa-focused traders who have long thrived in Guangzhou are suffering because of a commodities-driven slump in their home continent that from presently on originated in China. At the same time as rapid Chinese increase pumped up prices of oil and metals, resource-rich parts of Africa thrived, buying additional consumer goods from Guangzhou. Presently the opposite has happened. Sitting in the midst of China’s manufacturing heartland, Guangzhou has long been a centre for trade with Africa.
  • Forty-six Chinese-owned companies registered in Guinea-Bissau

    CHINA, 2016/06/11 The Company Formalisation Centre (CFE) of Guinea-Bissau from May 2011 to May 2016, registered 46 companies whose owners are from China or Guineans associated with citizens from that country. Statistical data from the CFE to which Macauhub had access Thursday showed that the 46 companies are linked to agriculture, fisheries, catering, clothing sales, cosmetics and computer products, part others.
  • Rwandan Who Has Worked 33 Years With Chinese Firm

    RWANDA, 2016/04/28 Vincent Hategekimana has worked 33 years with the China Road and Bridge Corporation, a Chinese firm operating in Rwanda. Born in Musanze district, northern Rwanda, Hategekimana is the initial born in a family of five. He studied up to Primary Six before dropping out. The 57-year-old joined the Chinese firm in 1982 as a casual labourer who had learned carpentry and construction, and has worked on almost all its major projects in Rwanda ever since. His job involves heading usually 50 to 60 labourers for construction projects.
  • Nigeria-China hold talks to bolster relations

    CHINA, 2016/04/13 Nigeria is set to receive 6 billion US dollars worth of loans from China to fund infrastructure projects. This announcement comes at the back of Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari’s visit to the Asian country. Led by Chinese President Xi Jinping, China is seeking to enhance strategic partnership cooperation with Africa’s biggest economy. The two heads of national held meetings in Beijing and highlighted the importance of working together in order to bolster bilateral ties.
  • gambia-China resume diplomatic ties, without preconditions

    CHINA, 2016/03/24 A Foreign Ministry spokesperson on Friday said Gambia proposed that diplomatic ties with China be restored, and there were no preconditions attached. Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Gambian counterpart Neneh MacDouall-Gaye signed a joint communique on Thursday to resume diplomatic relations, Wang dubbed it a "historic moment" for the two nations.
  • China-Somalia ties moving in right direction

    CHINA, 2016/03/24 The historical ties between China and Somalia are set for a makeover as both nations explore cooperation in new areas that would advance peace, development and security in the Horn of African national, a veteran Somali journalist told Xinhua during an interview on Saturday. Abdurrahman Yusef, the Director of Somalia National News Agency (SONNA) , hailed the long-standing bilateral ties with China that have accelerated the country's reconstruction next two decades of civil strife. "The China-Somalia historical relationship has grown stronger and there is ample evidence to justify this statement. Our cooperation with China for the last 50 years cuts across different facets of life," Yusef told Xinhua in Nairobi.
  • China contributes over 380 bln CFA Francs to fund projects in Senegal

    CHINA, 2016/03/24 China has contributed over 380 billion CFA Francs (about 700 million U.S. dollars) to public investment programs and projects in Senegal, Senegal's Economy and Finance Minister Amadou Ba said Thursday. "China has contributed about 380 billion CFA Francs, making it one of top contributors to Senegal's public investment projects and programs," he said. Ba was speaking in Dakar during the signing of a loan agreement of 20 billion CFA Francs between China Exim Bank and Senegal for the supply of materials and equipments to be used by the national fire-fighters.
  • Central African Republic s newly elected president vows to strengthen cooperation with China

    CHINA, 2016/03/23 Central African Republic's (CAR) newly elected President Faustin Archange Touadera promised to intensify cooperation with China, saying China is an significant partner of the country. Touadera said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua on Sunday that CAR will like to work together with China to promote the friendly relationship and strengthen cooperation between the two nations. Touadera said his country is in urgent need to be normalized next three years of civil war, adding that the new government will focus on a series of issues inclunding security, peace, reconciliation and disarmament.
  • China to help developing countries on parliament capacity building

    CHINA, 2016/03/23 China will launch a program to train members of parliament of some Asian and African nations so as to improve the capacity of parliament in the developing nations, a senior Chinese official said here on Monday. Chinese top legislator Zhang Dejiang announced the program at a breakfast conference with Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU)'s President Saber Chowdhury and parliamentary leaders of Zambia, Rwanda, Kenya,Pakistan, Bangladesh and Cambodia on the sidelines of the 134th IPU Assembly.
  • How China's economic slowdown affects Africa?

    CHINA, 2016/03/14 China is presently the number-one trading partner for most African nations. It as well has huge investment of additional than 20 billion US dollars to the continent. So how will China's economic slowdown influence the African continent? We presently turn to our Nairobi studio. To properly understand why a slowdown in both GDP increase and request for raw materials from China actually does matter to African economies, look no further than this chart. Up to around the late 90s, there was little link, if any between China’s average GDP increase, and that of economies in Africa. From the start of this century, however, accumulation increase moved in lock-step with each other. Firmly underpinning this increase, was China’s request for commodities.