China plans peace envoy for conflict-riven Horn of Africa
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[January 06, 2022]
By Duncan Miriri
MOMBASA, Kenya (Reuters) -China said on
Thursday it would appoint a special envoy to foster peace in the
turbulent Horn of Africa and wanted to shift focus on the continent to
trade over infrastructure.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi made the comments in Kenya, which has been
active in diplomatic efforts to halt war in Ethiopia since late 2020
between the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed's federal government.
He also visited Eritrea, which borders the northern Tigray region and
has been an ally of Abiy in a conflict that has killed thousands of
people, uprooted hundreds of thousands, and spread hunger.
"To share political consensus and to coordinate actions, China will
appoint a special envoy of the Chinese ministry of foreign affairs for
the Horn of Africa," Wang told a news conference in the port city of
Mombasa, via an interpreter.
Horn of Africa nations should decide their own destiny and convene a
peace conference, Wang added. The region's other major war is in Somalia
where Islamist militants al Shabaab are battling a Western-backed
government.
China has traditionally been more focused on economic development and
trade in Africa than politics and diplomacy, and Wang gave no further
details of the envoy's role.
Beijing wants to help develop Eritrea's Red Sea coastline, he added,
without elaborating on that either.
Eric Olander, managing editor of The China Africa Project website and
podcast, saw the visit to Eritrea as strategic in China's rivalry with
the United States, which has sanctioned Eritrea for its role in Tigray.
"This is part of a big push to rally countries against the use of
sanctions," he said. "I think they (China) feel they're gaining momentum
against the U.S."
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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Kenyan counterpart
Raychelle Omamo bump elbows during a news conference in the coastal
city of Mombasa, Kenya January 6, 2022. REUTERS/Joseph Okanga
AVOCADOS AND VACCINES
Chinese officials signed six agreements with Kenyan counterparts,
including one allowing Kenyan farmers to export fresh avocados to
China. That will enable Kenya to narrow its considerable trade
imbalance with China, said Rachel Omamo, Kenya's foreign minister.
Kenya will receive a donation of 10 million COVID-19 vaccine doses
from China, both sides said, part of 1 billion extra doses pledged
to Africa by China late last year.
China has been shifting from offering African nations hard
infrastructure loans towards increasing trade. "It is never about
what China wants to do, it is about what Africa wants to do," he
said.
The continent's needs were expanding from the building of roads and
railways, Wang said, citing the need for vaccines and export
opportunities.
Analysts have also attributed the slowdown in Chinese infrastructure
lending in Africa to China's own economic troubles and a commodity
price crash that has complicated African debt servicing.
China's interests in the Horn include its naval base in Djibouti,
overlooking a key global shipping route. Beijing has granted large
loans to landlocked Ethiopia, which relies on Djibouti's port for
trade.
The region is also threatened by instability in South Sudan, where
China has substantial oil investments, and spillover from Somalia
that has brought deadly attacks in neighbouring Kenya.
After Kenya, Wang was due to travel to Comoros, an Indian Ocean
archipelago. "They (China) see the Indian Ocean as a contested
space, so it's a priority," Olander said. "Wang simply going to a
tiny country like Comoros is symbolic in itself."
(Reporting by Duncan Miriri and Joe Bavier, writing by Estelle
Shirbon; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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