President Xi and South Africa’s Zuma hold joint press conference

World Today

Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in South Africa on Wednesday for talks with President Jacob Zuma that are expected to focus on flagging investment and trade worth around $20 billion a year.

Xi’s South African visit, which is his second in three years, is aimed at fostering ties between the two nations.

“Over the past 17 years, our friendship and co-operation has grown from a small boat to a gigantic vessel, riding the wind and waves and forging ahead towards greater mutual benefit and common development,” Xi wrote in an article in The Star, one of South Africa’s leading newspapers.

One South African cabinet minister said that bilateral deals were expected to be agreed during Wednesday’s meeting between Xi and Zuma, and the government issued a statement saying that the trade imbalance was one of the issues to be discussed.

Trade between South Africa and China more than doubled in the four years to 2013 to 271 billion rand ($19 billion), the South African statistics office said.

Xi will co-chair the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation this week, with several African heads of state expected to attend, and the summit discussions are seen centering on whether China will extend new loans despite its slowing economy, while African states may push for debt moratoriums and technology transfers.

The Chinese president started his Africa tour in Zimbabwe on Tuesday where he witnessed the signing of 10 business agreements, including Beijing providing $1 billion for the country’s largest thermal power plant.

China is Africa’s largest trading partner with trade amounting to $220 billion in 2014, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua. Its investments in Africa amounted to $32.4 billion at the end of 2014, according to London-based BMI Research.

But China’s direct investment in Africa has fallen roughly 40 percent in the first half of 2015 to $1.19 billion, China’s commerce ministry said on Nov. 17.

Africans broadly see China as a healthy counterbalance to Western influence, though Western governments accuse China of turning a blind eye to conflicts and rights abuses as they pursue trade and aid policies there.

Compiled from CCTV News and Reuters reports