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China’s premier Li increases aid to Africa to $12bn
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang unveiled extra aid for Africa totalling at least $12bn on Monday, and offered to share advanced technology with the continent to help with development of high-speed rail, state news agency Xinhua reported.
Mr Li pledged the additional funding in a speech at the Organisation of African Union headquarters in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.
China will increase credit lines to Africa by $10bn and will boost the China-Africa Development Fund by $2bn, bringing it to a total of $5bn, Xinhua said. It provided no details of the timeframe.
Mr Li “depicted a dream that all African capitals are connected with high-speed rail, so as to boost pan-African communication and development,” the report said. As China has advanced technologies in this area, Mr Li said China was ready to work with Africa “to make this dream come true”.
China will also offer $100m in aid for wildlife protection, Mr Li added.
It is Mr Li’s first visit to Africa since he became premier last year, and follows on from a trip to the continent by President Xi Jinping in March 2013, when he renewed an offer of $20bn in loans to Africa between 2013 and 2015.
Mr Li said that the new $10bn credit line would be on top of the existing $20bn already offered, the China News Service reported.
Chinese officials said last week that Mr Li’s trip, which includes visits to oil-rich Nigeria and Angola, would not simply be for energy deals, and Beijing would be seeking to help boost African living standards.
Trips by Chinese leaders to Africa are often marked by big natural resource deals, triggering criticism from some quarters that China is only interested in the continent’s mineral and energy wealth.
Africans broadly see China as a healthy counterbalance to Western influence but, as ties mature, there are growing calls from policy makers and economists for more balanced trade relations.