During a whirlwind visit on Friday morning to China's first national
corporation on international engineering projects, Guinea-Bissau President Joao
Bernardo Vieira rapped the gavel on two proposed projects: electric power
development and water reservoir construction.
"Please draft out the cooperation plans immediately. What Guinea-Bissau needs
most is development, especially better infrastructure facilities," said the
67-year-old at the China Machinery and Equipment Import and Export General
Corporation (CMEC)
"My biggest wish is to make power supply accessible across thewhole country,"
said Vieira who was here to attend the Beijing Summit of Forum on China-Africa
Cooperation slated for Nov. 4-5.
His visit to CMEC, which established its name in Africa after winning a
contract to construct four units of 30 MW hydro-power stations there in 1990s,
came two days after an economic and technical cooperation agreement was signed
in the presence of Chinese President Hu Jintao. Both sides have yet to disclose
the details of the agreement.
Vieira seems very enthusiastic about bringing in Chinese capital and
technology into the west African country. He said priorities for bilateral
cooperation could expand to ports, roads, bridges and mineral resources.
Inspired by Vieira's enthusiasm, CMEC vice president Zhou Li promised that a
special team would fly to Guinea-Bissau to discuss the details.
Vieira reminded her that apart from Guinea-Bissau, other west African
countries such as Senegal and Guinea also need power-generation facilities
badly.
Regarding China as a strategic friend who offers aids without political
strings, many African countries impressed with the country's two-digit economic
growth are seizing time to explore cooperative opportunities during their stay
in Beijing to boost domestic economy.
Vieira said after the summit, he would visit Shanghai and Nanjing, both of
which are economically advanced in China.
Vice Commerce Minister Wei Jianguo said earlier that more than 2,500 business
deals would be under discussion at the summit, without revealing specifics.
The China Southern Airlines announced on Wednesday a new air route linking
Beijing with Lagos, the commercial and industrial center of Nigeria in western
Africa would be launched soon.
Another double-track railway, about 1,400-km-long and involving an investment
of 8.3 billion U.S. dollars, will be jointly built by the Nigerian government
and the China Civil Engineering Construction Cooperation, the Nigerian Railway
Corporation has announced.
