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Chinese President Hu Jintao (R) meets
with Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi at the Great Hall of the People
in Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 4, 2006. Meles Zenawi is in Beijing for
the two-day Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation
(FOCAC), opened on Nov. 4.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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Chinese President Hu Jintao met with Ethiopian Prime Minister Ato Meles
Zenawi on Saturday, highlighting comprehensive and cooperative partnership
between the two countries.
Hu met Meles on the sidelines of the ongoing Beijing Summit of the Forum on
the China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), which opened earlier Saturday.
China and Ethiopia have increased exchanges between their governments, ruling
parties, legislatures, localities and people, expanded trade and two-way
investment and witnessed fruitful cooperation in areas including agriculture,
personnel training and infrastructure construction, said Hu.
The two countries have also maintained consultations and coordination in
international affairs, Hu added.
"Ethiopia has actively participated in the affairs of the FOCAC and played an
important role in implementing the follow-up actions of the forum and in
preparing for this summit," Hu said.
Meles, whose country co-chairs the forum, said the two countries share common
aspirations for developing friendly bilateral cooperation as the exchanges
between governments and peoples get closer.
Meles expressed his appreciation for Hu's announcement of eight aid measures
for Africa, vowing to make continued efforts to promote a new type of
China-Africa strategic partnership.
At the opening ceremony of the two-day summit, President Hu announced a
package of major assistance, investment, trade and other key cooperation
projects with Africa in an effort to strengthen China-Africa cooperation in more
areas and at a higher level.
In the eight-step package, China will double its 2006 assistance to Africa by
2009 and will provide 3 billion U.S. dollars of preferential loans and 2 billion
U.S. dollars of preferential buyer's credits to Africa in the coming three
years.
China will also cancel debts in the form of all the interest-free government
loans that matured at the end of 2005 owed by the heavily indebted poor
countries and the least developed countries in Africa that have diplomatic
relations with China.
Over the next three years, China will train 15,000 African professionals, Hu
said.
While addressing the opening ceremony of the summit, Meles said the
China-Africa partnership forged 50 years ago must be renewed to address
immediate challenges of fighting poverty and backwardness and seeking economic
independence.
Meles said African and Chinese economies are highly complementary. "Africa
provides to the growing Chinese economy a reliable field for investment, trade
and the utilization of natural resources for mutual benefit. China provides for
Africa a source of successful development experience, technology transfer, trade
and investment."
The prime minister said the African people had "very high expectations" from
the renewed Sino-African strategic partnership and "welcomed" China's tremendous
progress in the economic and other fields.
Hu, 41 heads of state or government and senior officials of 48 African
countries that have diplomatic ties with China, as well as representatives from
regional and international organizations, attended the milestone gathering
highlighting "friendship, peace, cooperation and development".
