Towering above the Ethiopian capital, cloaked in urban smog, the new
Chinese-built African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa is a bold symbol
of China’s rapidly changing role in Africa.
Once seen as strictly
interested in extracting raw resources and investing in infrastructure,
China has interests on the continent that are increasingly shifting to
investing in institutions and governments, experts say.
“China has
always been seen as less good at dealing with regions and continental
bodies,” said Alex Vines, Africa director of Britain’s international
affairs think-tank Chatham House.
“The building of the AU secretariat offsets that in a very dramatic fashion,” he added.
Construction
of the 99.9m-tall building was wholly funded by the Chinese government
at a cost of $200mn. Even the furnishings were paid for by the Asian
powerhouse, and most of the construction material was imported from
China.
The sleek edifice - Addis Ababa’s tallest - will host the African Union summit which gathers African heads of state this week.
The
centre is set to be inaugurated today by Jia Qinglin, chairman of
China’s political advisory body the People’s Political Consultative
Conference.
The building symbolises China’s major stake in Africa -
bilateral trade between the Asian nation and the continent reached over
$120bn in 2011, a jump from less than $20bn a decade earlier.
Beijing’s involvement in Africa dates back 60 years, when Chinese workers arrived to lay railways tracks and roads.
But
there has been a surge in investment in the past 15 years. Until
recently, it focused mainly on bilateral relations. The new building
suggests a push to foment multilateral links.
According to Vines, it
is in China’s best business interest to push for stability, especially
in the wake of the Arab Spring which saw a collapse of governments
across North Africa.
“It’s a recalibration of how China sees
Africa. I think the Arab Spring, in particular Libya, wasn’t anticipated
by China,” he told AFP from London.
It is also a strategic move on the part of the AU to look outside of Africa and Europe for partnerships.
The death of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has meant the loss of major funding for the often short-staffed pan-African bloc.
And
China’s investment in the AU stretches beyond the construction of the
glimmering new AU building. Last December, China pledged $4.5mn to the
AU’s mission in Somalia (AMISOM) to fight Al-Qaeda-linked Shebaab
insurgents.
China is also a major contributor to UN peacekeeping
missions in Somalia, Burundi and Sudan according to UK-based civil
society group Saferworld.
China’s ambassador to Ethiopia and the AU,
Xie Xiaoyan, recently said his government’s relationship with the AU
serves as a central part of the China-Africa strategic partnership.
That
partnership was formalised in 2001 with the launch of the Forum on
China-Africa Co-operation, which convenes every three years. At the last
gathering in 2009, China pledged $10bn in loans to Africa.
But China
views the AU as relatively toothless, according to political science
professor at Hong Kong Baptist University Jean-Pierre Cabestan.
“China
has very good relations with the African Union but ... it knows that
the African Union is relatively powerless and finds it difficult to make
decisions,” he told AFP in Beijing.
Construction of the new
headquarters kicked off in January 2009, and a team of up to 1,200
Chinese and Ethiopian workers laboured around the clock in two or three
shifts to finish it on schedule.
The site boasts three conference
centres, a helipad and office space for 700 people. A bronze statue of
pan-African leader Kwame Nkrumah, former president of Ghana, is slated
to be unveiled this week.
Project co-ordinator Fantalun Michael
said the new building allows the AU to host major international events
and represents Africa’s modernising image. It also signifies China’s
growing friendship with Africa, he said.
“It’s a testimony that this relationship will continue in the future,” he said.
But
that bond will depend largely on diplomatic relations between China and
Africa, not simply on Chinese-built infrastructure, according to Vines.
“In
10 year’s time, will there be a fuzzy warm feeling that China built
this building? I’m not sure. It will be more about up-to-date
relationships and Chinese diplomacy in Addis,” he said.
Source: AFP
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