News / National
'Chinese must come to Africa on African terms' says Mutambara
19 Apr 2013 at 02:30hrs | Views
JOHANNESBURG - Africa must learn to dictate its own terms when dealing with China and stop blaming Beijing, apartheid, or colonialism for its economic woes, Zimbabwe's Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara said on Wednesday.
Mutambara said it was time for Africa to stop taking a "romantic view" of China because it had grown from a "comrade in poverty" to a global business and economic giant.
"Why are we not making sure the engagement with China is on our terms, as Africans? Labour, skills, technology, value addition," he said at a China-Africa conference.
"The Chinese must come to Africa on African terms. The terms that will allow the Chinese to make money, but the terms that will also allow Africa to develop, win-win. China wins, Africa wins."
He said Africa had been free for a long time - two generations in countries such as Ghana - and it should not be wasting time looking for excuses for its slow development.
"Africans must not blame China or any other power for that matter. We must take charge of our lives, we must take responsibility for our problems and solve them.
Yes, there are things we can trace back to apartheid, to colonialism, but we must take charge of our lives and not justify incompetence by talking about apartheid, colonialism," he said.
South Africa has lately been embroiled in a fierce debate on whether - 19 years on - apartheid can still blamed for current government policy shortcomings.
Mutambara said it was time for Africa to stop taking a "romantic view" of China because it had grown from a "comrade in poverty" to a global business and economic giant.
"Why are we not making sure the engagement with China is on our terms, as Africans? Labour, skills, technology, value addition," he said at a China-Africa conference.
"The Chinese must come to Africa on African terms. The terms that will allow the Chinese to make money, but the terms that will also allow Africa to develop, win-win. China wins, Africa wins."
"Africans must not blame China or any other power for that matter. We must take charge of our lives, we must take responsibility for our problems and solve them.
Yes, there are things we can trace back to apartheid, to colonialism, but we must take charge of our lives and not justify incompetence by talking about apartheid, colonialism," he said.
South Africa has lately been embroiled in a fierce debate on whether - 19 years on - apartheid can still blamed for current government policy shortcomings.
Source - News24