News / National
'Friendly China vows to help Zimbabwe,' says Mugabe
31 Aug 2014 at 17:10hrs | Views
President Robert Mugabe, returning from a state visit to China, said on Sunday that Beijing had pledged to assist his southern African country's ailing economy "to the best of its ability".
China will "continue to be as friendly to us as it was before ... The support we have asked for in the various areas, China will provide to the best of its ability," Mugabe said in comments carried on Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) television after his arrival.
Mugabe, who won disputed elections last year, made a 13th trip to China this week to drum up investment for energy, infrastructure development and transport sectors in his impoverished state.
The 90-year-old, a former guerrilla and Africa's longest-serving leader, and his ministers signed various agreements in Beijing whose details are yet to be released.
Zimbabwe faces a severe liquidity crunch, high unemployment and minimal economic activity.
Foreign investment halved
Scorned in the West, Mugabe has adopted a "look East" policy, forging new ties and buttressing existing ones with east Asian countries, including China.
China has a long list of business interests in Zimbabwe which span the mining, agriculture and construction sectors.
It invested more in non-financial sectors in Zimbabwe than in any other country on the continent last year, exceeding $602m, according to Chinese government figures cited by Xinhua news agency.
Once the breadbasket of southern African, Zimbabwe now imports basic goods from neighbouring countries and is grappling with unemployment of around 80%.
It was forced to slash its growth forecast for the year from 6.1% to 3.1% due to weak economic activity.
Investors have been scared off by Harare's controversial indigenisation law, which requires foreign firms to hand over 51% of their shares to black Zimbabweans. Earlier this year, Harare said it would amend the law.
Source - AFP