Chinese President Hu Jintao begins five-nation tour next week which, after
his first stop in the United States, will take him to Saudi Arabia, Morocco,
Nigeria and Kenya from April 22 to April 29.
Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told a briefing here Friday that Hu
will pay his first visit to Saudi Arabia as president and hold talks with King
Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz.
It will be the second time the two countries' top leaders have met this year.
The King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz visited China in January, which was his
first overseas trip since ascending the thrown in August last year.
Saudi Arabia is a major influential power in the Middle East and Gulf region
and in Muslim society, Yang said. China and Saudi Arabia established their
diplomatic relations in 1990.
The two sides share the same or similar views on regional and international
key issues and have cooperated on international affairs, Yang said.
Saudi Arabia is China's largest trade partner in West Asia and North Africa
with bilateral trade reaching 16 billion U.S. dollars in 2005.
Hu's third stop will be Morocco, which forged diplomatic ties with China in
1958. He will confer with King Sidi Mohammed and other senior officials.
Yang hailed China-Morocco relations and cooperation in all fields, especially
their economic and trade ties.
China-Morocco trade increased by 28 percent year on year to reach 150 million
U.S. dollars in 2005. The two sides were expected to a ink series of agreements
in such fields as trade, culture, health care and sanitation during Hu's visit.
Hu Jintao will next travel to Nigeria, where he is expected to hold talks
with his counterpart Olusegun Obasanjo and meet with senior legislators. He will
also deliver a speech in the Nigerian parliament on Sino-African relations and
China's policy on Africa, according to Yang.
China and Nigeria formed diplomatic ties in 1971. The two countries'
bilateral relations have witnessed fruitful cooperation in such fields as
agriculture, infrastructure construction, power generation and
telecommunication.
Sino-Nigerian trade hit 2.83 billion U.S. dollars in 2005, up 29.6 percent
year on year. The two countries also carried out effective cooperation in
counter-terrorism and peacekeeping activities.
The last leg of the five-nation trip is Kenya, which is an important country
in East Africa, Yang said.
China and Kenya founded their diplomatic relation in 1963 and bilateral
relations have been going well.
The Kenyan government adheres to the One-China Policy and has kept close
consultation and cooperation on international affairs with China, Yang noted.
Trade and economic cooperation between the two countries also keeps
expanding. In 2005, bilateral trade amounted to 475 million U.S. dollars, up
29.7 percent year on year.
Chinese companies inked 830 million U.S. dollars worth of project contracts
up to June 2005 and completed 780 million U.S. dollars in sales volume,
according to Chinese statistics.
The two countries also carried out fruitful cooperation in tourism, culture
and education, Yang said.
The first Chinese Confucius Institute in Africa opened at the University of
Nairobi and some 10,000 Chinese tourists visited Kenya in 2005.
During his stay in the country, Hu will hold talks with his counterpart Mwai
Kibaki and visit the United Nations Human Settlement Program and the UN
Environment Program which are based there.