"China has been playing a key role in assisting Africa to get rid of colonial
rules and to develop its economy," said Dr. Salim Ahmed Salim, a seasoned
African diplomat, on Saturday.
"The China-Africa friendship and cooperation are not confined to economic and
technological realms only, but are also felt in the international political
arena," he said in an interview with Xinhua.
The 64-year-old Zanzibari got to know China at the age of 19 when he went to
the Asian country as a diplomatic apprentice.
"China then whole-heartedly supported African countries in their strife to
get rid of colonial rules, and China now is whole-heartedly supporting African
countries in their efforts to get rid of poverty," he said.
"A friend is not only one who comes when needed, but this friendship has to
be able to weather both ups and downs," said Dr. Salim who likened China to such
an all-weather friend in that it has been extending support to African countries
in a wide range of events.
Starting his diplomatic career in Cuba, the Zanzibari has served diplomatic
missions in Egypt, India, China and the United Nations apart from serving as the
secretary-general of the former Organization of African Unity, now the African
Union, for three terms on end.
He is now the African Union's special envoy and chief mediator on Darfur,
Sudan.
U.N. diplomats from the 1970s tended to say that Salim had missed a real
opportunity to be elected as U.N. secretary-general because of his open support
to China's return to the U.N. fold, for which he was rejected by the United
States in 16 rounds of votings.
"I did not regret at all. Not for one moment, because I was among those who
had just expressed their heart-felt joyance about China's return to the U.N.,"
he said when asked about the feeling of the anecdote.
The veteran diplomat described the event as not only China's victory on the
country's diplomatic front but also a victory for the Third World countries as
well as the United Nations itself.
When asked what the African countries are supposed to learn from China most,
his immediate answer was China's long-standing policy of independence and
self-reliance.
The veteran African diplomat might have a regret this time in that his tight
Darfur-related schedule will not allow him to attend the Beijing Summit of the
Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, scheduled for Nov. 3-5.
"I attended the first ministerial forum and I would think that the
China-Africa Forum had really promoted the friendship and cooperation between
China and African countries. I would also think that the forum will continue to
promote China-Africa friendship and cooperation," he said, adding that he would
expect this year's forum in Beijing also to offer participants a platform on
which people could ponder on the changes of the world.
"This world has been changing all the time," he said, "so people have to
think about and prepare themselves for how to deal and cope with the changes and
the changing world."