Arab League (AL) Secretary General Amr Moussa said on Thursday that the
China-Africa and China-Arab cooperation forums were "necessary and instrumental
mechanisms" for boosting African and Arab cooperation with China.
The AL chief made the remarks in a written interview with Xinhua on the eve
of a summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in Beijing.
For one thing, FOCAC has helped the two sides raise the two-way trade volume,
which increased from 10 billion U.S. dollars in 2000 to nearly 40 billion
dollars in 2005, said Moussa.
Of the 22 member states of the Cairo-based AL, 10 are located in North
Africa. They are Algeria, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco,
Somalia, Sudan and Tunisia.
Moussa said the upcoming summit will focus on the issues of friendship,
peace, cooperation and development.
The leaders of China and Africa will discuss the achievements of the
China-Africa cooperation in the past 50 years, and both sides will adopt a plan
to enhance cooperation in various fields, he added.
The secretary general praised China for its efforts to strengthen the
cooperation between Africa and China.
"China is also taking some measures (to improve China-Africa cooperation),
such as publishing African products catalogue and supporting African individual
businesses in getting training from their Chinese counterparts and experts," he
said.
Moussa also hailed the idea of developing a new type of African-Chinese
strategic partnership, initiated by Chinese President Hu Jintao, saying Hu's
proposal was "a recipe for a successful relationship between nations."
During his visit to Nigeria in April, Hu put forward the proposal when
addressing the country's National Assembly in Abuja.
Hu's proposal contained such key points as strengthening political mutual
trust, expanding win-win economic cooperation, increasing cultural interaction,
enhancing security cooperation, and maintaining close coordination in
international affairs among China and African nations.
Moussa said President Hu mentioned these points during their talks in Beijing
in May when China hosted the second ministerial meeting of the China-Arab
Cooperation Forum.
"Should these guidelines be faithfully and systematically pursued, I believe
that African and Arab cooperation with China could make the progress that we
hope to achieve," he said.
Commenting on China-Arab Cooperation Forum, Moussa said much had been
achieved since the forum was formed in 2004. "But the potential is huge and we
have great ambitions for these relations," he said.
"The Sino-Arab cooperation is a good example for the South-South cooperation
that we have been advocating for so many years," said Moussa.
FOCAC's Beijing summit is slated for Nov. 3-5, when Chinese and African
leaders will review China-Africa friendly relations over the past 50 years,
blueprint future cooperation, and exchange views on major international issues.
According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, President Hu extended invitations
to 48 African countries which have diplomatic ties with China, and all these
countries have confirmed that they will attend the summit.
The upcoming summit will be the highest-level and the largest meeting between
Chinese and African leaders since China and African countries started to forge
cooperative ties in the 1950s.