Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has become the first African leader
who arrived in Beijing for the summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation
and will pay a state visit to China after the summit. The relations between
China and Liberia is moving forward steadily.
China has supported the United Nations efforts to end 14 years of civil war
in Liberia, which claimed tens and thousands of lives and made 1 million people
homeless, by sending peacekeepers to the war-ravaged country.
In the postwar period, China has also rendered assistance for Liberia's
recovery programs.
"The relations between our two countries are growing steadily,"
Johnson-Sirleaf said last month. She added," We look forward to new and
rewarding areas of cooperation within the framework of South-South cooperation."
She identified infrastructure building and the agriculture sector as areas in
which Liberia and China can forge a new and rewarding partnership.
For its part, Chinese Ambassador to Liberia Lin Songtian has on many
occasions assured his government's preparedness to facilitate the cultivation of
commercial rice farms in Liberia, provided the government formulates an
agricultural policy.
If deals were sealed for the project, it would certainly help produce the
much-needed employment opportunities the Liberian president is seeking.
Liberia's human development report had stated that "agriculture accounts for
54 percent of Liberia's gross domestic product (GDP) ... and although rice
remains the main staple food in Liberia, accounting for 90 percent of daily
dietary intake, virtually 95 percent of the country's rice consumption needs is
met via imports."
The report, therefore, suggested that "agriculture transformation was
urgently needed to improve food security, create jobs and stimulate economic
growth."
In addition, China deployed agriculture experts at a vocational school and
sent a team of medical doctors at the country's largest referral hospital -- JFK
Medical Center.
Other assistance includes the donation of agricultural tools worth 1 million
U.S. dollars for thousands of farmers throughout Liberia, the supply of office
equipment including computers to almost all government agencies and the donation
of earth-moving equipment for road repairs.
It also supported Liberia's human resource development by enabling more than
300 students and personnel with diverse professional background to study in
workshops and seminars in China.
A memorandum of understanding was signed recently by China and Liberia to
upgrade Liberia's state-owned broadcasting system to boost the transmission
beyond the capital of Monrovia.