Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan (3rd R) attends the
closing ceremony of the 2nd Conference of Chinese and African Entrepreneurs in
Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 5, 2006. The conference concluded here Sunday
morning with 14 agreements signed between 11 Chinese enterprises and African
governments and firms, worthing US$1.9 billion in total.
-Xinhua
The 2nd Conference of Chinese and African Entrepreneurs concluded in
Beijing Sunday morning with 14 agreements signed between 11 Chinese
enterprises and African governments and firms, worth US$1.9 billion in total.
The agreements cover operation in infrastructure facilities, communications,
technology and equipment, energy and resources development, finance and
insurance.
African countries involved are Egypt, Ethiopia, South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya,
Ghana, Zambia, Uganda, Seychelles, Lesotho and Cape Verde.
Referring these contracts "a substantial result" of the conference attended
by 1,500 Chinese and African businessmen, Wan Jifei, Chairman of the China
Council for the Promotion of International Trade, announced the establishment of
the China-Africa Joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan attended the closing ceremony and met with officials
of nine African countries including Zambia, Lesotho, Nigeria, Uganda and Kenya.
The conference is on the sidelines of the two-day Beijing Summit of the Forum
on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) highlighting "friendship, peace, cooperation
and development".
FOCAC is a mechanism for collective dialogue and cooperation jointly
established by China and Africa to cope with new challenges and facilitate
common development.