Want China Times, Xinhua 2015-03-16
| Ambassador Xin Shunkang, second left, attends the inauguration of an aquaculture center funded by the Chinese government in Windhoek, Namibia, November 2014. (File photo/Xinhua) |
Namibia is
home to more than 40 Chinese companies that are making about US$4.6 billion per
year, Chinese ambassador to Namibia Xin Shunkang has said.
Xin said
all the companies employ more than 6,000 Namibians.
He said
currently, the value of investments by Chinese companies in Namibia is about
US$3 billion.
China and
Namibia signed the Reciprocal Investment and Protection Agreement in August
2005, while a Foreign Investment Act has yet to be brought before the Namibian
parliament.
Xin said
the embassy encourages Chinese companies to increase their investment, deepen
cooperation with local companies, and employ more local people.
So far, he
said the Chinese Embassy has been involved in skills development, taking
various measures to help with skills development for Namibians, especially the
youth.
Ambassador
Xin mentioned workshops on health, management, agriculture and media as among
those China has been involved in and where more than 100 Namibians took part.
He further
said they also offer scholarships to Namibians through the Ministry of
Education to study in China.
As part of
skills transfer, China is involved in the construction of the Namibian Youth
Training Centre at Grootfontein about 460 kilometres from the capital Windhoek.
In 2011 and
2012, Chinese investments in Namibia grew by US$179 million, while by the end
of 2013, China's total investment in Namibia stood at US$3.9 billion.
Most of the
investments are concentrated in the mining and manufacturing sectors.
Late last
year, ambassador Xin in another interview said China was discussing the
construction of a railway line between Tsumeb and the port harbour of Walvis
Bay that was estimated to cost more than US$500 million.
"A
Chinese company is in discussions with the Ministry of Works and Transport to
build a railway (line) from Tsumeb to Walvis Bay. It will transport cargo and
passengers. "The issue was how to raise the funds. The Ministry had the
budget, but it could not release the funds on time. "However, the Chinese
company said that was not an issue; they could provide the funds to start the
construction, and the Namibian Government could repay at a later time," he
was quoted saying then.
China was
also considering building a modern highway for Namibia connecting Hosea Kutako
International Airport with Katutura, Windhoek's sprawling township, to improve
the local traffic infrastructure.
Ambassador
Xin said this project was expected to cost more than 100 million U.S. dollars.
"In China we have a saying: If you want to be rich, it's better to build a
road. When people connect with each other, they acquire new ideas," he
said.
According
to Xin, the Chinese government was working on at least 10 new projects for
Namibia, spanning various sectors such as transport, education and health.
"In line with the Agreement on Bilateral Economic and Technological
Cooperation, China provided Namibia with free aid of 29 million U.S. dollars in
2013 and 16 million dollars to date this year," the ambassador noted.
By far the
most prominent milestone in Chinese investment came in the form of the joint
venture between Chinese state-owned company China General Nuclear Power
Corporation (CGNPC) and Namibian state-owned mining company Epangelo Mining,
with Epangelo' s acquisition of a stake in the Husab Uranium mine.
With
CGNPC's total long-term investment of US$5 billion, Husab Mine will make
Namibia the second largest uranium producer in the world, providing 2,000
permanent jobs and 4,000 temporary jobs while contributing at least 5 percent
to the Namibian GDP growth.
Chinese
companies are also planning to invest in maize and tobacco farming in the
Zambezi region.
"The
environment in Zambezi is very good and the land is fertile. The companies are
now doing the preparatory work. Once the project starts, it will create jobs
for 5,000 young people," the ambassador stated.
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