Ethiopian News, Current Affairs and Opinion Forum
Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by Zmeselo » 07 Dec 2022, 19:58


eden
Member+
Posts: 9193
Joined: 15 Jan 2009, 14:09

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by eden » 07 Dec 2022, 20:07

what a pleasant surprise

thank you for being useful today and sharing something sensible

i never open your threads because you are against people and on the side of those who jail us, torture us and kill us.

May God help you stay sensible

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by Zmeselo » 07 Dec 2022, 20:15



China lends billions to poor countries. Is that a burden ... or a blessing?

December 6, 2022

ANDREW CONNELLY

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandso ... a-blessing


China's New Silk Road project is lending out billions to countries in Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa to build and upgrade railways, ports, pipelines, power grids and highways. Above: A Kenya Railways train pulls shipping containers as it departs from the Mombasa port station. Luis Tato/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Chinese leaders have often boasted about their country's "miracle" progress https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-56194622 in alleviating poverty and indicated their willingness to share their expertise with other nations.

Take its "Belt and Road Initiative," also known as the New Silk Road. China has spent nearly one trillion dollars in the last decade building highways, railways, ports and energy plants from east Asia to Europe in a bid to boost global trade.

But development experts who monitor such programs have long said that there's a catch – that China burdens countries with unsustainable debt as it asks for repayment and that it leaves human rights abuses in its wake.

Maybe the critics are wrong?

Now a major new survey https://www.aiddata.org/blog/new-report ... agines-aid looks at how countries view their participation in China's development projects. The finding challenges critics who say that countries have an overall negative experience. And of course ... it's a bit controversial.

AidData, https://www.aiddata.org/ a research lab at William & Mary University, surveyed 7,000 leaders in public, private and civil society sectors in over 140 countries. They asked participants to score the progress of various goals such as economic stability, security, public services and employment.

Lead report author Samantha Custer tells NPR that leaders with China as a development partner felt more optimistic across the board than countries that did not work with China. These China aid recipients were more likely to agree that their country had made progress on government accountability, physical security and social inclusion.
Leaders often say they like that China is very quick to deliver financing and assistance,
Custer explains.
For newly elected leaders when they need to deliver promises quickly, China is a preferred partner [compared to Western ones] because there is not as much red tape.
But does the survey ring true?

Others in the sector are skeptical of the participants' ability to be candid.

John Calabrese, director of the Middle East-Asia Project https://www.mei.edu/profile/john-calabrese at the Middle East Institute wonders if taking leaders' answers at face value may give a misleading picture.
I would guess at least some Middle East and North African [MENA] officials would not wish to air any problems or dissatisfaction with China lest this compromise their relationship,
he says.

Custer says that the participants were afforded various levels of anonymity, but she cannot exclude the possibility that some may have felt intimidated.

But she believes there may be other theories for the reports of optimism. Perhaps these countries may have a lower expectation for internal reform or may find that projects work well
despite, rather than because of, China's contributions.
Calabrese added that certain features of the Chinese model may appeal to the leaderships of some countries, such as non-interference in other country's domestic affairs. A 2022 report by Arab Barometer – a non-partisan research network https://www.arabbarometer.org/wp-conten ... ort-EN.pdf – revealed that China remains more popular across the MENA region than the United States.

Another possibility raised by critics: Maybe it's just too soon for countries to draw meaningful conclusions about the impact of the substantial outpouring of Chinese aid. According to AidData, China has recently disbursed billions in emergency loans. About 60% has gone to already-indebted low-income countries. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/china-ga ... 58920.html
We know that China is very opaque about the terms of its assistance,
Custer says.
They will include in lending contracts explicit non-disclosure clauses prohibiting the lender from saying how much was borrowed and under what terms.
In 2019, China funded one out of every five infrastructure projects worth over $50 million in Africa. https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/D ... 021-V8.pdf

That's slightly less than the amount funded by African governments. Joseph Asunka, CEO of the pan-African research institution Afrobarometer, https://www.afrobarometer.org/ says that in terms of broad development partnerships, the U.S. (which historically reserves a quarter of its foreign assistance for Africa) gave $7.65 billion to Africa in 2021 https://sgp.fas.org/crs/row/R46368.pdf) and China come "neck and neck" in terms of positive perceptions across the continent.
The majority of people express concern about the amount of money their government is borrowing from China,
Asunka continues,
but the mitigating factor is when they see the infrastructure projects realized — a highway near their town, for example — and cheap and accessible Chinese goods like mobile phones.
But Asunka underscores that this changes when the subject of Chinese negative employment practices is raised.
The more violence perpetrated,
Asunka says,
the more China's image begins to diminish.
In April a court in Rwanda sentenced a Chinese national to 20 years https://www.voanews.com/a/chinese-natio ... 37376.html in prison for tying two of his local employees to a tree and whipping them. The Business & Human Rights Resource Centre watchdog https://media.business-humanrights.org/ ... iefing.pdf recorded 181 human rights abuse allegations linked to Chinese business conduct in Africa between 2013 and 2020. Asunka says that most African stakeholders are in favor of conditions that would drive the growth of democracy and accountable governance, stipulations not usually associated with Chinese aid.

Ultimately, says AidData's Custer, China is still the financier of first resort when it comes to major infrastructure projects, but with the assistance of other partners, low-resource countries can strive to be more resilient when negotiating the terms.
There is a role for Western democracies to play in addressing and curbing some of negative by-products of Chinese projects by improving internal systems to reduce corruption. It's not to say that countries shouldn't borrow from China, it's about doing so responsibly.
Andrew Connelly is a British freelance journalist focusing on politics, migration and conflict. He tweets @connellyandrew
Last edited by Zmeselo on 07 Dec 2022, 20:19, edited 1 time in total.

euroland
Member+
Posts: 7818
Joined: 08 Jun 2018, 12:42

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by euroland » 07 Dec 2022, 20:16

eden wrote:
07 Dec 2022, 20:07
what a pleasant surprise

thank you for being useful today and sharing something sensible

i never open your threads because you are against people and on the side of those who jail us, torture us and kill us.

May God help you stay sensible

Edu junti
Zmeselo is never against “people”, he is against your beloved Weyane like many Eritreans and Ethiopians alike.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by Zmeselo » 07 Dec 2022, 20:18

Kiss my áss, racist-lil'-hoe!

A donkey is "useful" & you're my discarded- dead- donkey.
:lol:
eden wrote:
07 Dec 2022, 20:07
what a pleasant surprise

thank you for being useful today and sharing something sensible

i never open your threads because you are against people and on the side of those who jail us, torture us and kill us.

May God help you stay sensible

Temt
Member+
Posts: 5279
Joined: 04 Jun 2013, 22:23

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by Temt » 07 Dec 2022, 20:39

eden wrote:
07 Dec 2022, 20:07
what a pleasant surprise

thank you for being useful today and sharing something sensible

i never open your threads because you are against people and on the side of those who jail us, torture us and kill us.

May God help you stay sensible
Stop lying you, ቆማል ዓጋመ፡፡ You probably couldn't wait to read/view whatever Zmeselo posted article. ድርባይ ፍጥረት! ፎእ!

quindibu
Member
Posts: 3279
Joined: 31 Dec 2010, 13:17

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by quindibu » 07 Dec 2022, 21:02

Young Eritreans from Germany- landscape and culture of Ertirea short clip.


Abe Abraham
Senior Member
Posts: 14412
Joined: 05 Jun 2013, 13:00

Re: Great answer, Moroccan coach!

Post by Abe Abraham » 07 Dec 2022, 21:11

  • ኣስማት ናይ ደቂ ሞሮኮ ንካልኦት ኣህዛብ እምበር ንዓና ህዝበ ዓን ጠን ኸን ቐን ሓን ብጥንቃቐ ንምድማጹ ኣይጽግመናን እዩ !!! ወይዞም ኣበዋትና ክንደይ ይልብሙ ኩሉ ሰሪዖምልና ዝሓለፉ !!!!!!!

ኣባላት ሃገራዊት ጋንታ ሞሮኮ ( ኡሱድ ኣጥላስ/ ኣናብስ ኣጥላስ)

ኣሰልጣኒ ፥ ወሊድ ኣ(ል)-ረግራጊ
ተሓጋጋዚ ኣሰልጣኒ ፥ ቐሪብ ኣምዚን
ዓላሚ ሓለውቲ ልዳት ፥ ፊሊፕ ሳንስ
ዓላሚ ኣካላዊ ጥንካረ ፥ ግሬጎሪ ዱፖ
ሓኪም ጋንታ፥ ዓብድረዛቕ ሄፍቲ


ሓለውቲ ልዳት

22_ኣሕመድ ሪዳ ኣ(ል)-ቲክናዊ
12_ሙኒር ኣል-ከጃዊ
1_ያሲን ቡኑ

ተኻላኸልቲ

20_ኣሽረፍ ዳሪ
2_ኣሽረፍ ሓኪሚ
24_በድር በኑን
18_ጀዋድ ኣል-ያሚቕ
5_ናይፍ ኣክረድ
3_ነሲር ማዝራዊ
6_ሩማን ሳይስ
25_የሕያ ዓጢያ ኣላህ

ማእከል

11_ዓብደልሓሚድ ሳብሪ
8_ዕዘዲን ኡናሒ
23_ቢላል ኣል-ኸኑስ
7_ሓኪም ዘያሽ
13_ኢልያስ ሻዒር
15_ሰሊም ኣምላሕ
17_ሱፍያን ቡፋል
4_ሱፍያን ኣምራብጥ
26_ያሕያ ጁብራን

ኣጥቃዕቲ

9_ዓብድረዛቕ ሓመድ ኣላ
16_ዓብድኣ(ል)ሰመድ ኣ(ል)-ዘልዙሊ
10_ኣነስ ኣ(ል)-ዛዕሩሪ
21_ወሊድ ሸዲራ
19_ዩሲፍ ኣ(ል)-ኑሰይሪ
14_ዘከሪያ ኣቡኽላል


(.) = ይጻሓፍ እምበር ኣይንበብን ። ሕጊ ኣል-ቐመር/ ኣ(ል)-ሸምስ መሰረት ብምግባር ማለት እዩ ።

-

Post Reply