The Weekly China Briefing Briefing China Weekly the 13 June 2014 2014 June 13
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... The Weekly China Briefing 13 June 2014 Namibia and China partake in joint naval activities Chinese and Namibian warships conducted joint naval drills off Namibia's coastal town of Walvis Bay on Tuesday, 10 June 2014. Two missile frigates, Yancheng and Luoyang, and a helicopter from the 16th Escort Task Force of the Chinese navy, took part in the joint exercise with a Namibian navy ship, according to Daijiworld (India). The Chinese fleet, which consists of two missile frigates and a supply ship is currently conducting an eight-country visit to Africa. The list of countries visited by China’s 16th escort taskforce of the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) includes Cameroon, Angola and South Africa, reports Xinhua (China). ECOWAS and China establish a strategic consultative mechanism China has begun moves to firmly establish its presence in West Africa and has sealed a strategic consultative mechanism agreement with the regional Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS, to achieve this. The agreement, sealed on Monday 9 June 2014, is expected to provide a holistic framework for defining and implementing the terms of co-operation between China and ECOWAS, reports PremiumTimes (Nigeria). China has also allegedly offered US$ 200,000 in capacity-building support to ECOWAS, one of the five priorities identified by the delegation, according to StarAfrica (France). China and Somalia ministerial meeting on co-operation Somali foreign and international investment minister, Abdirahman Duale Beyle, has met with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi. The two officials discussed the reinforcement of diplomatic ties between the two countries, according to SunaTimes (Somalia). The bi-lateral meeting held at the Chinese foreign ministry centre in Beijing focused mainly on security conditions of Somalia and the trade bonds between China and Somalia, reports Raxanreeb (Somalia). Global wind power capacity to more than double by 2020 – led by China Despite an overall slump in installations in 2013, global wind power capacity will more than double from 319.6 GW at the end of 2013 to 678.5 GW by 2020, led by China. China is the largest single wind power market responsible for 45 per cent of total global annual capacity in 2013, and is set to have a cumulative wind capacity of 239.7 GW by 2020, according to GD (USA). Despite off-the-chart air pollution levels in some cities, China has long been the world’s leading producer and user of clean energy. It already has the largest wind market in the world and its installed capacity has nearly doubled every year since 2005, reports ValueWalk (USA). United Nations willing to mediate China-Vietnam row Hanoi and Beijing have been embroiled in a bitter war of words as the two sides have traded accusations concerning maritime confrontations near an oil rig that China moved into contested waters near the Paracel Islands, reports NewsAsia (Hong Kong). The United Nations says it is willing to mediate in the territorial row between China and Vietnam. In the past week, Vietnam and China both sent dossiers outlining their claims in the South China Sea to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Both sides have repeatedly accused the other of aggressive behaviour and ramming. China’s dossier outlines its historical claims and Vietnam’s dossier has called for Beijing to halt drilling off the Paracels and negotiate over the territory, according to BBC (UK). Contact Us About Us +27 21 808 2840 The Centre for Chinese Studies (CCS) at Stellenbosch University +27 21 808 2841 [email protected] is the leading African research institution for innovative www.sun.ac.za/ccs and policy relevant analysis of the relations CCS_STELL between China and Africa. Facebook.com/CCS.Stell .