For the first time, the DR Congo took delivery of a donation of Chinese-made vaccines. A shipment of 400,000 doses of Sinovac and an equal number of syringes arrived on Wednesday at the capital’s N’djili Airport. Get a daily email packed with the latest China-Africa news and analysis. Read exclusive insights on the key trends shaping China-Africa relations. Full access to the News Feed that provides daily updates on Chinese engagement in Africa and throughout the Global South. China, Africa and the Global South... find out what’s happening. Subscribe today for unlimited access. Monthly $15/mo OR Yearly $149/yr (17% Savings) Already a subscriber? Log in Click Here to Learn More The post DR Congo Receives First Shipment of Chinese COVID Vaccines appeared first on The China Africa Project . source https://chinaafricaproject.com/2021/09/30/dr-congo-receives-first-shipment-of-chinese-covid-vaccines/
The G77 bloc of countries together with China is reportedly going to propose a new “loss and damage” fund at the COP27 summit to provide finance to poor countries impacted by climate disasters. The fund appears to be a repackaged version of the failed “climate adaptation fund” that wealthy countries balked at financing. Supporters say they hope the new initiative will be established before the next round of climate talks in Dubai in 2023. (REUTERS) U.S. Ambassador to Zambia Michael Gonzales called on all of Zambia’s creditors to accept debt write-offs. Although he didn’t specifically mention Chinese creditors that own more than a third of Zambia’s external debt, he did say there was a “stinky debt’. “There’s a lot of shenanigans that went into the debt that the Zambian people are now saddled with for a generation,” he said during a Sunday interview on state television. (BLOOMBERG) Get a daily email packed with the latest China-Africa news and analysis. ...
A new report provides an unprecedented view into Chinese loan contracts with dozens of governments throughout the Global South. Researchers from AidData, the Kiel Institute, and the Center for Global Development analyzed 100 contracts between Chinese state-owned entities and government borrowers in 24 countries and then compared the terms of those contracts with those of other bilateral, multilateral and commercial creditors. China’s lending practices are notoriously opaque and until now very few people other than key principals involved in the actual loans have had the opportunity to review these contracts in detail so as to better understand the specific legal terms and how they’re structured. What the research team discovered is that China is “a muscular and commercially-savvy lender” who employs contract terms that are in many ways quite similar to those of other international creditors. However, they did note a number of key differences that highlight how China structures its d...
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