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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken looks on as Nigerian Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama speaks during a press conference in Abuja, Nigeria on Thursday. Photo: AFP

US wants ‘race to the top’ on Africa infrastructure amid China competition

  • US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says Chinese investment in the continent is a good thing in principle, but countries should not become burdened by debt
  • The US signed a US$2.17 billion development assistance programme with Nigeria, to whom China is a major lender
Africa

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Thursday that Washington’s involvement in infrastructure in Africa was not about China, but intended to improve the standard of infrastructure without countries becoming burdened by debt.

On a visit to Africa’s most populous country, Blinken was asked about US-China competition over infrastructure investment on the continent, where China has grown its influence in recent years through such investments.

“When it comes to infrastructure investment, again, this is not about China or anyone else, it is about what we would like to think of as a race to the top when it comes to those investments,” Blinken said at a joint news conference with Nigerian Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama.

Blinken said investment from China in Africa was in principle a good thing, but that countries should not be left with “tremendous debt that they cannot repay”, adding that workers rights, environmental protections and safeguards against corruption should also be in place.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken salute each other during an audience in Abuja, Nigeria on Thursday. Photo: Nigerian presidency via Reuters

Developed countries in the G7 would invest in Africa as part of the so-called Build Back Better World programme, he added.

Blinken signed a US$2.17 billion development assistance programme with Onyeama on Thursday and said Washington would also continue to invest in security in Nigeria.

Onyeama said Nigeria needed investment from China to tackle a severe infrastructure deficit, and said the debt it has taken on was “sustainable”.

China is one of the major bilateral lenders to Nigeria and has provided financing for infrastructure development such as roads, rail and gas pipelines.

Blinken on maiden Africa tour with US-China rivalry in focus

Nigeria’s public debt office says on its website that Chinese debt stood at US$3.121 billion or 3.94 per cent of the country’s total public debt stock as of March 2020.

“We saw a great opportunity with the Chinese,” Onyeama said.

“They are used to a lot of these huge capital projects and infrastructure projects.”

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