UPDATED ON:
Saturday, April 21, 2007
20:45 Mecca time, 17:45 GMT
News Africa
China and Zimbabwe cement ties
Zimbabwe received 50 lorries and 424 tractors
 as part of a deal with China
 
Zimbabwe has been given millions of dollars worth of farm equipment as part of a deal which will see the African nation supplying China with thousands of tonnes of tobacco.

The government said the China-funded 424 tractors and 50 lorries would replace machinery destroyed during the seizure of white-owned farms to resettle landless blacks.
Agricultural production has fallen drastically in the country, largely due to lack of equipment, funding and technical expertise on the newly seized farms.

Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwe president, said on Saturday the agriculture sector was ready to "take off" after the deal with Beijing.
"This is the thrust of assistance by the People's Republic of China to the Republic of Zimbabwe ... for us to sustain politically our sovereign right to be ourselves," Mugabe said at a ceremony attended by Jia Qinglin, a senior Communist Party official.

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Zimbabwe is struggling with a deepening economic crisis - inflation rate is more than 1,700 per cent and 80 per cent of people are unemployed - which critics blame on Mugabe's policies.

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Joseph Made, Zimbabwe's minister of agricultural engineering and mechanisation, said the equpment had been purchased under a $58m loan from the Chinese government.

"The total loan facility granted by the People's Republic of China is $58m. These items cost $25m as part of the first phase," he said.

In return, Zimbabwe will deliver 110,000 tonnes of tobacco to China over two years, Made  said.

The country has seen a drastic reduction in tobacco output in recent years, down from a peak of over 200 million kg in 2000, to about 55 million kg last year.

The Chinese delegation also promised to build schools and hospitals in Zimbabwe as the two nations cemented their close ties.

Mugabe started to forge stronger ties with countries like China, Malaysia, Indonesia and India when he adopted a "Look East" policy after Western criticism of his policies and human rights record.
 Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
 
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