The coming three-day state visit to Kenya by Chinese President
Hu Jintao late this week marks the culmination of efforts to
strengthen ties between the two countries, said a statement issued
Monday by Kenyan Presidential Press Service.
"The visit by His Excellency President Hu Jintao of the People's
Republic of China is part of a wide range of efforts that have been
going in the last three years aimed at strengthening bilateral
relations between Kenya and China," the statement said.
Over the past three years, Kenya has dispatched several
delegations to China and has hosted several senior delegations from
China. During the exchange of visits, important documents on
bilateral relations have been signed, it said.
The two countries also signed important agreements aimed at
strengthening relations and opening a new chapter of strategic
trade and investments relations during the state visit by Kenyan
President Mwai Kibaki to China in last August, according to the
statement.
One of these agreements is the Framework Agreement on Provision
of Concessional Loan by China to Kenya, under which China would
extend to Kenya a grant of 600 million Kenyan shillings (about
US$8.3 million) and a concessional loan of approximately 2 billion
Kenyan shillings (about US$27.8 million) in support of development
projects of Kenya.
"The government's keen focus on the Far East, and especially
China, is based on the realization that the region offers vast
economic opportunities. China alone has a population of 1.3 billion
people, which translates into a massive market for Kenya's goods
and services," said the statement.
(Xinhua News Agency April 25, 2006)