China and Africa should work together to tackle new challenges and ensure their strategic partnership based on equality and mutual benefits.
            
            
                HANGZHOU - China and Africa should work together to tackle new  challenges and ensure their strategic partnership based on equality and  mutual benefits, diplomats and scholars said at a forum on Thursday. 
"The nature of the relationship will remain unchanged, but as time  moves on, there are numerous problems we need to address," Liu Guijin,  special representative of the Chinese government on African Affairs,  said at the first meeting of the China-Africa Think Tanks Forum. 
The forum was held under the auspices of the Forum on China-Africa  Cooperation (FOCAC), an inter-governmental initiative launched in 2000  aimed at enhancing bilateral ties and bringing tangible benefits for  African countries. 
China-Africa trade has enjoyed at least 15-fold growth in the past  decade, surging to $150 billion by the end of 2010. Inbound investment  from China rocketed to more than $10 billion. 
But Liu said the increased trade volume and capital inflow have also caused friction. 
For instance, thriving Chinese businesses tend to deal a blow to  local fledging mom-and-pop vendors, and Africans are increasingly  worried about job losses. 
Another source of tension may be the flood of fake merchandise in  Africa with "made-in-China" labels, which tarnishes China's reputation  and harms China's economy, said Bertram Mapunda, a specialist in  China-African relations at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. 
Another rising concern is the misinterpretation in China's intentions  in Africa. Some claim that the Chinese have a hidden agenda of  expansion in this relationship. However, it is apparent "no political  domination is envisaged in the Sino-Africa relationship, as the two  parties enter mutual and contractual agreements as equals", he said. 
Yang Jiemian, president of Shanghai Institutes for International  Studies, favored closer policy coordination between the two sides in  terms of international reforms, such as in the International Monetary  Fund and the United Nations Security Council, to serve as "the new  points of growth for bilateral relations".