China, Uganda sign 6 trade pacts (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-06-24 16:11 China signed six agreements with Uganda on Friday
in a wide range of fields including economy, trade, agriculture, education, and
technology.
After a talk between Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, who arrived here Friday for
a two-day official visit to Uganda, and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni,
Chinese Commerce Minister Bo Xilai and Ugandan Finance Minister Ezra Suruma
signed the agreements.
 China's Premier Wen
Jiabao (L) and Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni watch the honour guard
on Wen's arrival at Entebbe international airport, 47 km (29 miles)
southwest of Uganda's capital Kampala, June 23, 2006. Wen is on a one-day
state visit as part of a seven African nation tour.
[Reuters] |
Meanwhile, a Joint Communique was announced by Ugandan Foreign Minister Sam
Kutesa at the State House in Kampala.
It said the two leaders had an in-depth exchange of views and reached broad
agreement on China-Uganda relations and international and regional issues of
mutual interest.
The two leaders expressed satisfaction with the fruitful bilateral
cooperation in all fields and agreed to keep high-level contacts to boost mutual
political trust, deepen business cooperation, strengthen coordination in the
multilateral arena.
The Ugandan government reaffirmed the Chinese premier its one China policy
and opposition of any attempt of "Taiwan independence" in any form and Taiwan's
attempt to join any international or regional organization consisting only of
sovereign states. Wen also reassured Museveni of its support in Uganda's
efforts to maintain political and social stability and sustain economic
development.
The two sides expressed readiness to conduct closer consultation and
cooperation in international affairs, work together to uphold the rights and
interests of developing countries and promote global prosperity and development.
Uganda welcomed the issuance of China's African Policy and expressed its
appreciation of China's readiness to establish and develop a new type of
strategic partnership with Africa featuring political equality and mutual trust,
economic win-win cooperation and cultural exchanges.
The two leaders agreed that the Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa
Cooperation to be held later this year would create anew opportunity for
boosting China-Africa relations and give greater impetus to the common
development of China and Africa.
Wen's visit here, the last stop of his seven-nation Africa tour, which has
taken him to Egypt, Ghana, the Republic of Congo, Angola, South Africa and
Tanzania, is the first official visit by a Chinese premier to Uganda since the
establishment of diplomatic ties in 1962.
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