Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari, has arrived in the People’s Republic of China for a state visit.
According to the President’s spokesman, Mr Femi Adesina, President
Buhari was welcomed at the Beijing Capital International Airport by
China’s Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Cheng Guoping,
alongside other senior Chinese government officials.
Also at the airport were the Governor of Oyo State, Abiola Ajimobi,
Governor of Ogun State, Ibikunle Amosun, and the Governor of Yobe State,
Ibrahim Geidam.
Other Nigerian government’s functionaries at the airport were the
Minister of Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah, Minister of
Transport, Chibuike Amaechi, Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman
Adamu, and Minister of Defence, Dan Monsur Ali.
The President left Abuja on Sunday for a working visit to China aimed
at securing greater support from Beijing for the development of
Nigeria’s infrastructure, especially in the power, roads, railways,
aviation, water supply and housing sectors.
Considering Chinese Panda Bond
It is expected that in the course of the visit, several new
agreements and memorandums of understanding to boost trade and economic
relations between Nigeria and China would be concluded and signed.
The agreements include a Framework Agreement between the Federal
Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment and the National Development
and Reform Commission of the Peoples’ Republic of China to boost
industrial activities and infrastructural development in Nigeria.
Others are a Framework Agreement between the Federal Ministry of
Communications and the China Aerospace Science and Technology
Corporation, and a Memorandum of Understanding between Nigeria and China
on Scientific and Technological Cooperation.
Nigeria’s Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun, had told reporters
after a meeting with the business and investment community early on
Saturday in Lagos, that the government was considering the possibility
of issuing Chinese panda bond to make up for the deficit in the 2016
budget.
She said that the government’s objective was to borrow the cheapest possible money.
The breakfast meeting focused on the imperatives for fiscal
discipline, investment and diversification of the domestic economy in
the face of strong local and international headwinds such as the steady
decline in oil prices and weak global economic growth.
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