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African leaders show continent’s trust in Turkey as large number attend Turkey-Africa Summit

Top officials stress importance of holding 3rd Turkey-Africa Partnership Summit face to face despite pandemic

17.12.2021
Anadoulu

Hailing the large turnout at the ongoing Third Turkey-Africa Partnership Summit in Istanbul, the foreign minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo on Friday said this participation shows Africa’s trust in Turkey.

“This turnout is a sign of Africa’s confidence in Turkey. Africa trusts the Turkish people. It also shows how Africa benefits from cooperating with Turkey,” Christophe Lutundula Apala Pen’Apala said at the three-day summit, held under the auspices of Turkey’s presidency, which wraps up on Saturday.

Over 100 government ministers and 16 presidents from Africa are attending the summit, whose theme is “Enhanced Partnership for Common Development and Prosperity.”

Besides the growing trade between Turkey and Africa, Pen’Apala also pointed to how the number of Turkish diplomatic missions abroad has soared in recent years – from just a dozen in 2002 to 43 in 2021.

He stressed that strategic partners of the continent should consider the priority of industrialization for Africa.

Albert Muchanga, the African Union commissioner for trade and industry, stressed the importance of holding the summit face to face despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

Saying Africa is determined to curb the virus, Muchanga said no one should be left alone to face the pandemic, as no one is safe until everyone is vaccinated.

So the delivery of vaccines to all is necessary, he added.

The first Turkey-Africa Partnership Summit was held in Istanbul, the second in Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea, and the third at the Istanbul Congress Center in Turkey’s commercial capital.

Under the government’s outreach to Africa policy, Turkey’s engagement with Africa has gained speed in recent years, including President Recep Tayyip’s groundbreaking visits to multiple countries on the continent.

Turkey has said its African policy, which encompasses political, humanitarian, economic, and cultural ties, is part of its multidimensional foreign policy and is pursued in the spirit of win-win relations.

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