Berlin - Chancellor Angela Merkel travels to Africa on
Wednesday with the message that Germany is keen to step up
cooperation with the continent to help combat poverty and disease.
The chancellor's trip to Ethiopia, South Africa and Liberia from
October 3-7 will focus on economic development, social issues and
business ties, but she will also raise touchy political subjects.
German officials said she would bring up the question of human
rights, good governance and appeal to South Africa to do more to help
its neighbour Zimbabwe overcome its 'massive deficits' in democracy.
Germany is helping Portugal host an EU-Africa summit in December
which Merkel is determined to attend, even if British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown goes ahead with threat to boycott the gathering if
Zimbabwe's autocratic President Robert Mugabe is present.
The chancellor will spend three days in South Africa, conferring
with President Thabo Mbeki as well as his predecessor, Nobel Peace
Prize winner Nelson Mandela, and opposition leader Helen Zille.
Trade between the two countries amounted to 9.2 billion euros (13
billion dollars) in 2006, with Germany exporting twice as much as it
imported. Some 500 German companies are active in South Africa.
The chancellor, whose country is current president of the Group of
Eight rich industrial nations, will also visit a hospital treating
AIDS-infected children and tour a biodiversity project.
The BIOTA project near Cape Town examines changes in biodiversity
in Namibia and South Africa - part of the sub-Saharan region expected
to be worst-affected by climate change, mainly through increased
drought and flooding.
Merkel is accompanied on her visit by a 21-member business
delegation, Economic Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul,
and Oliver Bierhoff, manager of the German football team.
Bierhoff will join the chancellor on a tour of the revamped Soccer
City stadium in Soweto, where the opening game and the final of the
2010 football World Cup will be played.
The stadium visit will be closely watched, given the concerns
about South Africa's preparedness for the tournament, especially in
relation to its transport infrastucture.
In all three countries Merkel is visiting, China's growing
influence in Africa will be one of the subjects of her political
talks, German officials said.
Some African leaders apparently fear on an imbalance if Beijing
continues its drive for the continent's natural resources needed to
fuel its rapidly expanding economy.
European countries have not lost ground in Africa because of
Chinese activity but needed to continue their well-established
cooperation to ensure this does not happen in the future, German
government sources said.
In Ethiopia, the first leg of Merkel's trip, the chancellor will
confer with Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, President Girma Woldegiorgis
and visit a home for abused girls in the capital, Addis Ababa.
Talks are also planned with leaders of the African Union, an
organization whose goal is to promote peace and prosperity on the
continent. She will also deliver a speech at the AU headquarters in
Addis Ababa.
On the final leg of her tour, the chancellor travels to Monrovia
for talks with Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who
impressed Merkel when she visited Germany for this year's G8 summit
at Heiligendamm in June.
Merkel is expected to give her support to the Harvard-educated
economist's efforts to rebuild the West African country after years
of civil war.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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