President William Ruto is set
to embark on an eight-day tour of
China, a trip that comes at a time
when his diplomatic rapport with
the United States appears to be
weakening.
According to details obtained by
the Star, the President will depart
shortly after the Easter holidays
to strengthen diplomatic contacts
with the world’s second biggest
economy.
Ruto intends to finalise the construction of the Standard Gauge
Railway to Malaba and start the
170km four-lane Rironi-Mau Summit road.
The two projects are likely to be
a political game changer for Ruto,
especially in Western Kenya, if delivered by 2027.
During his visit, he is expected to hold high-level talks with Chinese
leaders to discuss the future of bilateral relations between Kenya and
China across various sectors.
Insiders familiar with the trip revealed that Ruto’s engagement with
Beijing marks a notable shift in his
foreign policy approach.
Immediately after taking power,
Ruto sidelined China and openly
courted the West, particularly the
United States.
However, the US is not known to
sink its money in capital-intensive
infrastructural projects in Africa.
“The visit will focus on strengthening bilateral relations and exploring new areas of cooperation between Kenya and China,” a source
familiar with the plans intimated to
the Star.
The discussions are expected to
include infrastructure development,
trade agreements and investment
opportunities, aligning with Kenya’s economic transformation agenda, state sources said.
The exact
dates of the travel, coming at the
height of Trump’s tariff wars with
the Asian economic powerhouse,
and the specifics of the itinerary remain closely guarded.
Ruto’s administration initially
leaned toward the West, underscored by two visits to the US at the
invitation of President Joe Biden’s
administration.
However, this dynamic seems to
be evolving, particularly as the US
recalibrates its stance toward Africa
under the Donald Trump administration.
Trump shocked the world with
new tariffs (10 per cent for Kenya)
reiterating that only those who negotiate with it will get reliefs.
Ruto’s upcoming China visit signals a potential rebalancing of Kenya’s foreign engagements, which
have been largely pro-West.
Prime Cabinet Secretary and Foreign Affairs CS Musalia Mudavadi
hinted at the visit during his quarterly diplomatic briefing.
“The President will attend a series of high-level meetings in his
tour,” the PCS said at the Wednesday briefing.
The Foreign Affairs CS was recently hosted to a luncheon at the
Chinese embassy, ostensibly to firm
up the details of the trip.
Cavince Adhere, an expert in
China-Africa relations, said the
planned trip signals a change of tact
by President Ruto’s administration.
“Ruto’s administration has finally turned the corner on the important role that China plays in
supporting Kenya’s development,
particularly in the domains of infrastructure construction, foreign
direct investments, digital inclusion,
trade and human capital development,” he said.
Kenya is looking up to China to
help realise the planned extension
of the Standard Gauge Railway to
Malaba, among other engagements
on matters of education and people-to-people exchanges.
Recently, Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi held talks with
his Beijing counterpart Lan Fo’an,
where it emerged that China would
have a key role in the project.
The talks explored ways to enhance trade, infrastructure investment, and financial collaboration.
The Treasury boss also met with the vice president of China’s Exim
Bank Yang Dongning alongside senior officials of the bank, pointing
to an impending financing deal.
It is understood that China would
provide Sh700 billion to finance the
project, with the government expected to provide 30 per cent of the
project’s funding.
A consortium of Chinese companies will provide 40 per cent of the
funding for the 475km line running
from Naivasha to Malaba.
China’s Exim Bank funded the
first two phases of the railway
project that saw Beijing take the
lead role in building the SGR from
Mombasa to Suswa under the Belt
and Road Initiative.
Exim Bank also supported the
Southern Bypass and Western Bypass roads in Nairobi as well as the
construction of Kenyatta University
Teaching and Referral Hospital.
“Both parties explored potential
areas for future collaboration, emphasising the need for sustainable
financing mechanisms to support
ongoing and new initiatives,” Mbadi said.
Recently, Chinese ambassador to
Kenya Guo Haiyan said President
Xi Jinping’s administration was
keen on bolstering ties.
She said the two sides would
enhance high-level exchanges and
share governance strategies, underscoring the position China intends
to take in the wake of the shifting
geopolitics.
“China will strive to provide
certainty to this uncertain world
with its development in this world
marked by transformation and instability,” Guo said, restating China’s readiness to support Kenya
realise its infrastructure dream.
Adhere argued that the government is coming to terms with the
fact that Beijing remains its best ally
as “seven out of ten potential investors to Kenya are from China”.
“It is also Beijing that has been
forthcoming for Kenya, extending
development financing support to
Nairobi,” he said.
The expert said that Ruto’s impending visit to China provides
both sides with an opportunity at
the level of top leadership, business
level and even people-to-people
ties, to strengthen their resolve for
development cooperation.
He held that while some traditional allies of Kenya such as the
United States are pulling back, by
suspending aid and imposing a slew
of debilitating trade tariffs, China is
doing the opposite.
“China is expanding access to
its market for Kenyan goods and is
willing to commit capital and technology on Kenya’s development
projects,” Adhere said.
Ruto is returning to Beijing after
his September 2024 meeting for the
Forum on China and Africa Cooperation.
During the Focac summit, he and
his Chinese counterpart reached a
number of concessions to bolster
ties between the two nations.
It was the second meeting in a
year, the first being in October 2023
when Ruto visited Beijing for the
third Belt and Road Initiative Summit.
At the September meeting, Kenya and Africa agreed on a 10-point
plan for enhancing diplomatic ties.
Kenya and China have a joint
master plan for advancing modernisation, as outlined in the recent
Beijing forum.
Kenya is also looking up to China’s support in its quest for a permanent seat at the United Nations
Security Council.
China is tagging Kenya along on
its climate change mitigation plans,
with Kenya hailing the ties as people-centred, mutually beneficial,
and permanent.
At the Focac summit, President
Xi outlined plans for 30 infrastructure connectivity projects and cooperation on 1,000 livelihood ventures in Africa.
China also pledged to send to Africa 2,000 medical specialists and
500 agriculture experts, as well as
train 1,000 leaders.
Beijing is also gearing up to implement 500 welfare projects, implement 30 green energy projects,
train 6,000 military personnel for
Africa, and train 1,000 police officers.
Kenya is eyeing the goodies in the
Sh6.7 trillion kitty that China has
set aside for Africa in the next three
years.
Adhere said building on the outcomes of the Focac 2023 Summit,
Kenya and China have the opportunity to forge ahead with their joint
modernisation plan.