CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
Background of the Study
The relationship between Nigeria and
China has been cooperative and cordial, especially between 1999 and 2009. At
independence, Nigeria adopted a broadly pro-western policy and did little to
establish diplomatic relations with China. Formal diplomatic ties between the
two countries came into being in 1971, barely a year after the end of the
Nigerian Civil War (1967-1970). However, following China‟s economic growth in
the 1980s, Nigerian leaders began to look forward to a more serious economic
engagement with China.
During the military regime of General
Sani Abacha, Nigeria turned to China for military assistance and training of
the Nigeria Army; perhaps to help the government suppress the domestic
opposition to autocratic rule in Nigeria. By the time of 1999, when Nigeria
experienced political transition from military rule to democratic
administration, there has been renewed content and context in Nigeria-China
relations. The details of such expanded relationship are the contents of
chapter four (4) of this study. Overall, after a lull in Nigeria‟s relations
with it‟s outside world; as a result of the hostility and paranoid (Fawole,
1999 cited in Ojo, 2005) that characterized the country‟s foreign affairs, the
1999 political change over marked the beginning of a renewed relationship with
other nations of the world. It is within this context that the Nigeria-China
relation is considered in the study.
1.2 Statement of the Problem
Despite the benefit, which the two
countries derived from their bilateral relationship, analysts have argued that
the relationship between Nigeria and China was complex and was never going to
be straightforward. But is this relationship the tale of two giants, as (Alaba
Ogunsanwo, 2008 cited in Gregory, 2009), the distinguished Nigerian academic
and former diplomat would has alleged it, or rather, employing the phrase of
the Chinese periodical Chinafrica, a more parochial story of a global
„elephant‟ and just one of many Third World „ants‟? The two tales converge
concerning China‟s status, which both views correctly characterize as weighty,
but diverge in Nigeria. Nigerian officials have noted that there is an
unbalanced system in Nigeria-China relations in which the Chinese world become
the dominant power while Nigeria would lack the capacity to exert her influence
in political dealings (Gregory, 2009). Similar short comings existed in the
area of technology transfer and job creation for Nigerian citizen-public officials
outside the foreign affairs sectors complained that although Chinese business
men were more attractive partners because the development gap is less daunting
than with the west actual technological transfer and job creation was low
because the Chinese imported their own labour to Nigeria (Utomi, 2009:42). This
created a debate among the public officials about how Nigerian‟s relation with
China could be better managed. From the foregoing, it appears that
Abuja-Beijing bilateral relations were cordial between 1999 and 2009 except for
a few instances where Nigerians complained about poor Chinese labour policy and
Chinese substandard goods.
However, from 2007 onward,
Nigeria-Chinese relations faced a new challenge with the failed effort of
President Olusegun Obasanjo to secure a third term in office. Obasanjo
campaigned for the late President Umar‟ Musa Yar‟Adua who was eventually
elected the President in 2007. Yar‟Adua, however, continued to review all the
agreement signed between Nigeria and China, which mostly resulted either in the
suspension or cancellation of these contracts. Between 2007 and 2009,
Abuja-Beijing relationship was not totally cooperative as some Chinese
companies decided not to sign pact with the Federal Government any longer but
rather would partner with State Government. Given this background, this
research focuses on the Obasanjo‟s “Oil for Infrastructures” policy and the
benefits, which the Nigerian Government derived from this policy from 1999 to
2009 and proceeds to suggest possible solution to the ongoing imbalance in
Nigeria-Chinese economic diplomacy since the assumption of President Yar‟Adua
to power in 2007.
1.3 Research Questions
In the course of this research work
the following questions will be examined:
1. What is the impact of the
historical ties between Nigeria and China on the current relationship?
2. What are the domestic and
international factors that influence the Nigeria-China relationship?
1.4 Objectives of the Study
1. To examine the historical
development of Nigeria-Chinese relations from 1999-2009.
2. To evaluate the relationship
between Nigeria and China especially during the former‟s transition programme.
3. To analyze Nigeria‟s relationship
with China in key areas such as bilateral trade, oil and gas, power generation,
rail transport system, road construction, communication, manufacturing and
retail loan finance and general free trade zone.
TOPIC: NIGERIA-CHINA RELATIONS, 1999-2009
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 90
Price: 3000 NGN
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