Cultural officials from 11 African countries said here Wednesday
they have benefited greatly from their two-week trip in China,
proposing more cultural exchanges between China and Africa.
The visit has been "a great learning experience" for African
ministries and departments of culture, Musamba Weseley Kaonga from
Zambia, said in his keynote speech at a summary seminar of the 2007
African Cultural Visitors Program.
"It has enabled the participants to appreciate the need to adapt
some of the policies and strategies that China has utilized to
develop a viable cultural sector," said Kaonga on behalf of all the
delegates.
Seventeen cultural officials from Benin, Botswana, Republic of
Congo, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania,
Uganda and Zambia toured Beijing, south China's Shenzhen and
northwestern province of Gansu from October 12 to 25, learning
about China's experience of urban cultural industry development and
rural cultural service construction.
China has a deliberate and clear cultural policy, said Victor
Makashi from Zambia. "The government has heavily invested in the
preservation of cultural relics and the promotion of the arts as
tourism resources."
Arts and culture are not just entertainment and reaction in
China but a serious cause, supporting economic development,
creating jobs and also used as means to preserve the social
identity of ethnic minorities in China, he said.
Participants of the program proposed to set up more Chinese
cultural centers in African countries apart from assisting
infrastructure projects so as to help more Africans to know about
China.
Besides the current exchange of visits for performing troupes,
the delegates proposed a mechanism for exchange of skills and
expertise between Chinese and African cultural ministries.
Dineo Naomi Phuti from Botswana suggested to launch a
China-Africa cultural ministers forum to let more senior officials
in Africa learning from the practices of China and attach more
importance to culture.
The African cultural visitors program, set up by China's
Ministry of Culture in 2006, is a long-term program of cultural
cooperation and exchanges between China and African
countries.
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(Xinhua News Agency October 25, 2007)