http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/southamerica/brazil/10081204/Brazil-prepared-to-write-off-around-600m-of-African-debt.html


Brazil prepared to 'write-off' around £600m of African debt 
Brazil will cancel or restructure almost $900m (£600m) in debt owed by African 
countries as part of a plan to increase future funding to the continent. 
 
President Dilma Rousseff is also set to announce a new development agency to 
work with African countries Photo: BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images
Reuters 

2:30AM BST 26 May 2013

Latin America's economic powerhouse is increasingly expanding its economic ties 
with Africa, a sign of how crises in the rich world are pushing faster-growing 
emerging economies to trade and invest among themselves, economists say. 

Brazilian officials said President Dilma Rousseff, visiting Ethiopian capital 
Addis Ababa to mark the African Union's 50th anniversary, was set to announce a 
new development agency alongside the cancellation that will offer assistance to 
African countries. 

"Almost all (aid) is cancellation," Thomas Traumann, spokesman of Brazil's 
presidency, told reporters in Addis Ababa. 

Under Brazilian law, Brasilia cannot offer new loans and long-term financial 
assistance to countries with outstanding debts. 

Traumann said most of Brazil's future assistance would target infrastructure, 
agricultural and social programmes. 

Among the 12 countries set to benefit are new gas exploration hotspot Tanzania, 
which owes Brazil $237m (£157m), along with oil-producing Republic of Congo and 
copper-rich Zambia. 

Most of the debt was accumulated in the 1970s and had been renegotiated 
previously, Traumann added. 

"Brazil has great expertise in what we call 'tropicalising' European crops. We 
have that technology," he said. "The idea is how to transfer that technology 
from Brazil to other African countries." 

In a sign of Brazil's quest for deeper ties with Africa, Rousseff was making 
her third visit to the continent in as many months, Traumann added. 

The BRICs countries – comprising Brazil, China, India and Russia – are now 
Africa's largest trading partners and its biggest new group of investors. 
BRICS-Africa trade is seen eclipsing $500bn (£330bn) by 2015, according to 
Standard Bank. 

Edited by Steve Wilson for telegraph.co.uk 


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