Turkey and Africa envision a strategic future together
The new phase in Turkey's ties with the African continent is beyond a mere economic project, and offers a great future for both sides based on mutual gains
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President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan made his second trip to Africa in four months. Prior to Senegal, he visited Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The largest country in Sub-Saharan Africa and home to 90 million people, the nation needs crucial investment in development, infrastructure and urbanization.
In the Congolese capital, where the Belgian and French influence remains strong, Erdoğan and DRC’s president, Felix Tshisekedi, personally oversaw the signing of military framework and defense cooperation agreements as well as a memorandum of understanding vis-à-vis highways, railways, a financial center, infrastructure and river transportation.
Erdoğan’s second stop was Dakar, the Senegalese capital, which he had frequently visited as part of his Africa tours. Attending the Senegal Business Forum on Feb. 21, the Turkish president signed six bilateral agreements. The following day, Erdoğan attended the opening ceremony of the Turkish Embassy’s new chancellery as well as an Olympic stadium built by Turkish businesspeople.
In his own words, the Turkish president’s trip was intended as a "follow-up to the decisions made at the Third Turkey-Africa Summit." Over the years, Erdoğan’s hard work has increased the Turkish business community’s investments on the African continent to $78 billion (TL 1 trillion) with over 1,700 projects.
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