Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The end of abstraction: China’s development relations with Sudan

Large, Daniel

Authors

Daniel Large



Contributors

Christopher M. Dent
Editor

Abstract

The current importance of China in Sudan was demonstrated in three offi cial political anniversaries celebrated in 2009. The fi rst was the ‘Golden Jubilee’ anniversary commemorating 50 years of diplomatic relations between China and Sudan, celebrated with a series of events starting on 4 February 2009 and a glowing rhetoric about the historic successes and future promise of today’s burgeoning ties. The second was the twentieth anniversary of Sudan’s military coup of 30 June 1989 orchestrated by the National Islamic Front (NIF), the forerunner of today’s ruling northern National Congress Party (NCP). The third anniversary marked Sudan’s fi rst decade as an oil exporter. At the end of August 1999, just over two decades after oil was fi rst discovered, Sudan’s fi rst cargo of Nile Blend crude shipped from Port Bashair, south of Port Sudan, following a process of accelerated, militarised oil development in which Chinese oil companies played a crucial role in turning Sudan into a functioning oil exporter.

Citation

Large, D. (2010). The end of abstraction: China’s development relations with Sudan. In C. M. Dent (Ed.), China and Africa Development Relations. Routledge

Publication Date Jan 1, 2010
Deposit Date Nov 10, 2010
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Series Title Routledge contemporary China series
Series Number 55
Series ISSN 2770-2014
Book Title China and Africa Development Relations
ISBN 9780415569330


Downloadable Citations