Nigeria, China partnership built on mutual respect, trust, shared strategic interest – NCSP

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

The Director-General of the Nigeria-China Strategic Partnership,Joseph Tegbe has said that since establishing diplomatic relations with Beijing in 1971, Nigeria has maintained a clear, principled, and unbroken adherence to the One-China Principle.

He noted that this position flows directly from Nigeria’s foreign policy tradition, grounded in respect for sovereignty, the principle of non-interference and the belief that nations must be free to determine their own paths.

“Nigeria and China share a philosophical foundation that gives their relationship a depth that goes well beyond transactional interest.That shared foundation received its most authoritative expression when President Bola Ahmed Tinubu met President Xi Jinping in Beijing in 2024.

“The joint statement was unequivocal: Nigeria affirmed adherence to the One-China Principle, recognised the Government of the People’s Republic of China as the sole legal authority representing the whole of China, regarded Taiwan as an inalienable part of Chinese territory, and expressed full support for China’s pursuit of national reunification. These were not words of diplomatic courtesy. They were the deliberate reaffirmation of a partnership grounded in mutual respect and long-term strategic alignment.

“Nigeria’s legislature has reinforced this position with equal clarity. Recently, the Hon Jafar Yakubu, Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on China-Nigeria Parliamentary Relations recently confirmed that Nigeria’s stance is clear, consistent, and firmly rooted in international law and bilateral agreements. Nigeria’s commitment to the One-China Principle is not the policy of one administration. It is a settled, cross-institutional expression of national conviction.”

He stated that this consistency is a strategic asset, one that Nigeria deploys with purpose through the Nigeria-China Strategic Partnership, adding that five decades of diplomatic reliability have built a genuine reservoir of political trust with Beijing.

“The NCSP’s mandate is to translate that trust into a new, more productive phase of economic cooperation: manufacturing investment, technology transfer, industrial development, and export-oriented production that reflect Nigeria’s true scale and potential as Africa’s largest economy.

“China has already contributed meaningfully to Nigeria’s railway corridors, port infrastructure, energy infrastructure,
telecommunications networks, and industrial capacity. However, the relationship can and must deliver more. Nigeria’s digital economy, solid minerals sector, agro-processing capacity, and consumer market all represent areas of deep mutual interest. With a transparent, results-oriented framework aligned with Nigeria’s national development priorities, the NCSP can move the partnership decisively from infrastructure financing toward genuine industrialisation.”

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