How former Kenyan president Mwai Kibaki looked east to China

The former Kenyan president Mwai Kibaki, who died last week aged 90, made a major economic shift to Asia with his "Look East Policy", which is credited with attracting Asian capital to a series of major projects such as ports, highways and airports.

In the early days of his tenure, the West was diplomatically and economically dominant in most African countries but in many cases cut funding while demanding democratic reforms.

Kenya and many others turned instead to countries like China, who promised not to interfere in their internal affairs. By 2009, China had overtaken the United States to become the biggest trading partner in Africa.

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Kibaki, who was laid to rest on Saturday, entered into trade and economic partnerships with several Asian countries, mostly China, India, Japan and the United Arab Emirates.

Of those countries, China became the biggest trading and economic partner - coinciding with the global financial crisis of 2008-2009.

As Western countries looked inward to concentrate on reviving their economies, China had a large current account surplus that created foreign earnings that had to be invested overseas.

Beijing also encouraged its companies to search for business and invest overseas as part of the country's "Go Out" strategy that has seen more than 10,000 companies invest in Africa.

Paul Nantulya, a research associate at the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies at Washington's National Defence University, said relations between Kenya and China had continued the upward trajectory established under his predecessor, Daniel arap Moi.

Nantulya said Moi's tilt towards China was part of his "Look East Policy" following the cooling of relations with Kenya's traditional Western partners such as the United States and Europe over human rights violations and corruption.

Under Kibaki, who was in office between 2002 and 2013, the partnership expanded into critical areas such as technical and higher education, agriculture, horticulture, public security and policing, and - most importantly - infrastructure, Nantulya said.

Mwai Kibaki pictured with Chinese the commerce minister Chen Deming in Nairobi in 2009. Photo: Xinhua alt=Mwai Kibaki pictured with Chinese the commerce minister Chen Deming in Nairobi in 2009. Photo: Xinhua>

Kibaki had a strong incentive to "look east", especially during his second term which was marred by a particularly nasty election campaign in 2007 that led to violence in the Rift Valley and put Kenya on the edge of civil war for the first time since independence, Nantulya said.