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Review
We invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about
Ghana and the world. We reserve the right to accept or reject
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expressed in articles we publish......MORE
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Howard W. French’s "China’s Second Continent"
China’s Increasing African
Presence
by CHARLES R. LARSON
Howard W. French’s disturbing account of China’s growing
presence on the African continent—a damning picture of what he
calls a “camouflage for immigration” —couldn’t come at a better
time given recent incidents of increasing political unrest
across the continent and what they imply for the West. His
imaginative focus is not upon Chinese government officials or
even Chinese corporations and their often slipshod work on the
continent (new roads, sports arenas, government buildings which
are often symbolic of bigness) but on individual Chinese
entrepreneurs who have invaded the continent like army ants
during the past twenty or thirty years. Since they operate
mostly on their own initiative, it appears as if there is no
official Chinese goal for taking over the continent, but their
combined presence is clearly intentional government “leverage”
against the West. We’re here doing great things because you
(America specifically) are ignoring the continent.
French estimates that there are currently at least a million
Chinese living in sub-Saharan Africa and says that may be a
conservative figure. Several countries alone (Zambia, Tanzania,
and Mozambique) have a hundred thousand each. Others have fairly
decent sized enclaves or Chinese towns, often of ten thousand
people. Africans have said for years that the Chinese isolate
themselves, that they don’t integrate, though French shows that
there are numerous exceptions to that, especially when Chinese
males have married African women and started families. There is
little question, however, that often these enclaves have sprung
up because in many places Chinese companies have brought their
own workers to complete a specific project. Again, that is not
the focus of French’s study. Instead, he tracked down individual
Chinese (mostly men but also a few women) typically living in
remote areas of the continent who, in some countries, have
become petty shopkeepers much like the Lebanese and the Indians
before them. And many of these individuals, through hard work,
have become enormously successful, starting modestly and slowing
growing their businesses into large agricultural or industrial
success stories. Some are fabulously wealthy.
Sadly, too many of them are condescending, outright racists.
They typically arrive with more education than the Africans
around them and a determination to work very hard. By contrast,
they consider the locals more interested in having a good time
than working and building up a business or a farm. They consider
the Africans stupid and have no compunction of taking advantage
of them. Here’s the observation of a man in Mozambique, which
pretty much sums up the entire perspective: “I didn’t think they
[the Africans] were so clever, not so intelligent, and I was
looking for an opportunity based on my own capabilities. Can you
imagine if I had gone to America or to Germany first? The people
in those fucking places are too smart. I wouldn’t have gotten
anywhere. I don’t think I would have beaten them. So we had to
find backward countries, poor countries that we can lead, places
where we can do business, where we can manage things
successfully. If it was the United States, with fucking
intelligent Americans, how could we compete?”
Variations of that quotation appear throughout the book. A
Chinese man in Senegal says of his hosts, “They just don’t
learn.” Worse, he states that African politicians are mostly
clueless. They can be taken advantage of in “noncompetitive
deals…struck all the time between builders and local
politicians.” In Liberia, another Chinese male says, “You
couldn’t find ten competent people here.” Another, in Tanzania,
refers to the Africans as “children.” We have seen this all
before throughout the history of colonialism in Africa. Take
advantage of those with lesser education, skills and worldview.
Colonial greed—colonial thievery or whatever you want to call
it—raped the African continent well before the recent influx of
Chinese and yet, just like the Europeans in Africa, the Chinese
have the audacity to refer to the Africans as the real crooks. A
man in Namibia tells French, “Ninety percent of Africans are
thieves.” Well, I can best that: One hundred percent of Chinese
in Africa are thieves.
Yes, a few Africans are willing to defend the Chinese, hopeful
that the infrastructure will be built up and, over time, the
Africans will benefit. But by that time (far in the distant
future) the continent’s natural resources may long have
disappeared and the massive buildings and the roads constructed
by the Chinese will long have crumbled. In many areas that
French does not write about in his book, Botswana for example,
that has already happened. And it is difficult to ignore this
lament from an African in Mali: “We don’t like the Chinese…. We
don’t want to be speaking Chinese someday.”
French provides devastating examples of environmental
destruction caused by Chinese in Africa. Often, when large
tracts of land are acquired for farming, or when they are
building roads, the Chinese “take everything down, from the big
trees to the small trees, and they don’t do any replanting. When
you speak with a Chinese company, as I have with the directors
of timber companies, they’ll say, ‘Our problem is not your
environment. Your environment is a question for your future, not
mine. Talk to me about money. I came here to make money and I
have brought money to your country.”
Money still talks—especially in Africa.
Howard W. French: China’s Second Continent: How a Million
Migrants Are Building a New Empire in Africa.
Charles R. Larson is Emeritus Professor of Literature at
American University, in Washington, D.C. Email:
clarson@american.edu.
July 29, 2014
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AAEA Meets to Share Experiences
On the Use of Biometric Technology in Africa
allAfrica, July 23, Ghanadot - The Association of
Africa Election Authorities (AAEA) is meeting in Accra
to share experiences of member countries on the use of
biometric technology in election management. The meeting
is a platform for member countries to share their
problems and how they were resolved. The Chairman of the
Electoral Commission (EC), Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, says
the biometric technology alone cannot address the
challenges of any electoral system..........More |
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China's second continent -
China’s Increasing African
Presence
Review, July 29, Ghanadot - Howard W. French’s
disturbing account of China’s growing presence on the
African continent—a damning picture of what he calls a
“camouflage for immigration” —couldn’t come at a better
time given recent incidents of increasing political
unrest across the continent and what they imply for the
West. .....More
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Ghana will not draw second half
of $3 bln China loan-govt
Reuters, July 17, Ghanadot - Ghana will not
draw the remaining $1.5 billion tranche from a $3
billion loan agreed with China in 2011, Ghana's finance
minister said on Wednesday.
. . More
. . More
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NPP SETTLES ON OCTOBER 18TH
FOR PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES
Release, July 17, Ghanadot - The New Patriotic Party has
penciled 31st August 2014 as the date for the Special Delegates
Congress to elect the first five of the seven persons who have
filed to contest the Presidential Primaries. The Special
Congress will be held at Regional Centres in all the ten Regions
of Ghana.....More
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