How China’s Taking Over Africa & Why The West Should Be Very Worried
Pictured: Close relations: Chinese President Hu Jintao accompanies Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe to a ceremony in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
From an article in the Daily Mail:
In the greatest movement of people the world has ever seen, China is secretly working to turn the entire continent into a new colony.
Reminiscent of the West’s imperial push in the 18th and 19th centuries - but on a much more dramatic, determined scale - China’s rulers believe Africa can become a ’satellite’ state, solving its own problems of over-population and shortage of natural resources at a stroke.
With little fanfare, a staggering 750,000 Chinese have settled in Africa over the past decade. More are on the way.
The strategy has been carefully devised by officials in Beijing, where one expert has estimated that China will eventually need to send 300 million people to Africa to solve the problems of over-population and pollution.
The plans appear on track. Across Africa, the red flag of China is flying. Lucrative deals are being struck to buy its commodities - oil, platinum, gold and minerals. New embassies and air routes are opening up. The continent’s new Chinese elite can be seen everywhere, shopping at their own expensive boutiques, driving Mercedes and BMW limousines, sending their children to exclusive private schools.
The pot-holed roads are cluttered with Chinese buses, taking people to markets filled with cheap Chinese goods. More than a thousand miles of new Chinese railroads are crisscrossing the continent, carrying billions of tons of illegally-logged timber, diamonds and gold.
The trains are linked to ports dotted around the coast, waiting to carry the goods back to Beijing after unloading cargoes of cheap toys made in China.
Confucius Institutes (state-funded Chinese ‘cultural centres’) have sprung up throughout Africa, as far afield as the tiny land-locked countries of Burundi and Rwanda, teaching baffled local people how to do business in Mandarin and Cantonese.
Massive dams are being built, flooding nature reserves. The land is scarred with giant Chinese mines, with ’slave’ labourers paid less than £1 a day to extract ore and minerals.
Pristine forests are being destroyed, with China taking up to 70 per cent of all timber from Africa.
All over this great continent, the Chinese presence is swelling into a flood. Angola has its own ‘Chinatown’, as do great African cities such as Dar es Salaam and Nairobi.
Exclusive, gated compounds, serving only Chinese food, and where no blacks are allowed, are being built all over the continent. ‘African cloths’ sold in markets on the continent are now almost always imported, bearing the legend: ‘Made in China’.
From Nigeria in the north, to Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Angola in the west, across Chad and Sudan in the east, and south through Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, China has seized a vice-like grip on a continent which officials have decided is crucial to the superpower’s long-term survival.
‘The Chinese are all over the place,’ says Trevor Ncube, a prominent African businessman with publishing interests around the continent. ‘If the British were our masters yesterday, the Chinese have taken their place.’
Likened to one race deciding to adopt a new home on another planet, Beijing has launched its so-called ‘One China In Africa’ policy because of crippling pressure on its own natural resources in a country where the population has almost trebled from 500 million to 1.3 billion in 50 years.
China is hungry - for land, food and energy. While accounting for a fifth of the world’s population, its oil consumption has risen 35-fold in the past decade and Africa is now providing a third of it; imports of steel, copper and aluminium have also shot up, with Beijing devouring 80 per cent of world supplies.
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Fuelling its own boom at home, China is also desperate for new markets to sell goods. And Africa, with non-existent health and safety rules to protect against shoddy and dangerous goods, is the perfect destination.
However, there is a lethal price to pay. There is a sinister aspect to this invasion. Chinese-made war planes roar through the African sky, bombing opponents. Chinese-made assault rifles and grenades are being used to fuel countless murderous civil wars, often over the materials the Chinese are desperate to buy.
Take, for example, Zimbabwe. Recently, a giant container ship from China was due to deliver its cargo of three million rounds of AK-47 ammunition, 3,000 rocket-propelled grenades and 1,500 mortars to President Robert Mugabe’s regime.
After an international outcry, the vessel, the An Yue Jiang, was forced to return to China, despite Beijing’s insistence that the arms consignment was a ‘normal commercial deal’.
Indeed, the 77-ton arms shipment would have been small beer - a fraction of China’s help to Mugabe. He already has high-tech, Chinese-built helicopter gunships and fighter jets to use against his people.
Ever since the U.S. and Britain imposed sanctions in 2003, Mugabe has courted the Chinese, offering mining concessions for arms and currency.
Mugabe.
While flying regularly to Beijing as a high-ranking guest, the 84-year-old dictator rants at ’small dots’ such as Britain and America.
He can afford to. Mugabe is orchestrating his campaign of terror from a 25-bedroom, pagoda-style mansion built by the Chinese. Much of his estimated £1billion fortune is believed to have been siphoned off from Chinese ‘loans’.
The imposing grey building of ZANU-PF, his ruling party, was paid for and built by the Chinese. Mugabe received £200 million last year alone from China, enabling him to buy loyalty from the army.
In another disturbing illustration of the warm relations between China and the ageing dictator, a platoon of the China People’s Liberation Army has been out on the streets of Mutare, a city near the border with Mozambique, which voted against the president in the recent, disputed election.
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According to one veteran diplomat: ‘China is easier to do business with because it doesn’t care about human rights in Africa - just as it doesn’t care about them in its own country. All the Chinese care about is money.’
Nowhere is that more true than Sudan. Branded ‘Africa’s Killing Fields’, the massive oil-rich East African state is in the throes of the genocide and slaughter of hundreds of thousands of black, non-Arab peasants in southern Sudan.
In effect, through its supplies of arms and support, China has been accused of underwriting a humanitarian scandal. The atrocities in Sudan have been described by the U.S. as ‘the worst human rights crisis in the world today’.
The government in Khartoum has helped the feared Janjaweed militia to rape, murder and burn to death more than 350,000 people.
The Janjaweed…
The Chinese - who now buy half of all Sudan’s oil - have happily provided armoured vehicles, aircraft and millions of bullets and grenades in return for lucrative deals. Indeed, an estimated £1billion of Chinese cash has been spent on weapons.
According to Human Rights Watch, a U.S. watchdog, Chinese-made AK-47 assault rifles, grenade launchers and ammunition for rifles and heavy machine guns are continuing to flow into Darfur, which is dotted with giant refugee camps, each containing hundreds of thousands of people.
Between 2003 and 2006, China sold Sudan $55 million worth of small arms, flouting a United Nations weapons embargo.
With new warnings that the cycle of killing is intensifying, an estimated two thirds of the non-Arab population has lost at least one member of their families in Darfur.
Although two million people have been uprooted from their homes in the conflict, China has repeatedly thwarted United Nations denunciations of the Sudanese regime.
While the Sudanese slaughter has attracted worldwide condemnation, prompting Hollywood film-maker Steven Spielberg to quit as artistic director of the Beijing Olympics, few parts of Africa are now untouched by China.
In Congo, more than £2billion has been ‘loaned’ to the government. In Angola, £3 billion has been paid in exchange for oil. In Nigeria, more than £5billion has been handed over.
In Equatorial Guinea, where the president publicly hung his predecessor from a cage suspended in a theatre before having him shot, Chinese firms are helping the dictator build an entirely new capital, full of gleaming skyscrapers and, of course, Chinese restaurants.
After battling for years against the white colonial powers of Britain, France, Belgium and Germany, post-independence African leaders are happy to do business with China for a straightforward reason: cash.
With western loans linked to an insistence on democratic reforms and the need for ‘transparency’ in using the money (diplomatic language for rules to ensure dictators do not pocket millions), the Chinese have proved much more relaxed about what their billions are used for.
Certainly, little of it reaches the continent’s impoverished 800 million people. Much of it goes straight into the pockets of dictators. In Africa, corruption is a multi-billion pound industry and many experts believe that China is fuelling the cancer.
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There have also been riots in Zambia, Angola and Congo over the flood of Chinese immigrant workers. The Chinese do not use African labour where possible, saying black Africans are lazy and unskilled.
In Angola, the government has agreed that 70 per cent of tendered public works must go to Chinese firms, most of which do not employ Angolans.
As well as enticing hundreds of thousands to settle in Africa, they have even shipped Chinese prisoners to produce the goods cheaply.
In Kenya, for example, only ten textile factories are still producing, compared with 200 factories five years ago, as China undercuts locals in the production of ‘African’ souvenirs.
Where will it all end? As far as Beijing is concerned, it will stop only when Africa no longer has any minerals or oil to be extracted from the continent.
Read the full story (yep its a long one) by Andrew Malone here at The Daily Mail.
It’s U.S. dollars the Chinese pricks are spending.
Hell, we’re a fucking colony of theirs AND Saudi Arabia.
All courtesy of the Dhimmi version of the global village which the Chinese don’t give a fuck about.
ENERGY INDEPENDENCE NOW!!!
July 17th, 2008 at 6:43 pmBash, that’s some serious shit.
July 17th, 2008 at 6:58 pmAccording to one veteran diplomat: ‘China is easier to do business with because it doesn’t care about human rights in Africa - just as it doesn’t care about them in its own country. All the Chinese care about is money.’
If this is a surprise to anyone living…you deserve what you get. We should have finished China when they attacked us in Korea. But then, Mexico should be a state. The Middle East should be a territory. And so on and so forth. Ain’t diplomacy just fucking grand.
July 17th, 2008 at 7:06 pmArticle - “With little fanfare, a staggering 750,000 Chinese have settled in Africa over the past decade. More are on the way.”
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I’d been following this for the last seveal years on Strategypage.com…China’s quest for raw materials, but I had no clue that 3/4 of a million ChiCom’s had settled there.
The ChiCom’s have an advantage over us in that they have no problems with bribery or corruption so long as they get what they want at what they consider a reasonable price!
And the ChiCom’s absolutely don’t give a rat’s ass about how many Africans are sacrificed in the process!
July 17th, 2008 at 8:14 pmThe chinese sell low quality cheap shit, and the ppor africans dont know its shit and buy it. eventually they will understand
July 17th, 2008 at 8:22 pmTake a look at your kids’ toys, your electronics, and 99% of the inventory at any “dollar store”.
Just TRY to buy anything not made in China.
We’ve met the enemy, and he is us, too….
July 18th, 2008 at 12:32 amAnd every single business news story in this country is pro china investment.
July 18th, 2008 at 1:26 amNever mind that communism that we saw Reagan throw down is being resurrected by wall street our god is money and we will do anything to get it including INVEST IN OUR OWN DEMISE.
“Just TRY to buy anything not made in China”
That’s what I do for years, don’t like their cheap stuff that are made with “unknown” material, unknown color matters…
I don’t even go into chinese restaurants anymore, though I used to like their food…
If the Africans are stupid enough , well it’s their fate to become “slaves”… I just don’t want that they claim their “pardon day” ; they ought to claim it to their leaders who sold/sell them for a penny, that increases their paradisiac bank account.
China is definitely the real “threat”, they don’t want to convert us, they want to replace us ; intestine wars are maintened, famines and or viruses deseases are “spread” with concerns.
Between a chinese face and or an African face, choosing who you think is the fairest, I would though choose the African’s, cause you can read on his/her face if he likes you, not on the Chinese’s !!!! that’s the problem that poor countries don’t see, the Chineses are “racist” !!!!!
July 18th, 2008 at 3:10 amThe Chinese are our enemies. They continue to pursue a policy of stealing our military secrets and hacking into our military computers to steal our secrets. Why? We are the only country who can stand up to them militarily.
We should not allow the Chinese own any American business. We should stop paying for their aggression towards us by doing manfacturing jobs in America and with American allies.
They are our enemies and one day we will have to fight them over it.
July 18th, 2008 at 5:47 amCouldnt care less. It will be very hard for the Chinesse to make any more of a mess of Africa than it already is, if anything it might help some and square the shithole away.
These Chinese settling in Africa are communist in name only, they are there to make money, they are as capatalistic as we are only without the assinine bullshit that comes along with the homespun drama from our place of origin. Ya, laborors make only a few bucks a day, but to them that is a freaking fortune, so they are selling chinese goods to them, go to africa and buy a bag of anything to eat and see where it came from (here).
History has proved that he easyest way to prevent a war is trade. As long as we keep buying there plastic shit and foferah and selling them our grain and beef we are alot less likely to come to blows.
The evolution of the chinese government in just the past couple decades has been extrodinary, they are not a republic thou, so to compare them to us is apples to oranges, but they are far from the “Red Terror” of old.
July 18th, 2008 at 7:58 am