Summary
- Several African ambassadors wrote to China’s foreign minister last week, calling for the “cessation of forceful testing, quarantine and other inhuman treatments meted out to Africans”.
- China’s foreign ministry said on Monday all foreigners are treated equally.
- Many foreigners in China say they have faced suspicion as the country brought its own outbreak under control, only to see new cases brought from other countries.
Huddled under a highway bridge with a small bag of belongings, a
19-year old student from Ivory Coast was desperately dialling his few
contacts in China.
The student said he arrived in the
southern city of Guangzhou last week, after completing his quarantine in
another city, during a coronavirus clampdown that several African
countries and Africans in Guangzhou say has unfairly targeted them.
“I really need help. I just don’t want to sleep on the streets again,” he said on Monday, asking not to be identified by name.
He
came to China to study the language but his university shut because of
the coronavirus. Hotels kept turning him away, but later on Monday he
said he had found one.
Several African ambassadors
wrote to China’s foreign minister last week, calling for the “cessation
of forceful testing, quarantine and other inhuman treatments meted out
to Africans”.
Ghana’s foreign minister on Saturday called in China’s ambassador to convey the government’s concern.
China’s
foreign ministry said on Monday all foreigners are treated equally. But
it also said virus controls on Africans would be lifted, apart from
confirmed cases and those who have had close contact with them.
“African friends will be treated fairly, justly and amicably in China,” the ministry said.
Many
foreigners in China say they have faced suspicion as the country
brought its own outbreak under control, only to see new cases brought
from other countries.
China has barred entry to most
foreigners, and the vast majority of imported cases of the disease have
come from Chinese nationals returning home.
In
Guangzhou, a hub for African traders, authorities said on Tuesday that
111 Africans had tested positive for the coronavirus, while a total of
4,553 Africans had undergone testing since April 4, state media
reported.
Several African residents said the black community was being unfairly targeted for stricter checks.
“If
they do this to all foreigners, then it’s not a problem, but it’s only
black people,” Soumana Toudou, a garment trader from Niger, told Reuters
by WhatsApp.
He said he was undergoing his second 14-day quarantine because the authorities did not believe he had completed his first.
Such decisions are made at the local level and Reuters could not independently confirm this.
The scrutiny from the authorities had triggered hostility from Chinese residents, one student said.
“The
selective testing has set the Guangzhou locals into panic, thinking
black people are carrying the virus,” he said. He declined to be
identified.
A
Communist Party social worker, speaking on condition of anonymity, told
Reuters on Monday that black people were specifically being made to
enter a period of quarantine.
Last week, authorities
announced that two neighbourhoods popular with Africans would be locked
down to curb the coronavirus after five Nigerians tested positive.
On
Monday, the U.S. consulate general in Guangzhou advised
African-Americans, or those who believe Chinese officials may suspect
them of having contact with African nationals, to avoid the city.
The
provincial foreign affairs office provided no immediate comment to
Reuters about complaints from Africans and embassies that Africans had
been unfairly targeted.
Engagement
China
has stepped up its engagement with Africa in recent years, with
state-owned companies building infrastructure and signing hundreds of
deals across the continent.
Guangzhou was home to
13,652 Africans in 2019 and about 351,000 Africans entered the city from
abroad last year, official figures show.
Videos on
social media in recent days showed what appeared to be Africans sleeping
on Guangzhou streets after being evicted from their apartments. Reuters
could not independently verify the footage.
Property
agents near Guangzhou’s Sanyuanli trading hub said such evictions of
foreigners, including Africans, had contributed to a glut of empty
apartments.
“For a white person, you can’t rent around
here now because of the virus, but you’ll be welcome again in a few
months,” said one agent, referring to when the pandemic passes. She
declined to give her name.
“But black people, no one will accept them.”
A spokeswoman for McDonald’s in China apologised on Tuesday after staff at a Guangzhou branch forced black customers to leave.
The
fast-food chain had temporarily closed the outlet while staff completed
“diversity and inclusion” training, spokeswoman Regina Hui said in a
statement.
The Chinese authorities now seem to be
taking a more conciliatory stance. On Tuesday, media showed hazmat-clad
personnel delivering food and flowers to Africans in home quarantine.
The
chairman of the African Union, Moussa Faki Mahamat, was receptive,
saying on Twitter on Monday he had spoken to Foreign Minister Wang Yi.
“He
reassured me of measures underway in Guangzhou to improve the situation
of Africans, in line with the strong and brotherly partnership between
Africa and China.”
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