Al Jazeera English aired a documentary about Chinese immigrants in Senegal yesterday, on the channel’s current affairs program The Witness. The documentary, called The Colony, was made by Brent Huffman and Zhou Xiaoli. It focuses on two Chinese families operating small businesses in Dakar, Senegal’s capital, and the Senegalese reaction to Chinese neighbours and Chinese competition. Huffman has a blog, which has some behind the scenes photography. In a press release about the documentary, he is quoted as saying:

“You can feel the anger in the air,” says Huffman, recalling the murder of a Chinese businessman by Africans. “There’s tension, like something terrible is going to happen, and the Senegalese won’t just stand by and let this happen forever.”



Youtube is inaccessible in China, so the video embedded above won’t display without first connecting to a VPN or proxy server.

 

Lebogang Rasethaba is a young South African filmmaker living in Beijing. Below is the first part of a film he shot in Beijing called Sino, about a co-incidental meeting between two Africans in Beijing, China. The film deals with issues such as the challenges of resettlement and the complexities that arise from the friction inherent in the interactions between Francophone and Anglophone Africans.

You can watch Part 2 of Sino here.

 

China’s embrace of Africa has produced some stunning statistics. The numbers look great across the board, from trade volumes to foreign investment to the growing popularity of Chinese ministerial junkets. But those numbers don’t tell the whole story. While money, goods and services are flowing back and forth at unprecedented levels, a deeper question persists: how well do Chinese and African people actually know each other? For some, the question may seem trivial. After all, if the checks cash, who cares.

Unfortunately, it’s unlikely that money alone will determine China’s longterm success in Africa. In fact, what they’ve accomplished over the past 5 years is really just the easy part. Throwing piles of cash around the continent is a sure way to buy companionship, but friendship and trust, especially in Africa, require more than just money.

Already, there have been hints of what’s to come if Beijing underestimates the importance of developing an effective soft-power agenda in Africa. Anti-Chinese policies introduced in Namibia earlier this year and rising hostility to Chinese immigrants in Angola are now but two points on a graph, but could quickly transform into a trend if left unattended. It will be critical for Beijing to help Africans and Chinese at every level of society get to know one another.

A model of what that kind of engagement looks like can be found in Cape Town, South Africa, in the offices Fahamu. This non-profit pan-African organization recently led a small group of African journalists on a trip to Beijing to learn more about China and the Chinese. Fahamu’s Emerging Powers Program Research Director, Sanusha Naidu, led the team on their visit to China where they met with students, intellectuals and other journalists. Naidu said that although the delegation was overwhelmed with China’s development and how much the country had achieved in such a short time, not all were convinced that China and Africa’s long term interests are aligned. ”There was a cautious optimism,” she said.

China still has time to ease those apprehensions, but it must get to work right away.

Listen to what else Sanusha Naidu had to say

China and Africa: Getting to Know Each Other

(Right click on the link and select save as to download the audio file.)

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