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China's
empire-builders sweep up African riches
RW Johnson,
Sunday Times (UK)
July 16, 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2271971,00.html
IN the past
seven months, Chinese dealers have bought 30 tons of ivory from
Zimbabwe's Parks and Wildlife Management Authority —
representing the tusks of some 2,250 elephants.
"It's
an incredibly profitable trade," said one game ranger. "They've
not only run the parks' stockpile right down, but elephants
are now being poached across the border from Botswana and other
neighbouring countries to fulfil the demand, which seems to be bottomless."
The purchases
are typical of China's rapacious scramble for Africa, in which
oil, minerals and all manner of raw materials are being eagerly
snapped up. Opportunities for deal-making are swiftly exploited,
sometimes with detrimental effects on the continent.
Under the Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species, which controls the
world's ivory trade, President Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe
has a special concession that allows it to sell lots worth £270
or less. This loophole has allowed the burgeoning trade to develop.
Chinese money is now fuelling widespread poaching. Two months ago
Zimbabwe police caught Chinese dealers with seven tons of ivory,
of which four tons came from illegal sources.
"They
deliberately mix legal and illegal stuff together as a disguise,"
the ranger said. "Of course, the case hasn't come to
court and probably it never will, given President Mugabe's
'look east' policy and his passionate enthusiasm for
all things Chinese."
In recent
months Mugabe has been exhorting Zimbabweans to learn Mandarin and
take up Chinese cuisine. Beijing's voracious appetite for
raw materials to sustain a fast-growing economy has seen Chinese
trade and investment pouring into Africa in the past few years.
In 2003 the total China-Africa trade was £6.6 billion. By
2005 it had reached £22 billion.
Human rights
activists are appalled at the way Beijing has ignored scruples that
have made many western investors wary of dealing with regimes like
those of Zimbabwe and Sudan. "Wherever there are resources
the Chinese are going to go there," says Peter Takirambudde,
head of the Africa division of Human Rights Watch. "They see
no evil. They hear no evil. That's very bad for Africans."
Indeed, the
Chinese go out of their way to ingratiate themselves with dictators
such as Mugabe, donating the blue tiles that adorn his new £7m
palace in Harare. They have also decided to foot the bill for a
large Namibian presidential palace in Windhoek.
The rhetoric
of the China-Africa relationship is different, with China claiming
to be the champion of all Third World countries, offering them a
new relationship that will free them from their dependence on the
northern powers of the G8.
They are adept
at high-profile gestures such as a donation of four endangered white
Siberian tigers to Zimbabwe for a captive breeding programme.
They have also
succeeded in getting African states to accept large numbers of Chinese
experts and workers as part of their investment packages: 28 "Baoding
villages" have been established, each housing up to 2,000
Chinese workers, in various parts of Africa.
In Nigeria,
a Chinese-language newspaper now serves 50,000 immigrants. At no
stage in Britain's colonisation of Nigeria did the British
numbers reach such a figure. As one opposition figure in Zimbabwe
observed: "If the British were our masters yesterday, the
Chinese have come and taken their place."
At grassroots
this is highly unpopular. Chinese goods sent to Africa are notorious
for their poor quality. None of a shipment of 50 buses to Zimbabwe
is still working and an order for 250 more has been suspended.
Of three MA60
passenger jets the Chinese sent to Mugabe, one has never managed
to fly, one had to make an emergency landing at Victoria Falls,
injuring many passengers, and the third caught fire on take-off
in Harare last week. All are now grounded.
Moreover, as
Eldred Masunungure, professor of political science at Harare University,
puts it: "The resentment of the Chinese is not only widespread,
it's deeply rooted."
The Chinese
are generally viewed as loud, uncouth, prone to spitting and openly
derogatory towards Africans. Worse, the copper mines they have opened
up in Zambia and Zimbabwe are renowned for low wages, ferocious
labour discipline and a sky-high accident rate. "That's
how they run things at home, after all — and on top of that,
they despise blacks," said one Zimbabwean engineer.
As with the
ivory traders, many Chinese technical experts develop other ways
of making money. In Harare, some are already a force in the drugs
trade. In Botswana, Chinese workers brought in by construction companies
now own hundreds of shops in the capital, Gaborone. Most worrying
of all, however, is the way Chinese imports have largely wiped out
budding African industries.
Professor Laurence
Schlemmer of Witwatersrand University's business school in
Johannesburg, said: "In effect, China is forcing Africa back
into the role of raw material suppliers — undermining its
textile industry and importing raw cotton instead."
Such concerns
were raised with President Hu Jintao, who recently toured Africa.
But for the moment the tidal wave of Chinese money is carrying all
before it. "The Chinese are getting away with claiming that
they aren't like the other colonialists, but Africans aren't
fools," a South African economist commented. "The Chinese
are far more ruthless than the Brits ever were."
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