Global Times

Zambia urged to probe murder of 3 Chinese

Western media misled Africans, created misunderst­anding: expert

- By Liu Caiyu and Zhao Juecheng

The Chinese Ambassador to Zambia made solemn representa­tions to the Zambian foreign ministry on Monday after three Chinese nationals were murdered in the capital Lusaka.

The three Chinese nationals from East China’s Jiangsu Province were murdered by three local Zambians who then set fire to the warehouse of a Chinese clothing company on Sunday, outraging the Chinese community in the African country, local sources revealed to the Global Times.

In a statement on its website published on Monday, the Embassy condemned the “appalling

and vicious act of violence.”

Ambassador Li Jie demanded the Zambian authority solve the case immediatel­y.

According to a preliminar­y investigat­ion by Zambian police, the suspects, two men and one woman, entered the warehouse and killed the victims before committing robbery, and then set a fire to destroy evidence.

Police have arrested two men on suspicion of murder and are searching for another fugitive, the Embassy said.

Chinese residents in Zambia reached by the Global Times on Monday said that the murders were committed by three Zambians pretending to be customers coming to buy goods at the warehouse of a Chinese clothing company.

Lu was in China when the incident took place and according to local sources, one of the victims was his wife. The other two were employees. The Chinese Embassy in Zambia and the Nantong foreign affairs department were trying to contact family members of the victims and assist them with visa applicatio­ns to Zambia.

In a statement on its website, the Embassy said it urged the Zambian authority to punish the suspects in accordance with laws and take effective measures to protect the lives and security of Chinese living in Zambia.

Some Chinese living in the country expressed concern over their own safety. Some locals have misunderst­ood epidemic measures adopted by some Chinese companies, they said.

Some reports by Western and local media and politician­s have stigmatize­d China and are affecting Africans’ ideas of China and Chinese people, Chinese nationals working in Zambia told the Global Times on Monday.

Since the COVID-19 hit Zambia in March, most Chinese-owned businesses either have shut down or are working at home, said a Chinese national surnamed Wu who run a barber shop in Lusaka.

Some imposed “closed-off management,” the resident said, “but this is interprete­d by locals as an invasion of freedom.”

False Western reports have generated a bad impression of Chinese, said Wang Xin, deputy head of the Overseas Chinese Associatio­n in Zambia. Those who thought the novel coronaviru­s originated in China were staying away from Chinese and this had induced conflict between Chinese and local Zambians, according to Wang.

Some Chinese living in Zambia also claimed that Lusaka Mayor Miles Sampa has been playing a role in provoking conflicts between Chinese and local Zambians with his allegedly frequent comments against Chinese.

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