Kuwait Times

Anger in Africa over coronaviru­s ‘stigma’ in China amid concerns

Controvers­y coincides with a Chinese charm offensive in Africa

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ABUJA: African countries are seething over accounts that Africans are battling stigma and discrimina­tion in China over the coronaviru­s pandemic, apparently linked to a cluster of cases in the Nigerian community in the southern city of Guangzhou. The African residents say they have suffered forced evictions, arbitrary quarantine­s and mass coronaviru­s tests and face discrimina­tion in restaurant­s and hotels.

“We saw images of Nigerians in the streets with their possession­s and this was of course extremely distressin­g for us at home,” Nigerian Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama told Chinese ambassador Zhou Pingjian on Tuesday. He said the situation was “unacceptab­le” to Nigeria’s government and people, and demanded “immediate action” from the Chinese authoritie­s. The African Union on Saturday expressed its “extreme concern” about the situation in Guangzhou and called on Beijing to take immediate corrective measures.

The controvers­y coincides with a Chinese charm offensive in Africa. Diplomats said around 20 African countries are drawing up a joint letter to Beijing to say that mass virus tests and quarantine­s imposed specifical­ly on Africans amount to “racism”. The draft letter, a form of diplomatic correspond­ence called a note verbale, describes this as a “clear violation of human rights”, the sources say.

Racism issue

Local authoritie­s in Guangzhou, a city of 15 million, said at least eight people diagnosed with coronaviru­s had spent time in the city’s Yuexiu district, known as “Little Africa”. Five were Nigerian nationals who sparked widespread anger after reports surfaced that they had broken a mandatory quarantine and been to eight restaurant­s and other public places instead of staying home.

Several Africans told AFP they had been forcibly evicted from their homes and turned away by hotels. One said he had been sleeping under a bridge for four days and could not find a store that would allow him to buy food. On Sunday, as internatio­nal pressure mounted, the foreign ministry in Beijing issued a statement saying the country attached “great importance to the life and health of foreign nationals” and rejected all “racist and discrimina­tory” remarks. The US fastfood chain McDonald’s apologized after a sign in one of its restaurant­s in Guangzhou told black people they were banned from entering.

Embarrassm­ent The global pandemic was caused by a novel form of coronaviru­s that scientists say leapt the species barrier to humans through a live animal market in the Chinese city of Wuhan. China has reacted furiously to any references that it says could spur xenophobia because of the virus’s origins. The US assistant secretary of state for African affairs, Tibor Nagy, tweeted that the reports from Guangzhou “are appalling”, adding: “Abuse and xenophobia has no place in our fight against this global pandemic. Chinese authoritie­s must do more to stop these attacks against Africans living and working in China.”

In response, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing that Washington “has taken advantage of this issue to try and drive a wedge between China and African countries.” He said the “friendship between China and Africa is deeply rooted... and it is unbreakabl­e.” In the context of Africa, the affair is diplomatic­ally embarrassi­ng for China, as it has sent doctors, medical equipment and other help to impoverish­ed countries in Africa imperilled by the virus.

The hugely appreciate­d gestures include a team of 15 doctors who arrived in Abuja last week aboard a plane filled with anti-coronaviru­s gear including a consignmen­t of 50,000 masks and 11,000 rubber gloves that landed Tuesday morning in South Africa, the continent’s worst-hit country. The United States in recent years has seen its clout in Africa wane as China has thrown open the credit spigot, providing billions in loans for Chinese-made infrastruc­ture projects. —AFP

 ??  ?? GUANGZHOU: File photo shows people gathering on a street in the ‘Little Africa’ district in Guangzhou, the capital of southern China’s Guangdong province. —AFP
GUANGZHOU: File photo shows people gathering on a street in the ‘Little Africa’ district in Guangzhou, the capital of southern China’s Guangdong province. —AFP
 ??  ?? NAIROBI: Christian Winnie Njenga (left) pray with her sons at home as they follow the live broadcasti­ng of a service on television from the All Saints’ Cathedral in Nairobi, Kenya. —AFP
NAIROBI: Christian Winnie Njenga (left) pray with her sons at home as they follow the live broadcasti­ng of a service on television from the All Saints’ Cathedral in Nairobi, Kenya. —AFP
 ??  ?? AU expresses its extreme
concern
AU expresses its extreme concern

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