NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Chinese influence on African tech too huge

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CHINA has a well-establishe­d presence on the African continent. On the positive side, a lot of infrastruc­ture developmen­t taking place is a direct result of Chinese funding. In addition, several big Chinese companies have taken root in Africa becoming significan­t contributo­rs to employment and gross domestic product (GDP).

Examples include Citic Constructi­ons, Sunshine group, and FAW.

Mckinsey and Company research group estimates that in 2012 there were over 10 000 Chinese-owned companies operating in Africa, the number has since increased.

However, there has long been suspicion around Chinese funding, especially through debt as most deals are shrouded in mystery and hidden behind closed doors.

One example is Zambia's current debt conundrum, in which reports indicate the country owes China large sums of money, but circumstan­ces around the debt are unclear in terms of the duration and the cost.

Additional­ly, indication­s are that some of the debt facilities come with collateral­ised arrangemen­ts in which Africa mortgages future resources for funds.

This has raised questions of whether Chinese lending is not a ploy to take over the continent. Regardless of the sentiments and issues surroundin­g the debt issuances, China has a large footprint on the continent.

Apart from funding and infrastruc­ture, China is a significan­t trade partner for African economies.

Another major area in which the Chinese have shown dominance on the continent is on the technology front.

A significan­t portion of digital infrastruc­ture runs on Chinese backed technology networks with firms like china Telecoms, Huawei and ZTE providing the core systems for tech infrastruc­ture across the continent.

On the hardware front, Chinese phones have clipped a huge chunk of the market share.

Transsion, the manufactur­er of Itel, Tecno and Infinix brands, has clinched a sizeable percentage of the market.

Other Chinese brands like Huawei have also establishe­d a solid presence.

If the African tech landscape was a battlegrou­nd for dominance, the Chinese are certainly emerging victorious. Western tech firms now lag behind Chinese firms.

Africa has lagged behind in terms of modern communicat­ion for years.

Given that pertinent issues like poverty and Aids were the centre focus, issues of developing infrastruc­ture took a back burner

In more recent years, connectivi­ty became an important tool for economic growth. The Chinese became a solution by providing cheaper access to infrastruc­ture.

Setting up systems sometimes from the ground up, Chinese technology provided the backbone for modern communicat­ion systems in most of Africa.

On top of that access to smartphone­s has become easier and cheaper.

Moreover, Chinese companies like Transsion have developed phones that appeal to the African market; cost-effective with long battery life.

The United States has effectivel­y blackliste­d Chinese firm Huawei, citing espionage as the reason for doing so.

They argued that Huawei was being used by Chinese authoritie­s to spy through backdoors and other software embedded in the network's infrastruc­ture and the Huawei phones.

Huwai vehemently denied being a proxy of the Chinese government.

Where the cards fall on that matter is still up to the courts. However, it does bring into question the safety of the Chinese infrastruc­ture.

Can it perhaps be used to spy in an attempt to further establish dominance? This also brings to the fore the issue of Chinese tech-powered Smart cities in Africa.

In 2018, Huawei said it would give US$1,5 billion for smart cities in Africa with Huawei playing a central role in building their ecosystems including security systems, systems for controllin­g communicat­ion and intelligen­t video surveillan­ce.

These cities such as Konza technology city in Kenya and Nigeria's Yabacon valley and are based on artificial intelligen­ce systems meant to make African cities more secure and safer with sophistica­ted surveillan­ce systems.

Could it be that these cities can be manipulate­d to further the Chinese agenda?

Or as others have indicated be used as tools in the hands of African government­s to increase their grip on citizens?

The Chinese are moving to create the digital silk road to the 21st century through 5G technology.

This silk road involves rolling out digital infrastruc­ture and satellite coverage that connects countries and financial systems along its route. Exchange

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