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| | #21 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Windhoek
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| What more needs to happen for our workers to stand up to being trated as modern-day slaves and get a fair deal? What else needs to happen for the authorities to launch raids and prosecute the offending organisations and drag them to the courts? This study confirms what we all know: China is exploiting us Africans to the hilt at the cost of our workers and our established local, law-abiding companies, and the damage is going to come and haunt us in the future. It is a one-way street, my friends, and our national interest is at stake here. Why are the Chinese companies getting away with this neo-colonialist and racist attitude and behaviour? Why can they pay our workers next to nothing and yet still get most - if not all - the construction contracts? My suspicion - and that of many other commentators and analysts - is that these conmpanies are essentially buying the protection of the state and public institutions by cutting deals with our politicans and senior civil servants in return for being left alone. You know, all the Mr. 10% running around town? What do they do? They keep the spotlight of the authorities away from the activities of these companie and their activities. How else can you explain them getting away day-after-day with exploiting our workers? Where is the Ministry of Labour and the labour inspectors that are so quick to pounce on white-owned companies where workers feal mistreated? Where is the Government's indignation at our people being treated like lesser human beings? Why the inaction and silence? Our governments are failing to protect our citizens from being exploited by a country that has little else but its own self-interest at heart. China is not acting benevolently. It is acting like a predator - agressively - and we are paying the price for it. The silence by African governments speak volumes, and I am ashamed of their inability to confront this issue head-on, with the same moral and economic resolve that they confronted colonialism in the past. Their silence makes them complicit in the suffering of our people. What is happening is so transparent and in our face that they even raise their flags over our towns and cities, sort of as thes estatement of a conquering force. And we sit back and let them walk all over us. It is time to turn the table and tell these Chinese companies: Respect our laws and working practices, pay our people living wages, respect our local expertise, and compete honorably. If you do that you are welcome to participate in the development of our nation. If you don't, go ply your dirty trade somewhere else. What are my hopes that this will happen? Very small indeed. China will walk all over us, send millions of its people to settle on our continent, ravage our natural resource base, build a couple of roads, bridges and schools to appease the local tritics and by the time we wake up the next generation of Africans will have become "enslaved.
__________________ "Nothing is complete and thus nothing is exempt from criticism." - James Luther Adams: Last edited by Comrade_007; 28th June 2009 at 10:41 AM. |
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| | #22 |
| Senior Member | Niger's president wins referendum on extending mandate English_Xinhua 2009-08-08 00:28:59 LOME, Aug. 7 (Xinhua) -- Niger's President Mamadou Tandja has won the referendum on extending his mandate, the electoral commission said on Friday, according to news reaching here. Niger, a landlocked country in Western Africa, borders Nigeria and Benin to the south, Burkina Faso and Mali to the west, Algeria and Libya to the north and Chad to the east. It is one of the poorest and least developed countries in the world, with over 80 percent of its territory covered by the Saharadesert. The country's economy is concentrated around subsistence and some export agriculture. On the other hand ...... On Nov. 9, 2007, the government of Niger granted Société des Mines d'Azelik (SOMINA) a mining license for the Azelik uranium deposit. SOMINA was formed on June 5, 2007, by the state of Niger and its Chinese partners. On June 19, 2007, the company applied for a mining license for the Azelik uranium deposit. The application was accompanied by an environmental impact study which was approved in July 2007, and a technical-economical feasibility study. The license was granted, after the latter study had been modified, as requested by the authorities. (Tamtaminfo Nov. 9, 2007) Sinohydro Corp. , China's leading hydraulic construction contractor announced it has secured a 140 million U.S. dollar uranium mine construction deal in Niger with China Nuclear International Uranium Corp. (SinoUranium). The contract calls for building a uranium mine with annual output of 600,000 tons, a coal-fired power plant and a hydrometallurgy plant in the African country, Sinohydro said in a statement on its website. The construction will last 900 days. (People's Daily Online Apr. 8, 2008) Chinese uranium mining interests to revamp Niger's power supply Niger government has sealed a deal with China to upgrade the country's power supplies. Niger which sources most of its power from Nigeria had several black outs since January due to systems collapse in Nigeria. In the deal aimed at improving Niger's power supplies, China - which is currently the main investor in uranium mining in the country - will transfer electrical power units to Niger. Niger's head of power plant in capital Niamey Mr Hamidu Mamudu, said the new equipment would help increase production of electric power by about 30% for the Niamey region saying equipment will also increase power output between 50 and 60 megawatts. (afrol News, 7 July, 2008) Battle in a Poor Land for Riches Beneath the Soil Niger’s northern desert caps one of the world’s largest deposits of uranium, and demand for it has surged as global warming has increased interest in nuclear power. Growing economies like China and India are scouring the globe for the crumbly ore known as yellowcake. A French mining company is building the world’s largest uranium mine in northern Niger, and a Chinese state company is building another mine nearby. Uranium could infuse Niger with enough cash to catapult it out of the kind of poverty that causes one in five Niger children to die before turning 5. (NEW YORK TIMES INTERNATIONAL FEED Monday, December 15, 2008) |
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| | #23 | ||||
| Senior Member | As far as China goes we don't exist anymore. Check this story in The Namibian out:
__________________ Is it not careless to become too local when there are four hundred billion stars in our galaxy alone - Archie R. Ammons | ||||
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| | #24 | ||||
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Windhoek
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| Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has announced Beijing will loan African nations $10-billion at favorable rates during the next three years. Mr. Wen made the pledge at a China/Africa investment conference underway in Egypt.
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| | #25 | ||||
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Windhoek
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| China continues its aggressive pursuit of Africa’s resources
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| | #26 | ||||
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Windhoek
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| China and India compete to share Africa
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| | #27 | ||||
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Windhoek
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| | #28 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Windhoek
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| George Ayittey, the Ghanaian-born economics professor at American University and libertarian argues that China's increased engagement with Africa has impeded the continent's halting steps towards democratic accountability and better governance, leading to neo-colonialism. He asserts that African countries receiving Chinese aid have little incentive to improve governance: "China's engagement with Africa should be a boon. Its overall trade with Africa rose from $10.6 billion in 2000 to $75.5 billion in 2008, propelling Africa's growth rate to 5.8% in 2008, its best performance since 1974. China is now Africa's second-largest trading partner after the United States, importing a third of its crude oil from Africa. Further, Africa needs the investment, in particular, to rebuild its decrepit infrastructure. A November 2009 World Bank Report states: 'The poor state of infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa — its electricity, water, roads and information and communications technology (ICT) — cuts national economic growth by two percentage points every year and reduces productivity by as much as 40 percent.' To close the infrastructure gap, an annual spending of $93 billion would be required. Thus, Chinese investment in Africa's infrastructure should be most welcome. But China's engagement is increasingly being seen as odious, predatory and brutish. The initial enthusiasm that greeted Chinese investments in Africa has now cooled." Dr. Ayittey doesn't like how the Chinese do business: "The nature of China's contracts is most objectionable. They are secured through outright bribery by building presidential palaces (Namibia, Sudan and Zimbabwe) and sports stadiums (Democratic Republic of Congo and Guinea). Namibian prosecutors are investigating allegations of bribery and kickbacks on government contracts with China to supply Namibia with scanners at security checkpoints. Nuctech, the Beijing-based manufacturer and headed until 2008 by the son of Hu Jintao, China's president, is accused of paying $4.2 million in kickbacks to a Namibian front company (New York Times, July 31st 2009, p. A4). Another investigation involves a Chinese contract to build a key railroad link. Most alarming, the deals are opaque and on barter terms dictated by China. For example, in exchange for oil exploration slots, China will rebuild Nigeria's dilapidated railway system. But China will supply nearly all the equipment and technical personnel at prices determined by itself. There is no protection against overcharging or cost overruns. As with other projects in Africa, China will supply most of the workers. The potential for exploitation and plunder of Africa's resources is enormous in such contracts, leading irate African commentators to denounce what they see as 'chopsticks mercantilism'. With chopsticks dexterity, China can pick off mineral dumplings with relish in Africa, all to its advantage." He zeroes in on the impact on local industries and local governance: "Further, China's engagement has devastated local industries in Lesotho, Nigeria and Zambia. In Nigeria, the influx of Chinese products has destroyed Kano's manufacturing sector. In 1982, 500 factories churned out textile products in Kano, but fewer than 100 remain operational today, most at far less than full capacity. In South Africa, the textile union says some 100,000 jobs have been lost as Chinese synthetic fabrics replace cotton prints in street markets across Africa.....More troubling, China's increased engagement with Africa has impeded the continent's halting steps towards democratic accountability and better governance. The West has made its aid conditional on progress on these fronts. But since China attaches no such conditions, African countries receiving Chinese aid have little incentive to improve governance. Indeed in 2003, when the IMF suspended $2 billion in aid to Angola, citing rampant corruption, China came to the rescue with a $2 billion oil deal." He also accuses the Chinese of trying to colonize Africa by a stealth settlement policy: "The claim that China's intentions in Africa are noble is fatuous. Its real intentions are well known: to elbow out all foreign companies and gain access to Africa's resources at cheap prices; canvas for African votes at the UN in its quest for global hegemony; isolate Taiwan; and seek new markets for Chinese manufactures as European markets become saturated with Chinese goods. Less well known is its quest for African land to dump its surplus population. As a condition for Chinese aid, African states must accept large numbers of Chinese experts and workers as part of their investment packages. Chinese communes are springing up across Africa. In Namibia, the number of Chinese expatriates has reached 40,000, with 100,000 in Zambia and 120,000 in Nigeria. China even has a secret plan, called the ChongqingExperiment, to resettle 12m of its farmers in Africa. As Rene N'Guetta Kouassi, the head of the African Union's economic affairs department, warned: 'Africa must not jump blindly from one type of neo-colonialism into Chinese-style neo-colonialism' (AFP, September 30th 2009)." Booker Rising |
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| | #29 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Windhoek
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| So far, media coverage of China’s involvement in Africa has mostly been about investment. Stories of Chinese engineers in hard hats standing by roads up mountains in Ethiopia. Stories of Chinese farmers moving to Zambia. But, in a push to extent its economic reach, China is now making a very real effort to export its culture to the world’s poorest continent. Last year the Asian giant overtook the U.S. as Africa’s top trading partner, confirming to the West that it has a real battle on its hands to maintain its influence over African nations. But, while China’s economic influence is now mighty and its cheap goods can be bought everywhere from Lagos to tiny tribal villages in remotest Ethiopia, Africans, especially young ones, still admire and try to copy U.S. culture. Middle class teenagers in Nairobi dress like suburban kids from Atlanta, posters of Obama adorn minibus windows in Kinshasa, American hip-hop is everywhere. China now seems to have realised this. In Addis Ababa, China and Ethiopia signed an agreement to work on a “cultural exchange program” from 2010 to 2013. Ethiopia’s state news agency said the countries will dispatch “art troupes, artists, writers and art exhibitions” to each other. It will be interesting to see how mutual the traffic is. And it’s not just China trying to use culture to secure access to a continent overflowing with mineral resources and a largely untapped consumer market of nearly 1 billion people with more money in their pockets each year. Addis Ababa is host to Chinese, Indian and even Turkish schools where Ethiopian children must sing the national anthems of those countries every morning, where they learn their languages, their dances, their songs, their particular set of manners. And where they learn a foreign history alongside their own. Such schools and “cultural exchange programs” are mushrooming all over the continent as the war for influence over African countries heats up. Similar schools from the European powers have, of course, existed for years, educating and, sometimes indoctrinating, Africa’s elite. But the British, the French, the Germans and the Spanish are losing ground to the world’s emerging powers. So how will this all play out? What will the impact of these new cultural imports be on the individual cultures of African countries, arguably still the most unique and preserved in the world? Is this really just imperialism version 2.0? Africa led by the West has not been given the opportunity to become self sufficient. Post independence colonization has robbed us of our identity, self worth, values, diaspora, tradition and culture. Any alternative is better than the present sad state of Africa where nations in most cases churn out corrupt leaders that rush to rape the continent to death while their puppet masters keeping the loot. “Corruption”, I say, is not an African word. China is the next Super Power that is not overtly bothered with holding Africa back, rather it’s focus is on keeping the momentum of it’s impressive economic growth fuelled by African resources. Africa must learn that the Chinese did this miracle the Chinese way and not the way of America or Europe… Though our youths are in awe of the urban American culture ie new global culture, they are die hard fanatics of Chinese and Indian movies. I constantly surprise my Indian and Chinese friends in the UK by naming their most famous film stars. I grew up watching films like enter the dragon, snake in the monkey shadow, Amar, Akuba and Tony, The Promise, burning train et al. The rich African Culture is similar to the Chinese one, where they are both male dominated, authoritative, spiritual, historical, respect for elders, children raised by the village and not the nuclear family, live off natural food not processed “food” and many more. Africa will do a lot of business with China but this time we will negotiate from a postition of strength, as we are the last virgin at the party. No more twenty slaves for one mirror…Now it is one mirror for one mirror, period! Oh it will play out well. China does not have colonial history with Africa, China stood on the side of African Liberation movements, when United States didn’t. African and Chines economic relations will play out well, and is the most positive aspect of this Chines surge toward Africa. China needs africa’s unexploited vast resources to power up its growing economy, and african states want investments and capital to develope their economies. On the cultural aspect, besides Chines Cusine & action packed movies, there is’t much cultural influence china can have over Africans. For style and cultural influences Africans look toward the United States.That is the fact. Its a very interesting question. I hail from Mombasa and in the Museum You will find Chinese porcelain from [If my Memory's Museum serves me right] from the c16th. So China has not come out of absolutely nowhere though we had a very long Hiatus before the recent Hyper Growth Re Emergence. The Finger Print Evidence resides in the Trade Hyper Growth Curve and the fact that Africa is providing the Fuel for the Chinese Locomotive. Today You will find all kinds of African Traders making their way back and forth from China. Look at the number of Airline Frequencies between Africa and China compared to just Ten Years Ago. Furthermore, the Chinese and African History is a shared One and not an Imperial One. This gives China a singular Advantage. The Cultural exchange is set to deepen and broaden. The Flow of Chinese to Africa and Africans to China will accelerate this late cycle Phenomenon. I have read there is a Chocolate City within a City in many Chinese Cities. Well the same applies here in Africa. The Ubiquity of Western TV and Cinema is the Challenge but the World is as Flat as a Pancake now and the Proliferation of the Internet and Delivery Channels surely means that the Exchange of African and Chinese Culture and Understanding will soon inflect at a speed and Velocity just as quick as the Trade Curve. And I do feel the Chinese are at Ground Level whereas many from the Western World are seeing Africa from behind an Air Conditioned Car or Office. The major threat to Africa is Islam and backward evangelist US exports (to Uganda), not the Chinese economy. africa is a consuming continent, we africans must ask ourselves this question .what are african nations producing or manufacturing ? what is job improvements in afarica? plz !plz!! plz!1! africa is not a dumping ground.china is worst esperience africa will have in future because even in nigeria all the small and medium scale industries have folded up.because of cheap and low and fake goods imported from china.no human right value in china.plz GOD give africans visions and learned leaders and removed from us those selfish and wicked ones that is pundering us day by day. Posted by amara God forbid! Africans are displaying the servility and inertia that has led us to where we are today. Africa can do business with any and everybody, but one thing is clear; there is no such thing as a free lunch. Chinese have more than a billion people which they are unleashing on the rest of the world. These guys want to subdue the world and they do not respect human rights. They have no mechanism for recourse except the Chinese communist party. Africans should shudder at the thought of having a tight embrace with this dragon. but no! “lets see what they bring to the table!!” What table? The table you will be sacrificed on one day. Just like at the Berlin conference when Africa was shared between western powers. After they had embraced them too closely, drinking their whiskey, selling their brothers, giving them land, all in the name of seeing what they would bring to that proverbial table. Only to discover that Africa was what was for lunch. Strange how history repeats itself. Only a fall does the same thing over and over expecting a different result. Posted by njemnu While China stood on the side of African Liberation, China saw thr golden opportunity in Africa. While the China and the African states seem to have a dynamic relationship now, let’s see 20 – 30 years down the road. Remember, there’s a price to pay for everything! The US is short-sighted indeed when it fails to recognize the great potential in Africa and the ultimate benefit that can be realised from increased active trade between the two regions. Posted by jvwh3b Well, well , well, for those who see China as the promised one, pls do you research. China is in a quest to conquer the world. Where best to start than the wall that has toppled itself through corruption and inefficiency – Africa! A continent with vast but unguarded natural recourses. I live in Europe and where as a black person i can say that most western Europeans are racist, Chinese however go several notches beyond. Theirs is a government with no respect for her citizen, now using her citizen and cheap goods to snare sitting ducks – African countries. Most Chinese believe that Africans are barbarians anyway. Europeans will marry black, ditto Americans. Chinese however see black as leprous. If I were one of these African leaders, I’ll say, let stick with the enemy we know. Not these sneaky cheap Chinese! Posted by lebon Well, well , well, for those who see China as the promised one, pls do your research. China is in a quest to conquer the world. Where best to start than the wall that has toppled itself through corruption and inefficiency – Africa! A continent with vast but unguarded natural recourses. I live in Europe and where as a black person i can say that most western Europeans are racist, Chinese however go several notches beyond. Theirs is a government with no respect for her citizen, now using her citizen and cheap goods to snare sitting ducks – African countries. Most Chinese believe that Africans are barbarians anyway. Europeans will marry black, ditto Americans. Chinese however see black as leprous. If I were one of these African leaders, I’ll say, let stick with the enemy we know. Not these sneaky cheap Chinese! Posted by lebon Asksimba.com is looking for columnists to write on issues relating to Africa or other topic’s, You don’t need to be a journalist, anyone is welcome, register at http://asksimba.com/article/ Posted by asksimba Thanks to all my African Brothers and Sisters who express their ideas here, I must say the days of fouling African is over, we are ready anyone who is willing to do a business with us as long they are counter partnering with us to do business and not compromising our natural resources. We need to take stand and choice who is our real friends and have the best interest of our, free food’s day is over; we now need the seeds to plant of our foods and machines to produce the goods. Africa is in the stage where America ones where, “The industrial revolution” and we need all the help we can get from America, Europe, Middle East, Asia. We Africans no longer satisfied with the worlds hand out. Africa needs a Marshall Plan what America did for Europe in June 5, 1947 See link “ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Pl an “ this is the only way Africa’s mind an harts could be won by America and allies, anything less, would be insult to Africa and Chine’s new relationship with Africa should not be under minded or anybody who wants to do business with. Posted by Africantimes Thanks to all my African Brothers and Sisters who express their ideas here, I must say the days of fouling African is over, we are ready anyone who is willing to do a business with us as long they are counter partnering with us to do business and not compromising our natural resources. We need to take stand and choice who is our real friends and have the best interest of our continent. The free food’s day is over; we now need the seeds to plant of our foods and machines to produce the goods. Africa is in the stage where America ones where in “The industrial revolution era”. We need all the help we can get from America, Europe, Middle East, and Asia. We Africans no longer satisfied with the worlds hand out and left over. Africa needs a Marshall Plan, what America did for Europe in June 5, 1947 See link “ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Pl an “ This is the only way Africa’s mind an harts could be won by Americans and allies, anything less, would be insult to Africa. Furthermore, Chine’s new relationship with Africa should not be under minded. Posted by Africantimes I tell you that Chinese has been in Africa 80 years before the coming of the west.The came only to trade and to intermedddle with the internal polotics. When you talk about exchage of arm to resources people should know that there is a russian man arrested somewhere in asia,whom america and eruopean goverment has use to deliver arms to all government who opposit them in the world to fuel war for the past 50years. People should do their reasearch on former Lome agreement with the west africa had with them what has it benefited us.people should ask the new EPA agreement that is been going on by the europeans who are sellling it to africa on a regional basis what is it going to benefit africa. WE Posted by ifydee I tell you that Chinese has been in Africa 80 years before the coming of the west.The came only to trade and to intermedddle with the internal polotics. When you talk about exchage of arm to resources people should know that there is a russian man arrested somewhere in asia,whom america and eruopean goverment has use to deliver arms to all government who opposit them in the world to fuel war for the past 50years. People should do their reasearch on former Lome agreement with the west africa had with them what has it benefited us.people should ask the new EPA agreement that is been going on by the europeans who are sellling it to africa on a regional basis what is it going to benefit africa. WE NEED UNITED STATE OF AFRICA which one ghanaia president promoted long time ago,which EU copied and is benefiting from it now. My little secrect i will let any one who cares to know is that chinese will be in africa doing they trade of building roads,hosipital etc,for us which will help africa in the long run while the west will be busy fuelling wars which chinese will be seen been around supporting whatever dictator that the west is producing basical on development check Zimbabwe what the west to them and what the chinese came in an was doing. One thing china is good at is that where the west causes problem they comes in,which the west dont like.this is check mate. Posted by ifydee | Report as abusive The Chinese are a catalyst for growth in some places and loss in others. e.g The Nigerian Local Shoe industry disappeared because shoes from china are half as cheap. Africans should not bank on this relationship as the all-in-all. What happens if the Chinese bubble bursts? Most african-chinese cakes would remain half-baked – a risk too ugly for either parties. Eventually, china’s edge on manufacturing/exporting(their source of growth) will disppear to cheaper places e.g. Vietnam and eventually Africa. Thus they are preparing to own the african companies that will eventually take their place. If you are African this is a time to build relationship with both the West and East to take advantage of this future benefit. Solonzo The Great. Posted by Solonzo @Mixtapebox, I agree with you. @ Lebon, I strongly agree with you. I happen to also have some experience with the Chinese, Americans and the Europeans. As far as culture is concerned, I don’t see China getting anywhere in Africa. We trade with them, yes! History is against the West, but the Chinese are far more crafty to influence Africans. I have some reason to believe that the present boom in China-Africa trade will serve China’s selfish interest. Culture aside, unlike other people, Chinese lack the human passion of ‘feeling for someone’. In line with economies, compare the number of Chinese humanitarian organizations in Africa with those from the West to picture this. I go to some University in North America where Chinese are almost the majority(Toronto), but they are almost in-existent socially. The Chinese are quite insensitive, this is not a good thing socially. A Chinese is not “racist” but will not want anything to do with Africans in the first place.For instance, after two years in the same team, a Chinese will asks you what your name ‘was?’! These days, like Lebon implied, you can easily get along with Europeans and Americans. These doesn’t happen with the Chinese! I feel like they still hold far nasty stereotypes about Africans, as in, a Chinese will always take the nearest route on meeting an African on a lonely street. These are factors that influence the transfer of culture. Arabs did not behave like that or they will not have succeeded like they did. Another reason is English in Africa, considering the role of a language in establishing culture. I don’t see either Mandarin or Cantonese overtaking English in Africa soon. I find African-Americans as part of the American influence amongst the African youth. people copy people whom they identify with. Besides trade, Chinese will always have themselves for themselves. Posted by meja Africafiles.org |
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