African migrants in China comprise at least two percent of Guangzhou’s 13 million residents but still face difficulties.
Dave Tacon
Al-Jazeera - 26 Sep 2014
Guangzhou, China - African migrants have been arriving
in Guangzhou, China’s third largest city ever since the Chinese economic
boom began in the late 1990s.
Current estimates put their
numbers anywhere from 20,000 to 200,000. The latter figure would place
their population at almost two percent of Guangzhou’s 13 million
residents. In any event, Guangzhou's Africans constitute Asia's largest
African community. The majority of them reside in a 10 square kilometre
area in the central districts of Yuexiu and Baiyun locally known as
'Chocolate City'.
Many of Guangzhou’s Africans are short term residents who arrive by
plane on 30 day tourist visas with little more than the clothes on their
backs and as much Chinese yuan as they and their families can cobble
together. Their plan is to purchase cheap goods to sell back home, which
may be anywhere from Lagos, Nigeria, to Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Abubakkar
Barrie, 32, an MBA student from Sierra Leone, manages other traders'
shipping by selling space in shipping containers. "I came to China
because it is the centre of international business," he says.
Although
he is excited by the opportunities available in Guangzhou, Barrie
admits that there are cultural barriers for Africans in Guangzhou.
"Although I work with many Chinese, I have never once been invited to
their homes."
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