HONG
KONG (AFP) – From a windowless room in a
dilapidated Hong Kong high-rise, Ali Diallo sells Chinese electronics to
retailers across Africa. The modest surroundings belie the multi-million dollar
business the West African trader has built in the five years since he moved to
the city.
The
39-year-old from Guinea is part of a growing number of African entrepreneurs
thriving in southern China, as trade between the world’s second-largest economy
and fastest-growing continent soars.
Sitting in a
small room cluttered with cardboard boxes destined for Nigeria, Diallo welcomes
the latest delivery of Chinese-made mobile phones to his office in Chungking
Mansions — a bustling labyrinth better known for budget hotels and no-frills
restaurants.
The building
is also the go-to place in Hong Kong for African buyers in search of cheap
electronics, with phones selling from around $8 each.
“In China
there are opportunities for people who can start from scratch and build up
their own business. Obviously not in one day but through hard work and
networking you can do it,” says the trader, whose company sees an annual
turnover of $11 million a year through the sale of phones and tablets alone.
Trade
between China and Africa hit new highs of nearly $200 billion last year, according
to official Chinese data, driven by Chinese industry’s appetite for African raw
materials.
The African
traders in southern China are the flipside of this deepening relationship.
Entrepreneurs like Diallo have made Chungking Mansions one of the most
important passageways for Chinese gadgets air-freighted to Africa.
According to
Gordon Mathews, professor of anthropology at the Chinese University of Hong
Kong, up to a fifth of all mobiles in Africa have passed through the building’s
corridors in recent years.
But while
this 17-storey hive is the storefront, the engines behind this trade lie in the
industrial heartland of neighbouring Guangdong province in southern China.
This mecca
for low-cost manufacturing has drawn entrepreneurs from across Africa, creating
one of the largest black communities in Asia.
A pivotal
role
In the
provincial capital Guangzhou, at least 20,000 Africans live in the city,
research from local Sun Yat-sen University shows.
Though their
number is a fraction of the million Chinese now living in Africa, these
migrants are playing a pivotal role in their new home.
“Traders bring
with them vast skills and capital, supporting large amounts of Chinese
manufacturers… If all the African traders were to vanish it would have an
enormous effect on the south China economy and business people realise this
rather strongly,” says Mathews.
Many traders
work in and around a downtown neighbourhood dubbed “Little Africa”, or more
insensitively “Chocolate City” by the local media. Along its winding central
alley, a restaurant serves Tilapia with fufu — a staple Congolese meal of fried
fish and cassava — as well as traditional Chinese fried rice and steamed fish.
A few
kilometres away at Canaan Export Clothes Trading Centre, a vast complex where
Igbo is spoken as often as the local Cantonese language, Lamine Ibrahim loads
thousands of jeans into bags destined for Africa.
He is one of
several hundred Africans who has forged a deeper connection to the city by
marrying a local Chinese woman — a relationship founded on love but also
economic prudence.
“For
(communication) with the Chinese people… she can do. I buy my car, she is
there, I open my own factory, she is there. So if I have no wife it’s not
easy,” says the Muslim trader from Guinea in broken English.
Five months
ago Ibrahim and his wife Choi Zoung-mai — renamed Maryam Barry after converting
to Islam — opened their first factory hiring 43 Chinese workers. With this
latest investment they hope to secure a bright future for their four-year-old
son who speaks fluent Mandarin as well as French, English and Fula.
Prejudices
can run high
While there
are several success stories, not all African entrepreneurs make it in China —
for some rising costs and intense competition make it difficult to stay afloat.
But this migrant community, which began forming in Guangzhou in the 1990s, has
built a network of groups to support each other’s ambitions.
This is
vividly apparent in the handful of African Pentecostal churches that have
sprung up across the city. Tucked away on the ninth floor of a building behind
Guangzhou railway station, 150 worshippers crowd into Royal Victory Church.
“Our prayer
is that you will prosper,” the pastor preaches to cries of agreement from a
mostly male congregation drawn from Nigeria, Cameroon and Ghana.
The African
entrepreneurs who are flourishing in Guangzhou are succeeding where many
foreigners fail. Not only are they navigating the notorious Chinese bureaucracy
but at times overt racism in a country where prejudices can run high.
This can
range from mild snubs from taxi drivers who refuse to pick up black customers
to more serious accusations of traders being unfairly targeted by police when
they conduct raids for illegal immigrants.
Even so
others report good relations with the Chinese. “Many traders feel much more
comfortable working in China than they do in Europe,” says Roberto Castillo, a
Lingnan University researcher in Guangzhou.
Ojukwu Emma,
president of the local Nigerian community, says the main problem for Africans
trading in China are the increasing clampdowns on visas. He says it is getting
harder for African residents in the city to renew visas, or for those
travelling back and forth to gain re-entry.
“You cannot
allow foreigners to come in and not give the foreigner confidence to stay. Once
you are out to the world, you must be open,” says the businessman who has lived
in the city for 16 years.
But for now
booming Sino-African trade continues to draw new waves of African
entrepreneurs, drawn to the shores of Guangzhou in search of the Chinese dream.
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