Guangzhou introduces anti-discrimination measures after denial of mistreatment of Africans
When news emerged in early April that Africans residents in the city of Guangzhou, Guangdong Province were facing a wave of discrimination and even evictionsย because of unfounded suspicion that they were bringing COVID-19 to China, Chinaโs reaction was denial. โAll foreigners are treated equally. We reject differential treatment, and we have zero tolerance for discrimination,โ a foreign ministry statement published on CGTN Africa read.
China later moved to addressย the rupture crisis in China-Africa relations, but never admitted that there had been a problem. Nigeriaโs House of Representatives last week passed an unprecedented motion to censure Chinaย for its mistreatment of Africans in Guangzhou.
Now, per the SCMP:
Guangdong province has announced new measures to stop discrimination against foreignersโฆ
The measures, introduced on Saturday, are the latest attempt to make amends with the African community following reports that Africans were being forcibly quarantined, kicked out of their homes and denied service in shops and hotels under the guise of controlling the spread of COVID-19.
Xinhua reporter Zichen Wang has more information on the regulations in a Twitter thread.
The regulations are a tacit recognitionย that the incidents of discrimination were real and worth preventing in the future. It remains to be seen if these measures end up satisfying African civil society, especially in countries like South Africa, Kenya, and Nigeria where condemnation of China was loudest last month.
Related:ย Two new essays worth reading on China-Africa relations in the time of COVID-19:
-
There are Chinese racists, and there are Chinese global citizensย / China-Africa Project (porous paywall)
Huรกng Hรณngxiรกng ้ปๆณ็ฟ, the founder of China House, a sustainable development NGO in Kenya, writes about the diversity of Chinese people and their interactions with Africans. -
Bring back the โBandung spiritโ in China-Africa relationshipย / Panda Paw Dragon Claw
Scholar Liรบ Hวifฤng ๅๆตทๆน of Peking University reflects on the history of the China-Africa relationship, and encourages China to โreturn to the starting point of its embrace of Africa when it was a newly founded country on the international stageโ (in 1955, there was a conference in Bandung, Indonesia at which many Asian and African countries found common ground.)