Edward Boateng – Ghana’s Ambassador to China
Chinese authorities are reportedly taking steps to halt the targeting of Africans for coronavirus testing.
This was made known by the Ghana Mission in China.
In a statement made available by the Foreign Ministry, the Mission in Beijing says the Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs of China, Chen Xiaodong, met a group of African ambassadors, including Ghana’s Edward Boateng, to discuss the fallout of the targeting of Africans in China for compulsory testing, quarantine and eviction in the Guangdong Province.
At the meeting, it was announced that the Government of China had taken note of happenings and was taking immediate steps to stop the targeting of and ill-treatment meted out to Africans, particularly those in the Guangdong Province.
Background
African nations are mounting pressures on Chinese authorities to cease what they have described as racist testing of Africans for coronavirus.
The African Group of Ambassadors in Beijing has on behalf of African States, registered opposition to China’s alleged ongoing forceful testing and quarantine and maltreatment of African Nationals in China and in Guangdong Province in particular.
In a letter to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China and International Department of the Communist Party of China, the ambassadors expressed worry about China-Africa relationship in the wake of the maltreatment.
Media reports say Chinese officials have started evicting hundreds of African residents and businessmen from hotels and apartments as they are being accused of having the coronavirus.
The Africans say they are just being targeted under the guise of a testing campaign for the COVID-19.
Some of them alleged that they have been placed under forced quarantine without being told about the results of their tests.
The Africans, who are based in China’s southern city of Guangzhou, have described the development as discriminatory.
“They are accusing us of having the virus,” a Nigerian student, Tobenna Victor, was quoted by the BBC.
Guangzhou houses one of the largest African communities in China.
African traders, buy most of their goods from the area to the continent.
Local Chinese health officials have raised concerns about a possible second outbreak of the COVID-19 over the increase in the number of imported cases.
The Ambassadors in their statement copied to the Chairperson of the African Union, expressed appreciation about what they described as “the excellent relations between China and our respective African countries dating back in the Africa’s liberation struggle, Africa’s support to China, especially in securing the permanent seat of the United Nations Security Council.”
They said “This collaborative effort also manifested in the ongoing fight against the COVID-19 pandemic and the various assistance extended to our countries by the Communist Party of China under the leadership of H.E Xi Jinxing.”
However, they observed that “It is therefore worrisome, following this excellent cooperation and mutual friendship that, the African Group of Ambassadors observes with consternations the discrimination and stigmatization of Africans whereby they are made to forcefully, and in a very crude manner to undergo epidemic investigation and Nucleic Acid Test, fourteen (14) days quarantine even if they had not travelled outside their jurisdictions, not come into contact with infected persons, not had close contact or showing any symptoms of the COVID-19.”
The Group would like to underscore the fact that the Africans in China have at all times adhered to the laws of China, particularly within the period of this outbreak, according to them.
“We have not and cannot recall Chinese authorities reporting a case where our nationals have violated the anti-pandemic laws and regulations of the China Government.”
“Therefore, the singling out of Africans for compulsory testing and quarantine, in our view, has no scientific or logical basis and amounts to racism towards Africans in China,” they say.
“We would like to underscore that friendship between Africa and China should be mutual and not a one way affair.”
“Regrettably, we have received disquieting reports of inhuman treatments meted out to Africans particularly in Guangdong Province and would like to enumerate just but a few:
? African nationals ejected including Togolese, Nigerians, and Benenois from their hotels in the middle of the night only because they are Africans;
? A group of African students studying in Sun-Yat Sen University in Guangzhou were made to undergo the Nucleic Acid Test, in spite of the fact that they had no travel history within the stated period.
? Selective testing of African students while their non African colleagues are left out.
? There were cases of African men married to Chinese ladies and they were demanded to take the COVID-19 test and their Chinese families left out. In some cases the men were pulled out of their families and quarantined in hotels alone.
? Forced evictions of Africans from their various apartments and thrown into the streets even those with infant children.
? Seizure of passports of African nationals in violation of international practices and conventions
? Persistent harassment and humiliation of African nationals by subjecting them to unwarranted medical examinations after testing negative for the COVID-19, and forced into quarantine, irrespective of their negative status;
? Threats of revocation of visas, arrest, detention and deportation of African legal migrants for no cogent reason which infringes on their human rights.
“From the foregoing the impression is being created as though the spread of the virus is caused by Africans contrary to the fact that , in China and indeed globally, Africans are the least exposed to COVID-19 OR is there any other reason for which Africans are being targeted other than COVID- 19 that we are unaware of ? they quizzed.
“We would also want to bring to your attention the possible backlash in our home countries of this obvious human rights violation”.
By Melvin Tarlue