Johannesburg, SOUTH
AFRICA
South Africa has urged China to investigate
reports that African nationals in the country have been subject to forced
coronavirus testing, forced quarantine measures and other forms of ill
treatment.
The International
Relations Department says in a statement that as the chair of the African
Union, South Africa is deeply concerned about the reports.
The department says
such actions would be inconsistent with the good relations between African
nations and China.
South Africa has
welcomed the AU Commission Chairperson’s decision to summon the Chinese
Ambassador in Addis Ababa to provide an explanation regarding the reports.
AU Commission Chair,
Moussa Faki Mahamat, met with the Chinese Ambassador to the AU, Liu Yaki, to
express concern about allegations that Africans are being mistreated in China
during the coronavirus pandemic.
There’s been a stream
of reports alleging that African nationals in Guangzhou city have been
forcefully evicted and placed in arbitrary quarantine. It is believed
they were forcibly evicted from their homes and now are being turned away by
hotels.
Beijing is yet to issue
a formal update on the matter.
Several African
countries have demanded that China address their concerns that Africans in
Guangzhou city are being mistreated and harassed amid fears there of a
potential spread of coronavirus from imported cases.
In recent days Africans
in the city have reported being ejected from their apartments by their
landlords, being tested for coronavirus several times without being given
results and being shunned and discriminated against in public.
Such complaints have
been made in local media, and on social media.
In a statement on
Saturday, Ghana’s minister of foreign affairs Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey said she
had summoned the Chinese ambassador to express her disappointment and demand
action to address the “inhumane treatment.”
“I regret and highly
condemn this…ill-treament and racial discrimination,” the minister said.
She said she had
summoned Ambassador Shi Ting Wang to “register my disappointment and call for
his government to immediately address the situation and bring their officials
to order.”
There was no immediate
response from the Chinese Embassy in Ghana to a request for comment on this.
In a tweeted statement
on Saturday, the Chinese embassy in Zimbabwe dismissed the accusation of
Chinese deliberately targeting Africans and suggested reports of racial
discrimination and harassment were being sensationalized.
“It is harmful to
sensationalize isolated incidents,” the statement said. “China treats all
individuals in the country, Chinese and foreign alike, as equals.”
China has ended its
more than two-month lockdown in Wuhan, the city where the coronavirus
infections began, after containing the outbreak there but authorities are now
worried about a potential second wave of infection from imported cases.
At the peak of the
outbreak in Wuhan some African nations refused to evacuate their students from
China, expressing confidence in Beijing’s ability to handle the outbreak.
In a press statement on
Friday the Kenyan government said the “stringent testing of foreigners” that
China had undertaken had “precipitated unfair responses against foreigners
particularly of African origin.”
In the foreign ministry
statement about the treatment of Africans in Guangzhou, Nairobi “officially
expressed concern.” It added that government was working with Chinese
authorities to address the matter.
On Friday, Nigerian
legislator Akinola Alabi tweeted a video of a meeting between the leader of
Nigeria’s lower house of parliament, Femi Gbajabiamila, and Chinese Ambassador
Zhou Pingjian. In it, Gbajabiamila demanded an explanation from the diplomat
after showing Zhou a video of a Nigerian complaining about mistreatment in
China.
The ambassador said in
response to the questions from the house leader that he took the complaints
“very seriously” and promised to convey them to the authorities back
home.
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