SCDigest Editorial Staff
Hitchens Says: |
I’m not sure the Chinese even know there are customs regulations,” Hitchens quoted the businessman as saying. “They don't fill in the forms, they just pay [the bribes].

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In a well known, but less well fully appreciated strategy, China for several years has been moving to lock-in commodity supplies in various parts of the world, especially Africa.
Now, a powerful article from journalist Peter Hitchens in London’s Daily Mail newspaper alleges that in addition to the longer term political and economic ramifications of those moves, some Chinese companies operating in Africa are, at best, exploiting local workers and, in some cases, treating them almost like “slave labor,” according to a leading politician in Zambia.
Hitchens visited Chinese-owned operations in both Zambia and The Congo. The former is a reasonably functioning democratic country with some semblance of political and legal structure. The Congo is a chaotic country ruled by a despot, President Joseph Kabila.
For the past several years, China has been buying commodity-based assets and land in many African countries, using a variety of mechanisms to get those deals done.
“Out of desperation, much of the continent is selling itself into a new era of corruption and virtual slavery as China seeks to buy up all the metals, minerals and oil she can lay her hands on,” Hitchens wrote.
China “regards Zambia as a great prize, alongside its other favored nations of Sudan (oil), Angola (oil) and Congo (metals),” Hitchens added.
To win political favor in Zambia, China has cancelled some of the country’s debts, eased Zambian exports to China, established a “special economic zone” in the Copper Belt, offered to build a sports stadium, schools, a hospital and an anti-malaria center as well as providing scholarships and dispatching experts to help with agriculture. Zambia-China trade is growing rapidly, primarily in the form of copper.
Just how big is China’s presence and involvement in Africa? No one really knows.
"You've got Africa, the big black hole of data, and China, the big black hole of data -- put the two of them together and it's a disaster," Lucy Corkin, a China-Africa think-tank expert, said last year. China is said to be offering zero interest loans to businesses investing in Africa.
(Global Supply Chain and Logistics Article - Continued Below) |