The official Chinese narrative on Sino-African engagement has always been seductive in its symmetry: a relationship of "win-win" cooperation between the Global South's largest economy and its most resource-rich continent built on solidarity, mutual respect, and shared development.
It is a narrative China's diplomats have polished with considerable skill. But on the factory floor, in the supermarket aisle, on the streets of Yaoundé and Kinshasa, and across Chinese social media, a starkly different reality is unfolding one of racial contempt, labour exploitation, and resource plunder, and deliberate humiliation.
The question African peoples must now confront honestly is not whether this discrimination exists. The evidence is overwhelming, well-documented, and growing. The real question is: how long will Africa's leaders allow it to continue?
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What makes Chinese racism toward Black Africans particularly unsettling is how casually it is expressed. It does not lurk in coded language or institutional procedure. It presents itself openly, even proudly.
A recent viral video showing a Chinese taxi driver flatly refusing to carry a Black passenger caused widespread outrage but it was hardly novel. In recent weeks, footage circulating on Chinese social media showed individuals tormenting a Black doll they had named "Natasha," mocking and degrading it for audience entertainment. The clip spread widely before any meaningful platform moderation occurred.
These incidents are not aberrations. They are symptoms of a deeper cultural pathology. In 2016, a Chinese television commercial for laundry detergent depicted a Black man being shoved into a washing machine and emerging to the delight of the Chinese woman operating it as a light-skinned Asian man. The advertisement ran on national television.
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Across Chinese social media platforms, including Bilibili, academic researchers have documented a pervasive and largely unchecked culture of anti-Black racism, where derogatory stereotypes about African intelligence and appearance are routinely circulated and amplified.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, African nationals resident in China experienced institutionalized discrimination that drew condemnation from the African Union and multiple African governments.
African residents in Guangzhou were evicted from their homes, subjected to forced testing and mandatory isolation disproportionate to that applied to Chinese nationals, turned away from hospitals, and refused entry to restaurants. The scenes that emerged from that episode were a window into how African people are perceived within Chinese society when the diplomatic gloss is stripped away.
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Racial contempt, it turns out, is not the only instrument of extraction. Chinese nationals have been implicated in a range of criminal and environmentally destructive practices across Africa.
On 8 and 9 June 2026 just days ago Cameroonian authorities dismantled a counterfeit currency factory in Douala engaged in the manufacturing of fake CFA Franc coins. Chinese nationals were among those implicated. The revelation struck at the heart of a monetary system that anchors the economies of fourteen African nations.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Chinese firm Bendera Mining Company has been found to be encroaching on the Kabobo wildlife reserve, conducting illegal gold mining operations inside a protected ecosystem. Across the continent, Chinese companies stand accused of illegal and exploitative mining activities that damage local environments, displace communities, and drain mineral wealth with little accountability.
Off the West African coast, Chinese fishing fleets continue to devastate fish stocks at a pace that threatens the food security of millions. Researchers estimate that approximately 40 per cent of the fish caught by Chinese vessels in West African waters is taken illegally beyond licensed quotas, inside protected zones, or using prohibited methods. The livelihoods of small-scale African fishermen are being systematically destroyed.
China's role in illegal logging is equally severe. The country's enormous appetite for rosewood has turned the timber into the world's most trafficked wild habitat product surpassing elephant ivory and rhinoceros horn in volume. Chinese companies, including Fodeco, have been directly implicated in illegal logging operations in West Africa, stripping forests that local communities depend upon for their survival.
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African governments have shown admirable patience ... in raising these grievances through diplomatic channels. That patience has not been rewarded with change. Incidents multiply. Videos circulate. Condemnations are issued and then forgotten. Chinese employers continue to wield whips on African workers in Cameroon. Chinese social media continues to circulate anti-Black content. Chinese vessels continue to empty West African waters.
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The decision about what to do with that evidence belongs to Africa's leaders and its people.
It is time for that decision to be made.
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China’s ‘Natasha’ toy trend draws backlash over violence and racism - [video, 2 min]
Edit:
One paper on Chinese racism concludes (opens pdf):
Here is a series of article on Chinese racism in more recent contexts.
A rights group reported, From Covid to Blackface on TV, China’s Racism Problem Runs Deep, and urged China [To] Combat Anti-Black Racism on Social Media.
You'll find much more on the web.
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