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Kalifa Feika, 44, a Sierra Leonean business man who is among those seeking his fortune in Guangzhou’s Little Africa
Kalifa Feika, Sierra Leonean business man seeking his fortune in Guangzhou’s Little Africa Photograph: Tom Phillips/The Guardian
Kalifa Feika, Sierra Leonean business man seeking his fortune in Guangzhou’s Little Africa Photograph: Tom Phillips/The Guardian

Life drains from Little Africa as China dream fades for its fortune seekers

This article is more than 6 years old

Dealmakers from Lagos to Luanda continue to descend but economic shifts and xenophobia causes exodus of African migrants

Kalifa Feika swapped Sierra Leone for southern China four years ago, determined to manufacture his fortune in the factory of the world.

“The US, you go there on holiday. But to look for money, it is here,” declared the 44-year-old evangelical entrepreneur, who grew up in Kenema but now resides in a quarter of Guangzhou, China’s third largest city, known as Little Africa.

For at least 20 years dealmakers and dreamers from across Africa have been flocking to the area around Dengfeng village, an inner-city trading hub that teems with factory outlets hawking every conceivable made-in-China product, from prayer-mats and popcorn machines to police uniforms and political propaganda.

At its peak, about a decade ago, tens of thousands of Africans reputedly lived here, all hoping to repatriate a slice of the economic miracle that has made China the second largest economy on earth. Baohan Street, Little Africa’s main drag, buzzed with Malian merchants and snappily dressed Congolese sapeurs. “You would feel you were in Africa,” reminisced Moustapha Dieng, the leader of Guangzhou’s Senegalese community, whose office overlooks the place some locals call “Chocolate City”.

In recent years though the life has started to drain from Little Africa as Chinese authorities tightened visa rules and cracked down on overstayers amidst a surge in xenophobia some blame on President Xi Jinping’s increasingly jingoistic tone. Today, a Chinese flag and troops brandishing automatic weapons and claw-like man-catchers keep watch over the community’s recently re-urbanised main square.

Chinese paramilitary police keep guard at the entrance to Little Africa on Guangzhou’s Baohan Street Photograph: Tom Phillips/The Guardian

Economic crises and changes have also slowed the African influx, with some low-end manufacturers - and with them their African customers - moving to south and south-east Asia as Chinese labour costs rise.

Dieng, who arrived in 2003, said the number of permanent Senegalese residents had halved over the last decade to about 150 now. The Malian and Congolese communities had seen similar drops. “Before it was Africa City. Now it is Africa Village,” he joked.

The downturn has led many to predict the demise of what was once considered Asia’s largest African community. Police say only about 15,000 Africans now live in Guangzhou. But while Little Africa may be down, it is far from out.

Some communities are holding their ground while others appear to be growing. Each Sunday Guangzhou’s 19th century Sacred Heart cathedral fills with Nigerian and Kenyan Catholics seeking spiritual succour at its English-language mass.

Traders from the Ivory Coast say their country’s citizens are arriving in greater numbers.

And Angola, despite facing its worst economic slump since its civil war ended in 2002, has also been sending reinforcements, opening a consulate here in 2016 to support its citizens.

“This feels like home now,” said Antonio José, 42, a furniture dealer from Luanda who first came in 2010 and now furnishes offices across Angola’s capital with Chinese tables and chairs.

Antonio José, 42, a furniture dealer from Luanda who has been travelling to Guangzhou since 2010 Photograph: Tom Phillips/The Guardian

José said Guangzhou’s unrivaled appeal was its unbeatable range of products and prices: “If you want it done cheap, they do it cheap. If you want it expensive, they’ll do it expensive. It just depends on the size of your pocket.”

One recent morning José embarked on his latest shopping spree, distributing smiles and “bom dias!” to compatriots he passed in the street: “We’re all black so it’s hard to know … who’s who. But when I hear someone speaking Portuguese … I like to say, ‘Good morning. How’s it going?’”

“They’ll say: ‘Oh, you’re from Luanda? Which part?’ ‘Ah, I’m from Benguela province’ … ‘Oh, so am I’ ... And there you have it - you’ve made a new friend … It makes you feel a little bit loved.”

The Dengfeng Hotel, a gloomy 160-yuan-a-night (£18) guesthouse at Little Africa’s centre, is a favourite haunt for Angolan callers.

Stores on its ground-floor offer guests a bewildering mix of products that can be sold for a markup back home: outboard motors and pirate Nollywood movies, corn threshers and sex toys, nail polish machines and t-shirts celebrating African democracy with slogans such as “#GAMBIA HAS DECIDED!”.

The hotel’s walls are plastered with Portuguese-language posters offering to transport all of the above and more to customers in Africa’s largest Lusophone nations, Angola and Mozambique: “Safe! Fast! Your satisfaction is our success!”

As darkness fell, Amélia de Carvalho and Catarina Antonio, two Angolan mothers-of-four, sat in the lobby shooting the breeze, having arrived to find their hotel of choice completely full. “We’re on the waiting list. If anyone leaves, they’ll give us a room,” said Carvalho, 44, who had flown in from Luanda, via Addis Ababa, on one of three direct flights linking Africa and Guangzhou.

As they waited to check-in, the two born again Christians discussed their families, their faith (“Do the Chinese have churches?”) and, crucially, their finances.

“Has it really gone up?” a third Angolan guest inquired about the exchange rate between the US dollar and Angola’s notoriously erratic kwanza. “It’s gone up,” Carvalho replied grimly. “Yesterday it was 44,500. Today it looks like it’s 46!”

Carvalho said language, as well as cash, had been her biggest headache when she first came to buy clothes and footwear in 2009: “I couldn’t speak any English, let alone Chinese.”

“But then I started to learn a bit of English: ‘How much this one’, ‘This no good’, ‘No this material’ ... and I started to figure things out.” “We really like China,” she concluded. “This is where we get our bread to take home!”

Not all those passing through Little Africa seek financial betterment; some just hope to stay alive.

Anselme Khandi Mabiala was a church youth leader in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, until being forced to flee after a crackdown on followers of the evangelical leader Paul Joseph Mukungubila. “People were looking for me,” explained Mabiala, 38, who now lives in Guangzhou with his partner, Elysee Bwati, and their 14-month-old China-born son, Parfait. “I’m a refugee.”

Mabiala said he was thankful for his Asian shelter but admitted the cost of living and widespread racial prejudice made life a struggle: “Some Chinese, if they don’t know you, they don’t like you.”

Felly Mwamba, a Congolese leader, blamed negative attitudes towards the African community on Chinese media reports that unfairly cast Little Africa as a den of iniquity. “I don’t care what people say,” he said of those charges. “I know myself ... and what is my mission.”

Little Africa, an inner city trading hub in Guangzhou, China’s third largest city that was once reputedly the largest African community in Asia Photograph: Tom Phillips/The Guardian

Dieng argued Little Africa’s biggest problem was financial. A calendar hanging from his office wall carried the phrase: “Large Riches and Honour”. But Dieng said profits were increasingly elusive because of rising prices and increased competition from Chinese traders who now took their products to Africa themselves. “We know it’s the end,” he sighed.

Feika, who had studied theology before heading east to deal in Chinese denim, was more bullish.

Integrating into society had been tough, he admitted. “I don’t really have very intimate Chinese friends”. But Feika was convinced the future was bright. Last year he earned an MBA from a local university and legally registered his first Chinese company: “Faith to Faith Logistics”.

“Good business is China,” Feika proclaimed. “True or false?”

Additional reporting by Wang Xueying

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