Matooke Republic
Sunday, June 15, 2025
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Features
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Photos
  • Relationships
Matooke Republic
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Features
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Photos
  • Relationships
No Result
View All Result
Matooke Republic
No Result
View All Result

China-Africa: Reassessing the neocolonialism smear

Matooke Republic by Matooke Republic
September 1, 2024
in Opinions
Reading Time: 5 mins read
The Nairobi Expressway in Nairobi, Kenya, February 6, 2023.

The Nairobi Expressway in Nairobi, Kenya, February 6, 2023.

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The article reflects the author’s opinions and not necessarily the views of Matooke Republic

Over the past few decades, one of the most conspicuous developments on the African continent has been the meteoric rise of China-Africa relations. China is now distinguished as Africa’s largest bilateral trading partner – a position it has maintained since 2009, while Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) flows to the continent have likewise grown sharply.

China has been making an active effort to help African countries, providing them with a new source of infrastructure, mining, and energy financing. The contours of the dynamic and fruitful bilateral relationship have also extended to encompass an array of other fields, including culture and education, digital infrastructure and technology, agriculture, and health cooperation.

RELATED POSTS

Sexual violence in the urban informal sector: Are existing laws failing women?

OPINION: Mukono’s Garbage ‘Gift’ — A New Perspective

However, the tight bonds forged between China and Africa have increasingly become the target of fierce criticisms and a slew of misconceived perceptions. Mainly perpetuated by Western media, policymakers, and other actors in the West, these attacks have portrayed the China-Africa relationship in an unjustifiably harsh negative light, and they are characterized by paternalistic warnings to Africans of the supposed dangers of neocolonialism by China.

Carefully dissecting the narrative and closely reviewing the basic, fundamental facts reveal that these criticisms are unfounded and far from the truth. For one, China has no history of colonialism in Africa or other areas, nor does it have any history of militarily invading and occupying other states in Africa or anywhere else. In fact, it is Africa and China that have a shared history of subjugation and oppression at the hands of the West.

What is more, the historical record shows that following its own revolution and founding, China extended a range of economic and technical support to an array of African liberation movements that were fighting to free their nations from the shackles of Western colonial rule.

Rather than practicing neocolonialism in Africa, China’s engagement on the continent, rooted in mutual respect, peaceful coexistence, and a win-win approach, has actively helped the continent in its decolonization and developmental efforts.

People interact at a United Nations Chinese Language Day event in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, April 19, 2024.

Over the years, China has assisted the building or renovation of countless dams, bridges, roads, railways, airports, ports, telecommunications networks, hospitals and health facilities, schools, power stations and transmission lines, and other infrastructure across the continent. This has been critical for African integration and connectivity, promoting energy access, increasing trade and industrialization, and addressing substantial bottlenecks which have long held back the continent’s aspirations for sustainable development.

Within health, China has extended multifaceted support, including through financing the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, dispatch of volunteer medical teams, donation of medical supplies and equipment, and capacity-building, all of which have combined to improve levels of access, care, and wellbeing.

Similarly, China’s assistance for African education and technical areas, reflected in thousands of scholarships, provision of training opportunities, and establishment of initiatives like Confucius Institutes and Luban Workshops, have helped to raise human capital, allowed youth to reach their full potential, and reinforced Africa’s drive for industrialization and modernization.

Students learn vocational skills in the Luban Workshop in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, March 20, 2023.

Notably, the China-Africa partnership has led to the establishment of economic and trade cooperation zones in numerous African nations. This has contributed to the development of hundreds of businesses, creation of much-needed jobs for locals (especially youth) and attracted billions of U.S. dollars in investment flows. Africa and China also support each other within international affairs, and their mutually beneficial cooperation stands as a model for South-South cooperation.

An inherent problem with the attacks on China-Africa cooperation is that they are extremely patronizing and deny the inherent agency and capacity of Africans. Contrary to the narrative propagated by some in the West, Africans are not passive, helpless victims, but instead rational actors fully capable of defining their own interests and advocating for partnerships that genuinely contribute to their long-term development and progress.

It is also worth considering the views of Africans themselves. Results from a long series of public opinion surveys and reports conducted over the years, ranging from Afrobarometer and Gallup to Pew and scholarly studies, indicate that, for the most part, Africans tend to hold positive opinions of China’s engagement on the continent and embrace it as valuable developmental partner.

For Africans across the length and breadth of the continent, China’s engagement has been anything but neocolonialism. Instead, it has supported socioeconomic growth and development, met the diverse needs of local communities, and helped to tangibly improve living standards.

People visiting waterfall city park in Johannesburg, South Africa, June 17, 2024. 

So, what gives? What is behind the West’s unremitting attempts to smear China through the label of neocolonialism? Simply, the fervid attacks are driven by the West’s growing anxiety and insecurity about its own waning power and declining influence within the global system, combined with its complete inability to accept the reality of China’s rise and success.

For the West, stuck as it is in a toxic zero-sum mentality, China’s continued ascendancy is viewed solely through the prism of an imminent, sweeping threat and it must be contained, weakened, and undermined. Accordingly, China, and its positive and constructive relationship with Africa, which has delivered myriad tangible benefits to both sides while helping to usher in a new and multipolar global order, is targeted for malicious propaganda and slander under the guise of concern for Africa.

Nonetheless, despite the constant drumbeat of negativity and flood of politicized attacks, the indelible truth remains that the Africa-China relationship has contributed to an array of mutual benefits.

Related

Tags: AfricaChinaNeocolonialism
ShareTweetSend
Matooke Republic

Matooke Republic

Freshly peeled info from area code 256

Related Posts

Tony O. Elumelu.

Tony Elumelu promotes Africa’s investment potential at World Government Summit

by Matooke Republic
4 months ago

...

Did you know that in countries like South Africa, women pin their lovers’ names on their sleeves? Here are the world’s most interesting and famous Valentine’s Day celebrations and traditions

by Matooke Republic
4 months ago

...

Health Ministry says Uganda is prepared to handle Human Metapneumovirus (HMPV): Here is what you need to know about the virus as cases rise in China

by Matooke Republic
5 months ago

...

President Yoweri Museveni.

Uganda at 62: Museveni urges Africa to industrialize and end reliance on raw material exports

by Matooke Republic
8 months ago

...

Absa opens new office in China

by Matooke Republic
1 year ago

...

Next Post

A Don Julio Affair as The Villa Celebrates Second Anniversary

Tagore Apartments: Luxury living with flexible stay packages

RECOMMENDED

Singer Ykee Benda proposes to his girlfriend

June 14, 2025

Makeup guru Mona sets pace for Johnnie Walker’s ‘Toast To Dad’ Fathers’ Day celebration with heartfelt post

June 14, 2025
  • 643 Followers
  • 23.9k Followers

MOST VIEWED

  • Here is how to use NIRA’s new online portal to register or renew your national ID

    3061 shares
    Share 1224 Tweet 765
  • National ID mass enrolment & renewal exercise: Here are the requirements you must have to get a new ID

    237 shares
    Share 95 Tweet 59
  • Dj Karo finally wins over Cedric Babu’s heart, introduction underway

    166 shares
    Share 66 Tweet 42
  • Former IGP Kayihura gets a new job

    135 shares
    Share 54 Tweet 34
  • Cedric Babu Ndilima, son of Capt. Francis Babu, dies after battle with heart condition

    115 shares
    Share 46 Tweet 29
Matooke Republic

Uganda's only free Newspaper. Out every Thursday. Freshly peeled info. kiwatule, Kampala, Uganda.

  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Features
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Photos

© Matooke Republic 2024

© Matooke Republic 2024

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.