Soamahamanina
residents protest the presence of the Jiuxing Chinese mining company, near the
mining site in central Madagascar, on October 6, 2016 ©Rijasolo (AFP)
|
The mine had not yet
opened, but Madagascans were already seething with rage and the Chinese
management finally quit Soamahamanina, leaving behind empty tents and cigarette
butts.
AFP
report continues:
For
months, this small city in central Madagascar was engulfed by protests targeted
at a Chinese gold mining company, Jiuxing.
Every
Thursday, city residents would take to the streets in downtown Soamahamanina to
demonstrate against Jiuxing, which had secured a 40-year gold mining licence on
a 7,500-hectare (18,500-acre) piece of land.
For
the protesters, the mining operation risked ruining their farms -- one element
of a nationwide aversion to the new wave of Chinese investors on the large Indian
Ocean Island.
Not
just in Soamahamanina, but across the country Madagascans have openly expressed
their hostility towards the growing presence of China, the country's largest
trading partner.
Anti-Chinese
sentiment is on the rise in Africa as Beijing increases its business presence
on the continent for natural resources while flooding the markets with Made in
China goods.
"Madagascar
belongs to the Madagascans, not the Chinese or any other foreigners,"
Fenohasina, a local student, told AFP.
"Forty
years of operation -- that is called selling the country," said
Marise-Edine, a street vendor.
Many
farmers who were eager to take advantage of the windfall and had agreed to sell
their land to the Chinese miner, are now regretting it.
"Our
compatriots are angry with us and accuse us of selling away the country,"
said farmer Perline Razafiarisoa.
But
a local worker at Jiuxing blames the hostilities on politics.
"It's
people from outside who are encouraging people here to dislike the
Chinese," said Chrysostome Rakotondrazafy, a Jiuxing Mines foreman.
"There
is political manipulation behind all this."
Buckling
under the weight of the relentless protests, the Chinese mining workers had
little choice but to pack up their bags and leave in October.
"As
a company we think we have the right to stay, but for the sake of social
appeasement, we chose to withdraw," Stella Andriamamonjy, the mine's
spokeswoman, said.
"We
hope to return under new terms, (and) repair past mistakes."
How
soon that will be, she could not say.
China's
Jiuxing had secured a 40-year gold mining licence on a 7,500-hectare
(18,500-acre) piece of land near Soamahamanina, central Madagascar ©Rijasolo
(AFP)
|
- Xenophobic tensions -
For
the locals in Soamahamanina, the return of the Chinese would not be welcome.
"I
would like to tell our leaders that the big powers in this world are only
turning us against each other to destroy our country," warned resident
Marie Rasoloson.
With
more that 800 companies now on the island, China has rapidly established itself
as Madagascar's largest trading partner.
In
a country where 90 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, such
investment has given an unexpected boost to infrastructure development.
But,
as elsewhere on the African continent, the mass arrival of Chinese investors
has created tensions.
In
2011, police stepped in to prevent riots in the Chinatown section of the
capital Antananarivo after an Asian trader beat up his two Madagascan
employees.
Three
years later, clashes over wage demands left six people dead at a
"Chinese" sugar factory in western Morondava town.
The
Chinese embassy has warned the authorities in Madagascar against tarnishing its
image as an investment destination.
The
government is concerned at the growing hostilities towards its powerful
partner.
"It
is essential to prevent this from degenerating into xenophobia," said the
ruling HVM party leader Rivo Rakotovao.
Officially
launching a Chinese-built road recently, President Hery Rajaonarimampianina
praised Beijing's "helping hand".
Chinese
ambassador Yang Xiaorong promised to strengthen the "win-win
cooperation" between the two countries.
"Chinese
companies are well integrated into the local community," said the embassy,
adding that 90 percent of the 17,000 jobs created so far are occupied by
locals.
Hit
by the bitter competition from Chinese outfits, many Madagascans remain
sceptical.
"We only pick up the
crumbs," Daniel Rafanomezantsoa, a craftsman, told AFP.
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