Why Gambian migrants are giving up on their "China Dream"

Why Gambian migrants are giving up on their "China Dream"

They did not know very much about China but they had heard it was the world's second largest economy and Africa's leading trading partner, so they assumed there must be opportunity. Europe, of course, was their first choice but with EU countries overwhelmed by migrants and cracking down on smugglers, China would have to do. Lured by deceptive visa brokers, hundreds, possibly thousands of young Gambian men leveraged everything they had to pay for the long journey from Banjul to Guangzhou.

The brokers told them it would be easy to find work and make thousands of dollars to send back to their needy families in The Gambia. With few other viable options at home, these men, and they were all men, discovered almost immediately upon arrival in Guangzhou they had been lied to and they had made a dreadful mistake. Contrary to what they were led to believe, work was very hard to come by, particularly in a country where they could not speak the language. The high cost of living in China's major cities also quickly drained the little money they came with. Soon, these migrants would be alone and destitute with no work, no money and the shame of having to admit to their families that they had failed.

China, for its part, does not make it easy for African migrants. After years of lax enforcement, Chinese authorities are now regularly conducting immigration checks in migrant communities and detaining those who have overstayed their visas. African migrants also report considerable difficulties assimilating into Chinese society due to widespread discrimination against black people.

Now, more and more Gambian migrants are giving up on their "China Dream" and doing whatever they can to head home. This new trend of reverse migration from China is also known as "U-Turning" and was recently documented by a pair of European scholars as part of an independent online multimedia research project.

Dr. Heidi ?stb? Haugen of the University of Oslo and Manon Diederich, a masters candidate at the University of Cologne in Germany, interviewed dozens of Gambian migrants to document their stories and learn more about the difficulties they faced both at home and in China. Heidi and Manon join Eric & Cobus to discuss their digital project "U-Turn Asia."

What do you think? Are you sympathetic to the plight of these migrants or do you think they were naive and should have known about the challenges of life in China before embarking on this long, risky journey?

Join the discussion:

Facebook: www.facebook.com/ChinaAfricaProject

Twitter: @eolander | @stadenesque

Okwusogu Onochie

Sales Executive at Maon Homes and Facility Management limited

8 年

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Okwusogu Onochie

Sales Executive at Maon Homes and Facility Management limited

8 年

They didn't do their research well. When going to another mans land, one should be able to research well about where one is going to and what is obtainable there. Ask questions and learn from other blacks there going there deplete your resources and wasting time. Thank God my trip to China didn't work!!!

Karen Kabeu

ICT OFFICER at Kenyatta National Hospital

8 年

The problem is that they had little or no information about China before they left Gambia. With no reference point they made a big leap of faith that turned into a nightmare.

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