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Jatoo
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« on: January 31, 2008, 05:03:29 AM »

http://us.ft.com/ftgateway/superpage.ft?news_id=fto012320081149471698

Africans in China: The attractions of Guanzhou's Tianxiu Mansions

By Geoff Dyer
Wednesday Jan 23 2008 11:35

It is commonplace for hotels in Chinese provincial cities to put up clocks on the reception wall with the time in major capitals. But at the Tianxiu Hotel in Guangzhou, there are some less familiar names alongside the time in Beijing and New York - Cairo, Brazzaville and Bamako.

Guangzhou, the biggest city in southern China, has been one of the centres of the manufacturing boom in China over the past two decades. Yet in the past few years it has also become a magnet for traders from Africa looking to tap the seemingly endless supply of cheap products made in the region.

One small neighbourhood in the city has gradually come to be dominated by African migrants and many now operate businesses in a 27-storey tower block called the Tianxiu Mansions, where the hotel is located. The Africans, many from Francophone countries, work as either middlemen for visiting traders from the region or operate their own export businesses.

Everything imaginable is for sale in bulk at the Tianxiu Mansions, from motorbikes and building materials to fake Armani suits and iPhones.

Sherif Cisse, a 22-year-old from Guinea, came to Guangzhou two years ago and now helps run a small shop that sells jeans and T-shirts. He says he was delighted when he got the visa to come to China and managed to raise enough money for the flight ticket.

However, while China has gradually come to be seen as a beacon of potential wealth for some Africans of his generation, the reality of business in Guangzhou has been much harder than he expected.

"I do not have contacts direct with the factories," he says, "so I have to go through Chinese middlemen in order to get hold of goods. That makes it much harder to actually make any money." In the first few months, he paid upfront for goods that were not exactly what he had asked for. "You have to check everything, over and over again," he says.

There are also plenty of Chinese suppliers looking to sell directly to African traders with products specifically designed for their markets. Bett Hair Fashion, a company based in the central Chinese province of Henan, has an outlet in the Tianxiu building selling wigs and hairpieces with names such as Afro Curl and Jumbo Braid.

"The factories around here can make pretty much anything you ask them to make, all they need is a sample," says He Yongjie, one of the company's salesmen.

Some of the African businessmen have only recently left their home countries. Others, however, are itinerant travellers who have decided that Guangzhou is the place to be at the moment. Diarra Monzon from Mali spent 10 years in Thailand before moving to China two years ago. He now has a small shop that sells textiles with African patterns and cosmetic products, especially skin whitening creams. "The quality is not always as good here as it is in other parts of Asia," he says, "but prices are a lot, lot cheaper in China." He broke off the conversation to order some evening food from a company called 'Rotisserie Africaine'. "It is run by people from my country and they deliver to my home," he says.

"We can get lots of home comforts here now."
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sabresaurus
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« Reply #1 on: January 31, 2008, 09:58:05 AM »

He now has a small shop that sells textiles with African patterns and cosmetic products, especially skin whitening creams.

Whoa...for a quick second there I thought it said 'skin whitening cosmetic products for Africans'.
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normal35762
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« Reply #2 on: January 31, 2008, 01:05:22 PM »

He now has a small shop that sells textiles with African patterns and cosmetic products, especially skin whitening creams.

Whoa...for a quick second there I thought it said 'skin whitening cosmetic products for Africans'.


might as well say that. who else would them products be for?
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sabresaurus
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« Reply #3 on: February 01, 2008, 02:37:26 AM »

Actually, I thought only Asians did that (if 'whitening' actually means to lighten skin tone).

Michael Jackson, you are certainly not alone.
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Jatoo
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« Reply #4 on: February 01, 2008, 04:49:12 AM »

I did not know until I heard from my African friends that many African women used some cream to whiten their skin in both Africa and U.S. 
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pat_togo
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« Reply #5 on: February 01, 2008, 10:38:40 AM »

Use of skin-whitening cosmetics is quite widespread in sub-saharian Africa
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ren da
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« Reply #6 on: February 20, 2008, 05:09:56 AM »

i love this article pat. 

oh my goodness the skin lightening is so widespread that it's sickening.  the men are turning against it though because they see the effects it has on the skin. 

women are starting to notice how damaged their skin becomes as they get older.  a good friend of mine in dakar used the creams for years so she had become really light.  i didn't know how she looked before.  like a month or two passed and then i saw her again and didn't know who she was.  i stood there and just said hello and it wasn't until she said my name that i realized who she was.

she stopped using the cream during that time and her skin had turned to its natural shade.  she looked completely different but she looked healthier and better.
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