Chinese people in Tanzania

Chinese people in Tanzania
Chinese people in Tanzania
Total population
Disputed[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Dar Es Salaam, Zanzibar
Languages

Chinese[3]

Related ethnic groups

Overseas Chinese

There were Chinese people in Tanzania as early as 1891.[4] However, most of the Chinese in the country trace their roots to three distinct waves of migration: 1930s settlement on Zanzibar, workers sent by the Chinese government in the 1960s and 1970s as part of development assistance to Tanzania, and private entrepreneurs and traders who began doing business there during the 1990s.[5]

Contents

History

Most foreign labour in Tanganyika's history as a German colony came from other parts of Africa; however, there were a few Chinese as well. In 1891, the German East Africa Corporation hired 491 Chinese and Javanese labourers from Singapore to work on plantations in Usambara.[4] Separately, a community of overseas Chinese began to form on the island of Zanzibar, by then a British possession, in the 1930s. The Chinese noodles they produced there became a popular staple food for the local population, especially for the evening iftar meal which marks the end of the day's fasting during Ramadan.[6]

In 1969, a few years after Tanganyika and Zanzibar achieved independence from the British Empire and merged to become Tanzania, the People's Republic of China agreed to provide financing and technical assistance for the construction of the TAZARA Railway, intended to give Zambia an alternative to an existing railway route passing through Rhodesia, and allow them to export copper through ports in Tanzania instead. The first thousand Chinese railway workers came to Dar Es Salaam on board the ocean liner Yao Hao in August 1969.; they would be followed by twenty to thirty thousand more in the next five years.[7] At any given time, Chinese composed between twenty-five and thirty percent, or 13,000, of the thirty to forty thousand workers on the railway.[8] Most of them returned home after their stint in the country, but due to the emphasis placed on speedy construction, they had little time to train their Tanzanian counterparts to replace them; as a result, teams of Chinese experts continued to work for the railway authority as late as 2004.[7] During these years, China also sent some advisors to Zanzibar for work on other development projects.[5] Finally, roughly 200 doctors from Jiangsu were dispatched all over Tanzania on two-year stints; people's positive experience with these doctors laid the foundations for the later popularity of traditional Chinese medicine, though they themselves were not TCM practitioners.[9]

The population of old overseas Chinese continued to decrease; by 2008, just twenty remained in Dar Es Salaam, including a Meixian Hakka couple from South Africa who ran a Chinese restaurant, and a number of Burmese Chinese who traced their roots to the Taishan and Kaiping counties of Guangdong.[8] However, their numbers were bolstered by the arrival of new expatriate businessmen and entrepreneurs beginning in the 1990s.[5]

Numbers

There are conflicting statistics on the number of Chinese in Tanzania. In 2000, statistics of Tanzania's Immigration Department showed that they had issued work or residence permits to just 239 Chinese nationals, making them one of the smaller groups of foreigners in the country.[1] However, China's official Xinhua News Agency reported in 2008 that 10,000 Chinese people live in the country.[2]

Business and employment

The new wave of Chinese expatriates in the 1990s initially came to Tanzania with the intention of working in more typical industries, such as construction, textiles, or food products.[10] However, the World Health Organisation's push for privatisation of health care in Tanzania provided unexpected business opportunities to them; despite the fact that most lacked any medical training, they began setting up traditional Chinese medicine clinics, the first of which was established in 1996.[11] Qualified practitioners came later, but in the early 2000s, the majority were still learning on the job.[12]

See also

References

Notes

Sources

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Chinese people in Kenya — Total population 3,000–10,000[1] Regions with significant populations Nairobi, Mombasa[1][2 …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Zambia — Total population 80,000[1] Regions with significant populations Lusaka Related ethnic groups Overseas Chinese In the past decades, the population of Chinese people in Zambia has ra …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Papua New Guinea — 巴布亞新幾內亞華人 巴布亚新几内亚华人 Total population 5,000–20,000[1][2] Languages Tok Pisin and English; Cantonese (among older people); …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Sri Lanka — Total population Various estimates Related ethnic groups Chinese people There have been Chinese people in Sri Lanka since the 1700s.[1] Though their numbers dwindled in the decades after independence, in the 1990s and 2000s a new wave of Chinese… …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Kazakhstan — Total population Disputed Regions with significant populations Almaty[1] Related ethnic groups Overseas Chinese The number of Chinese people in Kaz …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Kyrgyzstan — Total population Various estimates Regions with significant populations Bishkek, Naryn[1] Languages Chinese; many learning Russian as a second langu …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Senegal — Total population 200 2,000? (c. 2008)[1][2] Regions with significant populations Dakar[3 …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Japan — Kanteibyou Temple in Yokohama Chinatown Total population 655,377 (as of 2008 …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Spain — Chinese people on the street in Madrid, Spain. Total population 145,425 (2009)[1] …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese people in Iran — Total population 2,000 3,000 Regions with significant populations Tehran and other major cities Languages Chinese; Persian not widely spoken Religion Not known …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”