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What a viral video does — and doesn't — reveal about China's relationship with Africa

A blurry video surfaces on the r/trashy subreddit of what appears to be a work dispute in an unspecified African country. A Chinese man slaps a clipboard out of a Black worker's hands, then leaves the frame for a moment, before coming back with a large metal pole. There's no context provided with the video, but most of the commenters seem to know what's happening — seem being the operative word. They're just making assumptions, grounded in a complicated geopolitical relationship that's changing everyday life across the African continent.
In pursuit of context for this video, Endless Thread explores the knotty geopolitical relationship between China and Africa, and hears from Henry Mhango, a Malawian journalist who hunted down the context for another viral video, exposing racism and exploitation in the process.
Show notes:
- "Racism for Sale" (BBC Africa Eye)
- "Sierra Leonean Miner vs Chinese Miner: Company PRO Breaks Down What Transpired" (News Central TV)
- "Why China Is in Africa - If You Don’t Know, Now You Know" (The Daily Show)
- "How China Sees itself in Africa" (The Global Jigsaw)
- "Chinese companies in Africa can be flexible and adaptive in their employment strategies." (The Washington Post)
"This content was originally created for audio. An auto-generated transcript is available on Apple Podcasts. Heads up that some elements (i.e. music, sound effects, tone) are harder to translate to text.



