| 
		Beijing ups diplomatic pressure on Africa as the US pulls back
		[April 09, 2025]  
		By DAKE KANG 
		BEIJING (AP) — Chinese diplomats threatened to cancel a summit and 
		called top officials in two African countries to pressure lawmakers to 
		quit an international parliamentary group critical of China, officials 
		from the group told The Associated Press.
 It's an example of how far China will go to influence politicians 
		overseas, and how that pressure can succeed behind closed doors.
 
 In the past year, lawmakers from Malawi and Gambia withdrew from the 
		Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, or IPAC, a group of hundreds of 
		lawmakers from 38 countries concerned about how democracies approach 
		Beijing, according to letters, messages and voice recordings obtained by 
		The Associated Press.
 
 Founded in 2020, the group has coordinated sanctions on China over 
		rights abuses in Xinjiang and Hong Kong and rallied support for Taiwan, 
		a self-ruled democratic island Beijing claims as its territory.
 
 African politicians and experts say it’s an escalation of Chinese 
		diplomatic pressure in Africa, where Beijing's influence is growing. 
		Beijing has built deep ties with African leaders by developing mines and 
		building infrastructure through state-owned construction companies, 
		often funded by loans from state-owned banks.
 
 The pressure is also part of Beijing's longstanding effort to influence 
		groups and lawmakers across the world, including in New York state, 
		where a former governor’s aide faces charges for acting as an agent for 
		the Chinese government.
 
		
		 
		'Very shocking news'
 In January, Gambian lawmaker Abdoulie Ceesay sent a voice message to an 
		IPAC staffer saying the Chinese government had complained to the Gambian 
		foreign ministry about his membership.
 
 “We have very shocking news … it’s a problem right now,” Ceesay said in 
		the recording, which IPAC provided to AP. “The president is not happy 
		with us at all.”
 
 Later the same month, Ceesay and fellow lawmaker Amadou Camara informed 
		the alliance they were withdrawing. Ceesay told IPAC in a written 
		message that his decision was “not influenced by the Chinese embassy,” a 
		position Ceesay reiterated when contacted by AP.
 
 Gambia's information minister said he was unaware of any attempt by 
		China to influence his country's politicians.
 
 “They decided on their own behalf to opt out of IPAC after realizing it 
		goes against the government’s bilateral (relationship) with China,” said 
		the minister, Ismaila Ceesay, who is not related to Abdoulie Ceesay.
 
 The Chinese government has targeted lawmakers over the alliance before. 
		Beijing has sanctioned some members and last year, lawmakers from at 
		least six countries were pressured by Chinese diplomats not to attend 
		the group’s summit in Taiwan. Kenyan lawmakers cancelled their plans to 
		attend but stayed in the alliance. The group was also targeted by 
		Chinese state-sponsored hackers in 2021, according to a U.S. indictment.
 
 “Foreign legislators are being bullied out of a free alliance between 
		them and other politicians,” said IPAC head Luke de Pulford. “This is 
		clearly a result of Chinese pressure.”
 
 In a statement, the Chinese Foreign Ministry accused IPAC of “smearing 
		China" and said that “China has never engaged in coercive diplomacy."
 
 But a Malawian lawmaker, Ephraim Abel Kayembe, told an IPAC staffer he 
		had been contacted by the speaker of the Malawian National Assembly 
		shortly after he and another lawmaker joined the group at last year’s 
		Taiwan summit, according to the staffer. The staffer declined to be 
		named for fear of damage to their relations with other politicians.
 
		
		 
		[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            Members of the IPAC (Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China) attend 
			its Taipei Summit in Taipei, Taiwan, , July 30, 2024. (AP 
			Photo/Chiang Ying-ying, File) 
            
			
			 
            The speaker told Kayembe the Chinese government had threatened to 
			cancel the president’s upcoming visit to Beijing for a regional 
			summit and meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, according to IPAC 
			head de Pulford, programs director Tom Fraser and the person who 
			spoke directly to Kayembe.
 Less than two weeks after the summit, the two Malawian lawmakers 
			said they were withdrawing. Kayembe said in a letter to IPAC that he 
			had been tricked into joining.
 
 “I want to extend my sincere apology to the People’s Republic of 
			China,” Kayembe wrote in the Aug. 7 letter.
 
 When contacted by AP, Kayembe denied being coerced by the Malawi or 
			Chinese governments, writing in an email that he withdrew because 
			the alliance appeared “aimed at achieving geopolitical intentions 
			against China.”
 
 Malawi’s government did not respond to a request for comment.
 
 Shifting alliances
 
 For decades, Beijing has cultivated ties with African governments, 
			seeking diplomatic partners and access to natural resources.
 
 Many African leaders have welcomed Beijing’s presence since it 
			brings much-needed capital and construction expertise that can 
			contribute to economic growth and development. Critics say China 
			strikes secretive, sometimes corrupt deals with African leaders that 
			mainly benefit Chinese companies and workers brought in to build 
			mines, bridges and railways.
 
 “China has been investing and being present in African countries 
			when many countries were not willing to come,” said Christian-Geraud 
			Neema, Africa editor of the China Global South Project, an 
			independent research group.
 
 Chinese leaders have repeatedly promised not to interfere in the 
			internal affairs of African countries, saying there are “no 
			political strings attached” to its investment. But China has 
			pressured African governments to shun Taiwan or Tibet’s spiritual 
			leader, the Dalai Lama, efforts that Neema says appear to be 
			escalating. Last October, South Africa demanded that Taipei move its 
			unofficial embassy out of the administrative capital, Pretoria, and 
			in January, Beijing sanctioned the head of South Africa’s 
			second-largest political party for visiting Taiwan.
 
            
			 
			Moves like these mirror efforts China has made against governments 
			elsewhere in the past. Beijing blocked exports from Lithuania, for 
			example, after the northern European country allowed Taiwan to open 
			a trade office.
 But experts say the pressure against the IPAC members is unusual. 
			Lina Benabdallah, a professor at Wake Forest University who studies 
			China’s relations with Africa, said she has never heard of China 
			using direct coercion against African parliamentarians before.
 
 “This is very new to me,” Benabdallah said.
 
 Zimbabwe lawmaker and IPAC member Daniel Molokele said he expects to 
			see more coercive behavior from Beijing, especially as the Trump 
			administration pulls back from Africa.
 
 “I expect China to benefit,” Molokele said. “It will definitely use 
			this opportunity to grow its influence in Africa.”
 
 ___
 
 Abdoulie John in Serrekunda, Gambia, and Gerald Imray in Cape Town, 
			South Africa, contributed to this report.
 
			
			All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |