The African Traveller and the Chinese Customs Official: Ethnic Minority Profiling at Border Check Points in Hong Kong and China?
Author: Adams Bodomo.
Bodomo, Adams. 2014. "The African Traveller and the Chinese Customs Official: Ethnic Minority Profiling at Border Check Points in Hong Kong and China?." Journal of African American Studies 19
Stronger government-to-government relations between Africa and China in
the first two decades of the twenty-first century have led to an increasing presence of
African travellers at Chinese border check points. This is a novel situation involving
cross-linguistic and cross-cultural communication dynamics that we need to understand
from different research perspectives: linguistic, socio-economic, and legal, among
others. Academic studies are already detailing some misunderstandings between
Chinese customs, immigration and public security officials and African travellers and
immigrants, who are clearly a visible minority group, both at border check points and in
the wider Chinese communities (Bodomo 2010; Bodomo and Ma 2010; Bodomo
2012). A number of questions may be asked towards understanding the cross-cultural
dynamics involved in this novel situation. What are Chinese immigration and customs
officials’ experiences with African travellers and how do they see and handle this
visible minority ethnic group? What are, in turn, African experiences with Chinese
immigration, customs, and public security, officials both at border check points and in
the wider Chinese communities in places like mainland China and Hong Kong? To
answer these questions, a profile of the most frequent African visitors to Hong Kong
and China is constructed, based on research among Africans in China, particularly
Guangzhou. An outline is then made of what Africans think of Chinese customs and
immigration officials as a whole, what kind of treatment they expect on arrival in China
and how they prepare for it. It is then claimed that the most fundamental issue that
causes friction, unhappiness and sometimes lack of cooperation from African travellers
at immigration and customs check points in Hong Kong and other places in China is
not so much due to linguistic and cultural misunderstanding as it is due to stereotyping
and, in extreme cases, (un)conscious racial profiling. Finally, it is proposed that the best
way for Hong Kong and other Chinese customs personnel to serve African immigrants
is to apply immigration rules using systematically fair, just and colour-blind strategies.Published: June 22, 2014Typ: journalArticleISSN: