Armed Angolan gangs are targeting Chinese workers in ”mafia-style” attacks, a construction boss said on Friday, creating a climate of fear among the Chinese community in Luanda.
A string of gang robberies has targeted Chinese companies and housing compounds in recent months, said Eddie Zhang, head of Shanghai Urban Construction Group, the company building Luanda’s new football stadium for the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations (CAN).
”These are not just normal robberies …They are planned, like mafia-style attacks. The gangs go first to inspect premises and then they go back with AK-47s.”
Zhang said his staff had not had any problems but he had warned his workers to take extra care.
”We have a lot of security at the site and also I think that Angolans know how important this project is for the country.
”But elsewhere things are getting bad and people are talking about wanting to go back home,” he said.
He added that the Chinese embassy had advised nationals against going out alone at night.
A spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Luanda said they were aware of incidents against Chinese nationals and were working with Angolan authorities to resolve the problem.
Xu Ning, the head of the Chinese Business Council in Luanda, said Chinese living in Angola were increasingly afraid.
”Things have got worse in the last few months. Just last night someone I was due to have dinner with did not turn up because he had been robbed,” he told Agence France-Presse.
More than 40Â 000 Chinese workers are in Angola, about 90% on construction sites.
Chinese companies have several key post-war reconstruction contracts in the southern African country, including new roads, airports, and government buildings, as well as four CAN 2010 stadiums. Chinese credit lines to Angola are believed to exceed $5-billion. — AFP