How a gold mining deal in Africa inflamed hostility toward Chinese
With more that 800 companies now on the island, China has rapidly established itself as Madagascar’s largest trading partner

The mine had not yet opened but Madagascans were already seething with rage. The Chinese management finally quit Soamahamanina, leaving behind empty tents and cigarette butts.
For months, this small city in central Madagascar was engulfed by protests targeting a Chinese gold mining company, Jiuxing.
Every Thursday, city residents would take to the streets in downtown Soamahamanina to demonstrate against Jiuxing, which had secured a 40-year gold mining licence on a 7,500-hectare piece of land.
For the protesters, the mining operation risked ruining their farms – one element of a nationwide aversion to the new wave of Chinese investors on the large Indian Ocean island.
Not just in Soamahamanina but across the country, Madagascans have openly expressed their hostility towards the growing presence of China, the country’s largest trading partner.
“Forty years of operation – that is called selling the country,” said Marise-Edine, a street vendor.