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  2. Chinese South Africans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_South_Africans

    The first Chinese to settle in South Africa were prisoners, usually debtors, exiled from Batavia by the Dutch to their then newly founded colony at Cape Town in 1660. . Originally the Dutch wanted to recruit Chinese settlers to settle in the colony as farmers, thereby helping establish the colony and create a tax base so the colony would be less of a drain on Dut

  3. List of ambassadors of China to South Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ambassadors_of...

    In 1976, the Republic of China and South Africa opened embassies. Since 1998, the People's Republic of China and South Africa has recognised each other. From 1991 to 1997, the People's Republic of China hosted the 'Chinese Center for South African Studies' in Pretoria, headed by a diplomat in the rank of ambassador.

  4. Sino-African relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-African_relations

    According to Melanie Yap and Daniel Leong Man in their book "Colour, Confusions, and Concessions: the History of Chinese in South Africa", Chu Ssu-pen, a Chinese mapmaker in 1320, had southern Africa drawn on one of his maps. Ceramics found in Zimbabwe and South Africa dated back to the Song dynasty. Some tribes to Cape Town's north claimed ...

  5. China–South Africa relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China–South_Africa_relations

    Chinese South Africans are an ethnic group of Chinese diaspora in South Africa. They and their ancestors immigrated to South Africa beginning during the Dutch colonial era in the Cape Colony. Since 2000 an estimated 350,000 Chinese immigrations, most of whom came from mainland China, have settled in South Africa. [67]

  6. Asian (South Africa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_(South_Africa)

    In late 2006, the Chinese Association of South Africa filed suit to have Chinese South Africans recognised as having been disadvantaged under apartheid, to benefit from Black Economic Empowerment (BEE). Complicating this attempt was the presence of recent immigrant Chinese who had not been disadvantaged by apartheid.

  7. Chinatowns in Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatowns_in_Africa

    During the Apartheid regime (1948–93) Chinese South Africans were classified as "Coloureds" or "Asian South Africans", while certain East Asian nationals (such as Japan and Taiwan) in South Africa were declared honorary whites and thus avoided most forms of official discriminatory laws (they could live in reserved white neighborhoods unlike ...

  8. Patrick Soon-Shiong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Soon-Shiong

    Soon-Shiong was born in Port Elizabeth in the Union of South Africa in present-day South Africa, to Chinese immigrant parents who fled China during the Japanese occupation in World War II. [11] [12] His parents were Hakka originally from Meixian District in Guangdong province. [12] [11] His ancestral surname is Huang (黃). [12]

  9. Honorary whites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honorary_whites

    Chinese South Africans (simplified Chinese: 华裔南非人; traditional Chinese: 華裔南非人) are Overseas Chinese who reside in South Africa, including those whose ancestors came to South Africa in the early 20th century until Chinese immigration was banned under the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1904.