Researchers say Beijing is exporting its “surveillance state” model to African countries and rapidly positioning itself to control the critical infrastructure, data, and energy that will power the continent’s AI systems in the future.
This could mean that China will have immense influence over politics and public life in Africa, potentially influencing election outcomes and swaying public opinion in favor of Beijing and its allies, according to the studies.
Some academics say it’s happening already.
One investigation by a nonprofit studying the use of social media and other technology to target dissident groups worldwide concluded that a “largely invisible pattern” is transforming conflicts across Africa.
The Distributed AI Research Institute (DAIR) stated that using technology such as spyware to hunt political activists and employing facial recognition to track protesters represents “a new kind of mercenary force” in Africa, one that’s largely shaped by companies controlled from Beijing.
Adio-Adet Dinika, researcher and affiliate fellow at the Bremen International Graduate School of Social Science in Germany, headed DAIR’s Data Workers Inquiry project. It investigated incidents in countries including Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Zimbabwe.
Dinika’s research revealed the existence of “digital sweatshops” in African cities and towns, including in Nairobi, Kenya; Accra, Ghana; and Gulu, Uganda, where workers are paid as little as $1.50 per hour to teach AI systems to recognize faces, moderate content, and analyze behavior patterns.
The Chinese regime is perpetrating what Dinika called “digital colonialism at its most insidious.”
“I call this surveillance colonialism, the process by which foreign powers extract data and labor from African populations to build AI systems that ultimately police, repress, and destabilise those very populations,” he wrote.
Among the new additions was CloudWalk, with which “the Zimbabwean government agreed to the installment of a mass surveillance network in Zimbabwe,” the Treasury stated at the time.
“The agreement included a requirement that the Zimbabwean government send images it acquires from the surveillance network back to Cloudwalk’s offices in China, so that Cloudwalk could improve the ability of its facial recognition software to recognize individuals based on skin pigmentation,” the Treasury stated.
The technology that emerged, according to Dinika, is now used by China across Africa and the world, including in public spaces in Zimbabwe frequented by anti-government demonstrators.
Zimbabwe counts itself as one of Beijing’s closest partners.
Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s spokesperson, Nick Mangwana, told The Epoch Times that Zimbabwe’s “excellent cooperation ties” with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its leader, Xi Jinping, “means Zimbabwe now has one of Africa’s most sophisticated crime-fighting tools.”
An extensive study into Zimbabwe’s use of AI surveillance systems by Germany’s Humboldt University in 2024 concluded that the use of the technology has not resulted in a single public conviction of a criminal.
Zimbabwean pro-democracy activist, Evan Mawarire, told The Epoch Times: “When you are arrested and locked up by the police, they boast how they use their AI technology to identify us at protests. The Chinese tech gear is being used as a form of political control. The police say they can watch us anytime, anywhere, because they have also bought devices from the Chinese to monitor internet and phones.”
In response, Mangwana said he would not comment on the “nature of our security apparatus and how it is employed, because that would make it ineffective.”
He emphasized that Zimbabwe’s security forces use technology “in line with Zimbabwean law.”
CloudWalk and the Chinese Embassy in Zimbabwe declined to comment.
In Ethiopia, the pro-Beijing government is using Chinese “sentiment analysis tools” against the country’s Tigray population, Dinika said.
He said those tools allow the authorities to monitor social media and online posts in real time, while even providing information regarding the tone of communications.
Dinika explained that one of the key AI tools used by the Ethiopian authorities is an AI application called Natural Language Processing.
“By means of this, the system is trained to understand the context and nuances of the Tigray language. It can interpret verbal cues such as sarcasm, and Tigray people have disappeared just on the basis of this,” he said.
When Ethiopian authorities relied on Chinese AI during the 2020–2022 Tigray conflict, they weren’t just buying technology, Dinika said. They were “outsourcing critical governance functions to foreign entities with their own strategic interests.”
During the conflict, the algorithms that determined which social media posts amounted to “ethnic incitement” were trained by data workers in Kenya, his investigation found.
During Kenya’s 2024 Gen Z protests against a proposed tax increase, the country’s top telecom company, Safaricom, “unlawfully” shared customers’ location data with security forces, Dinika’s report alleged.
This allowed the police to track and detain protestors, he said.
Safaricom has denied any level of cooperation with Kenyan authorities.
Dinika said Kenya President William Ruto’s government used “data interception” in combination with facial recognition tools and footage from hundreds of Chinese-supplied CCTV systems to create what he termed a “digital dragnet” that resulted in the “enforced disappearances” of 82 people, with 29 still missing.
Professor Willem Gravett, a senior lecturer in law at the University of Pretoria, has also documented the increased use of Chinese technology in Africa.
The technology includes “wifi sniffers” that gather the unique addresses of devices such as laptops and smartphones, he said.
“Data is covertly connected from devices within range of a particular network. This enables authorities to read communications, including emails,” Gravett told The Epoch Times. “China will call it business, but it’s helping these regimes to sometimes, quite literally, wipe out opposition. Citizens’ rights to privacy do not exist anymore in some places in Africa.”
China has developed into a “twenty-first century surveillance state” with unprecedented abilities to censor speech and infringe upon basic human rights, he said.
“[The Chinese regime] has only just begun sending its surveillance blueprint to authoritarian governments in Africa,” Gravett said.
“This blueprint is imprinted with the potential for developing surveillance societies in China’s image, particularly in African countries with poor human rights records, where democratic institutions are either weak or still in their infancy. The consequences for human rights on the African continent are likely to be dire.”
By means of more than 800,000 cameras, CCP authorities have the ability to spy on “the whole of the city of Beijing,” according to Gravett.
“When African dictators hear of this, they jump for joy,” he said. “They want ultimate control over anything and anyone that could be a risk to their illegitimate power.”
According to Dinika, Africans are fast developing “surveillance fears.”
“Citizens attending protests, journalists investigating corruption, and activists organising communities modify their behaviour when they believe they’re being watched. This psychological warfare is particularly effective because of the opacity surrounding these systems. Citizens don’t know which cameras are operational, what data is being collected, or how it might be used against them. The mere possibility of surveillance becomes a form of control,” he said.
For example, Huawei is planning to invest $430 million in data centers in Africa, and Alibaba is already providing cloud services in South Africa.
“All of this represents a threat to Africans, because it’s well-known that Chinese firms have no problem cooperating with the powers-that-be,” Gravett said.
ODI Global said China could soon exert control over the critical infrastructure, data, and energy needed to power Africa’s AI models.
“AI models can shape public opinion by influencing the news, information, and entertainment that people have access to. This can influence electoral processes or turn opinion towards certain foreign powers and away from others,” the report reads.
It suggested that this could impact Western investment in Africa.
“This risks creating a tipping point whereby Western companies won’t have access to the very AI sector that is keeping them locked out of investments. This could also restrict their access to critical raw materials needed for their own next-generation technologies, such as batteries,” the report reads.
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Author: Darren Taylor via The Epoch Times
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