Chinese Influence: Zambia paper publishes in Chinese
Newsroom Updated 1 min read
By BBC As Chinese influence continues to grow rapidly in Zambia, the state-owned Times of Zambia newspaper has come up with an ingenious way of increasing their revenue - by publishing today's lead story in Mandarin. The article quotes President Edgar Lungu as saying Zambia "will not look east or west - we will look forward and go with whoever wants to go with us". Those are comments he made while hosting a Swiss delegation at the presidential palace Monday. Reporting the story in both English and Mandarin Chinese is a move aimed at tapping into the Chinese market, says chief government spokeswoman Dora Siliya. One person argued that Gujarati would have been a better language to choose given Zambia's Indian population. Another said Zambia's indigenous languages should be favoured over foreign languages as a matter of national pride. Zambia has recently been forced to deny accusations that the government has accumulated a lot of debt by borrowing from China and putting up some key public assets, including the national broadcaster and the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport, as collateral. China denied these allegations as well. According to the government, Zambia’s current external debt is $9bn with up to 30 per cent of that amount being money borrowed from China.
Support
Support this reporting
M-Pesa support recorded against this story.
Stay close
Get the briefing
Major updates by email. No spam.
Share
Save share card
Download a clean portrait card for sharing.
More from Nyakundi Report
Most read this week
2d · 1 min read
Probe Underway After Fatal Fall at Aga Khan University Hospital
by Nyakundi Report
2d · 15 min read
Elgon Group Payment Scandal: Luo Piny Festival Suppliers Expose CEO Mercy Wamoto in Ksh 105 Million Fallout
by Nyakundi Report
4d · 2 min read
US Congress Targets Kenya Over Alleged Recruitment for Russia's War
by Nyakundi Report
2d · 4 min read
MPs Approve Finance Bill 2026, Paving Way for Ksh 4.8 Trillion Budget After Heated Vote
by Nyakundi Report