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Chinese wholesalers have set up shop in the Moroccan port city of Casablanca, causing a wave of panic among the local traders fearful of being undercut.
"Chinese wholesale centre," reads a sign in Arabic, French and Chinese above one Chinese trader's shop.
"I don't speak English and French very well, and Arabic is difficult," said Lin Xue Yun, a 32-year-old Chinese woman managing a shop selling mirrors, sandals, shoes, chessboards and various electronic toys.
Language is the main obstacle for her and her compatriots who arrive unable to converse in two of Morocco's main languages, Arabic and French.
Moroccan nationals are employed in an intermediary role in their shops.
"I've only been here for four months," Lin told AFP. "I have an 11-year-old son I left in Fujian," the south-eastern Chinese province from where most of the wholesalers originate.
"Watch out, the Chinese are landing!" headlined the daily newspaper Aujourd'hui Le Maroc last week, saying "an army of Chinese businessmen (estimated at 1,200) had decamped in the kingdom's main towns and villages."
The paper called on the authorities to "seriously analyse the phenomenon."
"Business in Casa is good," said Yen Tieh, 39, in halting English, a resident since six months in Morocco.
Four other Chinese men enjoyed an animated discussion in his shop. "These are all my brothers," he said with a smile.
Ghita, a 21-year-old Moroccan employed in a Chinese shop in Derb Omar, the bustling trading area of Casablanca, said she
was happy working where she was.
"We sell sandals, photo and picture frames, and small gifts," she said, adding that her wages were "very satisfying".
But Nadia, writing out a bill on the counter of her neighbouring shop, railed against the Chinese influx, claiming the new traders had "destroyed the economy and job market" in Casablanca.
"The product for which I pay 25 dirhams in duty, they sell at 10 dirhams. They could sandals for only 18 dirhams (1.60 euros, 1.95 dollars)."
"Their products are of a very bad quality," Nadia said, adding that some Chinese traders were going "door-to-door, suitcase in hand".
Salah, a fellow Moroccan worker in Derb Omar, added: "I've seen them unload their own container at Casablanca port."
As far as the Moroccan association for importers of games is concerned, Chinese traders are engaged in "unfair and anti-competitive practices."
In a recent statement, the association said it wanted to "sound the alarm bell."
Shop manager Fatima Lmoussi, however, disagrees: "Trade is open to all. The arrival of the Chinese is even positive because it creates a business dynamic."
For one taxi driver, the Chinese came across as "nice, extremely polite and they pay the Moroccans they employ very well."

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2004

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