An unspecified number of African residents and businessmen residing in China’s southern city of Guangzhou have been evicted from apartments and hotels due to COVID-19 fears.
Community leaders in the area told BBC this is to allow for health officials to roll out a testing campaign.
Those evicted say they are being discriminated against.
“They are accusing us of having the virus,” said Tobenna Victor, a Nigerian student in Guangzhou.
“We paid rent to them and after collecting rent they chased us out of the house. Since last night we have been sleeping outside.”
Businessman Lunde Okulunge Isidore, from the Democratic Republic of Congo, said: “They came to my house. They told me to wait after 24 hours for the result, [but] after 24 hours nobody contacted me.”
Some residents have told the BBC that they have been evicted from their apartments, others say that they have been put into forced quarantine without knowing the results of their tests.
On Tuesday, Chinese officials denied online rumours that the virus was spreading in African communities and that parts of the city where Africans reside were under lockdown.
The #Chinese government is chasing out Africans that went to #China for business.
They are stranded and need rescue.
HELP!#COVID19 #CoronaVirus@_AfricanUnion @WHO @UN @hrw @AmnestyNigeria @amnesty @Imamofpeace @MaziNnamdiKanu @realFFK pic.twitter.com/ep6Q7YyVhp
— Amaka Ekwo (@Amaka_Ekwo) April 6, 2020
Guangzhou is home to one of China’s largest African communities and has become a hub for African traders buying and selling goods to the continent.
There are rising concerns in China over the increase in number of imported Covid-19 cases, which authorities fear could fuel a second outbreak.
Since March, Guangzhou has required people arriving from abroad to be quarantined for 14 days.