Parents of ‘terrified’ Africans stranded in China want help
KAMPALA, Uganda — She wakes every day long before dawn to chat with her three stranded daughters on the other side of the world in China’s locked-down city of Wuhan, anxious to see they have started a new day virus-free.
“If I don’t get a reply it worries me, but if I get a reply from any of them I say, ‘’Thank you, Jesus,'” Margaret Ntale said.
Many countries evacuated citizens from Wuhan after the virus outbreak started there, but thousands of students from African countries have been left behind. Despite pleas with governments for evacuation, several African countries have said it’s safer to stay in place.
More than 4,000 African students have been estimated to be in Wuhan, a result of China’s push to expand its influence on the youthful African continent.