African Union Chairman Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame wished that the AU, rather than China  built the organisation’s headquarters following allegation that Beijing bugged the building.

Kagame has, however, said that he is not concerned about the reports a Rwandan journalist had tweeted. He quoted Kagame as saying that “everybody spies” and he wished that the AU, rather than China, built the headquarters, adding: actually we want all to know what we say inside.

Meanwhile, China has dismissed the reports as “preposterous”. Chinese ambassador to the AU Kuang Weilin told reporters in Ethiopia the “absurd” claim in France’s Le Monde was “very difficult to understand”. He spoke out three days after the newspaper published an article claiming data from the Chinese-built AU building was being copied to Shanghai.

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The article said the discovery resulted in all the AU servers being switched. Le Monde spoke to a number of anonymous sources, who claimed the alleged transfer was taking place late at night and was only spotted in January 2017 due to the spike in activity between midnight and 02:00, despite no-one being in the building.

It was suggested the alleged data transfer had been taking place since 2012, when the building, in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, was opened. Officials also brought in security experts from Algeria to sweep the entire headquarters for potential bugs, the newspaper said, leading to the discovery of microphones in desks.

But Mr Kuang who hailed the headquarters as a “monument” to his country’s relationship with the continent said it was entirely untrue. “I really question its intention,” he told reporters yesterday. “I think it will undermine and send a very negative message to people. I think it is not good for the image of the newspaper itself.  “Certainly, it will create problems for China-Africa relations.”