This article seeks to discuss China’s engagement with Sudan from an Afrocentric perspective.1 It is noted that much of the literature on this research theme is underpinned by state-centric theories which are rooted within the Westernised standpoint. This situation has resulted in a partial understanding of China’s engagement with Sudan. The other weakness of the extant literature on the theme of this article is that China’s foreign policy towards Sudan is often [mis]interpreted and [mis]analysed due to the studies focusing on China-Africa relations instead of China’s relations with Sudan as a sovereign African state specifically.2 It is argued in this article that the Bandung Conference of 1955 served as a watershed moment for AsiaAfrica re...