Links

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Happy New Year And Thank You

I want to thank the readers of this blog for their faithful following of the contents of the blog and for their comments. Doing this blog is one of my passions (in all the senses of the word) and I enjoy doing it. I trust we are going to continue to see positive changes in Africa so that in the very near future there will be no irony when we talk of a flourishing Africa.


HAPPY NEW YEAR 2012!!!!!

Monday, December 26, 2011

Who Are Africa's Friends?: On Images of Africa

In a recent interview, Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, CEO of the NEPAD, made this comment about images of Africa:
 The problem is that many Africans spend too much of their time repeating what the Western media says about the continent and about us. It will take some time to ward off this colonial way of thinking. Obviously, when you watch the way Africa is treated on a major news channel like CNN, the feeling is that Africa is plagued by misery and ruled by inept and corrupt leaders who hardly give any thought to the greater public interest.
Many among us Africans tend to repeat what CNN and others have to say without taking a step back and reflecting about what we just heard. We seem to wallow in a kind of self-disparagement. Nowhere else is such an attitude so widespread than on our continent.
Unfortunately, this self-disparaging attitude does have a negative impact. We cannot afford to keep on offering our children a negative image of Africa. We need to put things into perspective. A country like Rwanda has made significant progress while reducing its reliance on foreign aid.
By mobilizing its own resources, Cape Verde has succeeded in becoming a middle-income country. Judging from the design and implementation of its new constitution, Kenya is now making significant progress in terms of governance. Botswana refuses to appeal for foreign aid, with many other countries following its example.

Mr. Mayaki's concerns are well founded given the historical badmouthing of the continent. We must be careful not to repeat derogatory and dated descriptions born of the historical marginalization of the continent. True, some African countries have made some movement toward ameliorating the lives of their peoples. However. we must also remember that even this movement is yet to make African countries, or even the continent as a whole, to have significant sway in the global political economy. By and large, many African countries are still disproportionately dependent on foreign aid - ask Malawi and Uganda. Famines still disproportionately affect Africans. There is still widespread bad governance in the continent so that one can count on one hand, out of the over fifty countries in the continent, the leaders who are seeking the well-being of their peoples. Cameroon, Chad, Central Africa Republic, DRC, Burkina Faso, Burundi, etc., are places where life is a daily struggle for most.

Now, when we point out these things it is not because we are imitating CNN or any other Western media. These are things that one finds on the ground in these countries. These are not constructions or lies even though they may sometimes be exaggerated. Thus, Africa's friends are not those who say that things are going great when they are actually not. Those who paint rosy pictures of Africa are, in fact, not Africa's friends. They are those who tend to see small progress in Africa as a giant step, limiting people's perspectives to the minimum rather than calling for extravagant imagination. It is true that things are getting better but life is still quite abysmal from most people. African and African American elites should stop making themselves feel better by painting pictures of small improvements as if they were giant steps. Doing so is, in fact, derogatory because it associates African progress with the marginal.

Mr. Mayaki even mentioned that the Peer Review Mechanism outlined in NEPAD is the envy of the West. It would have been such if it worked. That mechanism exists only in name and has made no contribution to African life. The African Union itself, under which NEPAD exists, is not helpful to Africa. It is a shield under which African dictators are protected. African ruling elite are so mired in the very subjugation of their peoples that they have no credibility railing against colonialism for they themselves manifest the same attitude toward their people as the colonialists did. Rather than portraying those who critique the snail and sometimes inconsequential steps that African leaders are making as enemies of the continent, Africa's real enemies are the ruling elites who peddle pictures of giant strides even as their people continue to wallow in all forms of hardship.

Where Are The Jobs?: Africa's Phony Growth?

There has recently been much talk about the increasing growth of African economies. Measured in GDP, many African countries seem to be on the road to explosive growth. However, most ordinary people still live desperate lives in many African countries. Should economists continue to talk of economic growth that does not appear to reflect the welfare of the people? Are these predictions just a gimmick, a reverse of Afro-pessimism? If you live in an African country, please respond to this Western and Asian predictions of growth in Africa.

Aging Asia, Middle-Aged Americas, Youthful Africa

African demographic prospects from The Economist.

Friday, December 23, 2011

2011 Was A Bad Year For Dictators

Although it appears to be generally agreed in Western media that 2011 was a bad year for dictators, the continent of Africa is still infested with their likes, ranging from Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe to Paul Biya of Cameroon and Yahya Jammeh of the Gambia. There is Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Joseph Kabila of the DRC. True, we had three less dictators is nothern Africa but in Egypt Mubarak was quickly replaced by his military who are now killing and humiliating their own people. Generally speaking, Africa has not experienced much reduction in dictators even though the current ones appear to be less vicious than their colleagues of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. However, the events of 2011 should put all African dictators on notice. Who knows what 2012 may bring!

Friday, December 16, 2011

Occupier Dies In Cameroon

The Occupy movement has been going on in Cameroon for about three months now, led by workers fired from one of Cameroon's agricultural corporations. One of the Occupiers has apparently died. Will the movement gather steam?

Friday, December 9, 2011

Malawi Homosexual Troubles: Epitome of Africa's Weakness

Malawi is one of the several African countries that have recently passed, or become notorious for maintaining, draconian homosexual laws. However, these African countries have been coming under severe pressure from Western countries, such as Britain and the United States, to scrap these laws. Recently the United States has said that it will review its foreign aid policy based on countries' homosexual laws. And here is where Malawi comes in. Malawi has been receiving over a hundred million dollars in aid from the United States. The threat that the United States may cut off this aid has prompted Malawi's Minister of Justice to say that Malawi's homosexual laws will be reviewed. Instead of telling the truth about why the laws will be reviewed, namely that foreign powers will no longer give aid if the laws stand, he lied that the review is prompted by public opinion - as if Malawians have suddenly changed their opinion about homosexuality in the last couple of weeks.
Do not get me wrong, this piece is not about the rightness or wrongness of these laws or homosexuality itself. Rather, it is about the fact that some African countries cannot have the spine to do what they want to do because they rely on foreign aid. In recent African history, there has been much talk about neo-colonialism, imperialism, and the like, and the need for African countries to overcome these impediments to their well-being. However, few among our elites seems to think that these unwholesome influences cannot be overcome just by railing against them. African countries need to ween themselves from foreign dependence if their call for the overcoming of these impediments is to pass muster. If you cannot make rules in your own house, if the rules you make in your own house depends on the wishes of people outside your house, then you are in quite a pitiful condition. And that is the condition in which African countries such as Malawi, Uganda, Kenya, Cameroon, etc., find themselves today. Their ministers and religious people come out and rail against the immorality of the West while taking their begging bowls to this same West in broad daylight. If Africans are to maintain their morality, whatever the rightness or wrongness of that morality, they must be able to support that morality with their own wealth. Without their own wealth, their supposed morality will always be seen as expedient. That seems to be the case with Malawi, a country that does not seem to know whether it is for or against homosexuality because it is poor.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Tweet Until Paul Biya's Dictatorship Ends: Join The Movement

Flourishingafrica will be tweeting one tweet per day against the Biya dictatorship in Cameroon until the regime collapses. Today is day two of the process. Join the struggle. Cameroonians and all people of good will must not remain silent while Biya destroys the country as he is currently doing. This is just the beginning. Tweet one tweet against the dictatorship today! Join the struggle. For more about the Biya dictatorship, see here.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Africa In Red: Corruption Ranked

Transparency International has come up with this year's ranking of the least to most corrupt states in the world. States in Africa are in red - among the most corrupt. Click on the page and go to "Download Report" to see the list and maps