Monday, November 30, 2009

Baronial Governors,Synthetic States

In Sahara Reporters Aliyu Modibbo Umar writes about the present day Nigerian Emperors who run synthetic states:
Over the last ten years of our democratic life in Nigeria, state governors have deteriorated to become imperial lords where their actions and deeds are unquestionable by the electorate through the legislators of the state. A true legislative arm is to provide restraints to personal impulsiveness but this has been absent in most states of the federation. My argument does not foreclose the fact that there are no islands of integrity exhibited by some governors and legislators. There are, but a majority of these governors fit into the imperial template and this is worrisome.
More here
For further context read 'Hints of a new chapter'

Sunday, November 29, 2009

A corrupt leader cannot fight corruption

In 234Next Ayo Okulaja reports:

“The only way to fight corruption that is endemic to the entire world is to develop a culture that rejects corruption in the formative years; that is in schools and at home.” This was the postulation of the former Prime Minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Bin Mohamad.
More here

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Famine Cover-Ups vs. Fake Famines

In Aidwatch:
Is Ethiopia having a famine? As often is the case, there are two forces pulling in opposite directions that make it hard to answer the question...On the one hand, the authoritarian government wants to cover up any famine to mute criticism of its performance...On the other hand, NGOs have a well known tendency to cry wolf and exaggerate—to see famine where there is no famine—perhaps in order to raise more money for their own organization
More here

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Friday, November 27, 2009

Misrepresenting Indigenous Religions

Bubacarr Sankanu writes in Africa Council
The prophets of intolerance cannot seriously claim to be defending African Values as all the monotheistic religions they are using to argue are foreign imports. It is the serious Voodoo Practitioners like those of the Republic of Benin who can talk about defending the true African Values. In fact no one can talk about bringing faith/salvation to Africans, be it monotheist or otherwise.
More here

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Open Source Science Archives-Scientific African


Scientific African"...aims to disseminate scientific content from Africa and to enhance the visibility and accessibility of African scholarly material on the Internet - adhering to a strict copyright policy, a commitment to the principles of Open Archives and Open Access, and a long-term (self-)archival system. The organisation is working toward comprehensively exposing what is happening in scientific Africa and representing its progress. In the long term, Scientific African hopes to foster research partners in Africa - leading to a better cross-cultural understanding through science..."

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Music and Traditional Healing

Nicholas N. Kofie writes in 'Voices' a world forum for music therapy:
Music (therapy) has been part of the Ghanaian traditional healer's stock-in-trade. Music accompanies the priest's suite (of dances) and increases in intensity up to the point when the priest/priestess enters the semi-conscious trance state and starts to communicate with the ancestral spirits. That is how far music is used by the would-be therapist as a stimulus.
More here

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

A way out for SME's?-Developing Ghana's Unlisted Securities Market

Emmanuel Ashong-Katai of Ghana's SEC writes:
...the unlisted securities market holds much promise for the private sector and the growth of the national economy. Its effective and efficient development will unleash the creative potential of the Ghanaian private sector by turning ideas and inventions into marketable products both locally and internationally. It will also induce efficiencies in the entire financial system - It will force commercial banks to improve their services and reduce their lending rates to the SME sector as the unlisted market provides them with an alternative and reliable source of long- term capital.
More here(PDF)
Read related article 'New securities market to rescue SMEs'
via PEF Ghana

Monday, November 23, 2009

“Every designer’s work in Nigeria is couture,”-Frustration in Nigerian Fashion

Chude Jideonwo writes about the challenges of the fashion industry in Farafina:
“Every designer’s work in Nigeria is couture,” Debbie Ogunjobi of Everywoman stores in Lagos said a few years ago, “because, there’s no ability to mass produce.”...he challenge lies in bringing back the spark, and with the new spark, a jolt of sustainability. Some experts have pointed to investment—building the industry to a level where businessmen and corporate players can invest much-needed funds that come with the burden of achieving concrete financial results. After the cameras have stopped clicking, it really comes down to the money.
More here

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Propeling Legal Reform-North African Women

Fatima Sadiqi writes in Common Ground News Service:
Women in North Africa have made tremendous progress in promoting and upholding their rights. Women in this region—commonly known as the Maghreb—are at the forefront of the Arab world in terms of individual rights and gender equality, and constitute models for other Arab women to follow. A number of lessons may be drawn from the inspiring experience of women in North Africa, especially in Morocco and Tunisia.
More here
via Pambazuka

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Sierra Visions

From their website:
The mission of Sierra Visions, Inc, is to foster social reform and economic development in Sierra Leone, and ultimately West Africa.Our vision is that Sierra Leone (West Africa) could be developed using our Five-T model which focuses on five core areas or initiatives: educaTion, Technology, YouTh, healTh, environmenT, in order to achieve economic sustainability and social reform

Friday, November 20, 2009

Redefining Development-James Shikwati

James Shikwati writes in African Executive:
A redefinition of development to put Africans at the center of determining what they need (and not what they have been taught to need) is crucial. In an East African Community forum in Arusha recently, delegates sought to know how the "One Laptop Per Child" initiative leads to development. One delegate quipped: "Why not one tractor per farmer?" Psychologists remind us that when every other moment it is someone else fixing us, we cannot mature.
More here

Thursday, November 19, 2009

France and its continued support for Dictators

Adam Nossiter writes in the NYTimes:
It is not a good time to be French in Francophone Africa, except if you are a high official from Paris privately visiting a strongman’s palace. As democracy slips in country after country in the region, France often quietly sides, once again, with the once-and-future autocrats.All summer long, while African opposition figures were protesting, demonstrating and fleeing, men in power were coolly visiting Paris, or receiving visits in return.
More here
See related article on America's blind eye to looters from Africa

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Rent-Seeking

The FT on rent-seeking:
Rent-seeking takes many forms. On Europe's oldest highway, the Rhine river, the castles on rocky outcrops date from the time when bandits with aristocratic titles extracted tolls from passing traffic. In poor countries the focus of political and business life is often rent-seeking rather than wealth creation. That helps explain why some countries are rich and others poor.
More here

Monday, November 16, 2009

Manufacturing is key to Prosperity


In The Banker Africa Export Import Bank's Jean-Louis Ekra states:
Creating more wealth through local entrepreneurs producing goods that are value added will produce local wealth.
Once you diversify away from commodities you are less subject to volatility. If more and more African countries produce finished goods then we can trade among ourselves and new markets would open up.
China has become a market today but 20 years ago people were saying it would never have any [internal] purchasing power. What has happened in-between is that China created wealth and that is what Africa needs to do.
More here
Related article: "Medvedev blasts Russia's resource based economy"-WSJ

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Leveraging Remittances

A Bombastic Element points us to Dilip Ratha's ponderings on the subject of remittances:
A standard remittance is a simple financial transaction that -- if lightly regulated and processed using modern technology -- can cost as little as one percent. If funds were transferred through banks and other financial intermediaries, migrants and their beneficiaries would be encouraged to save and invest. Intermediary banks could also use remittance inflows as collateral to borrow larger sums in international credit markets for local investments.

To best leverage these flows for development, it is time to create an international body -- an "International Remittances Institute" -- that would monitor the flows of labor and remittances and oversee policies to make them easier, cheaper, safer, and more productive. The proposed African Remittances Institute, supported by the African Union and the European Union, is a small but important step in this direction.
More here

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Art Moves Africa

Art Moves Africa's objectives include to:
  • Facilitate regional and transregional cultural exchanges in Africa for individual artists/cultural operators and cultural organisations and encourage the mobility of artists and cultural professionals to exchange experiences, information and ideas
  • Encouraging artists and cultural operators to work towards shared projects and artistic collaborations across the continent

Friday, November 13, 2009

Andrew Esiebo

Andrew Esiebo's project

...'Eyes from South to West' , which explores the experiences of individuals and families who have migrated from Nigeria to Europe. Through photography and audio interviews, he investigates the contradictions of the migratory experience and exposes the tensions between the dreams and realities of starting a new life.
More here
photo courtesy of Light Stalkers

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Privatizing Nigeria's Government

In a 2003 piece that is just as relevant today Xavier Sala-i-Martin contended that for the Nigeria:
Paradoxically, the boldest course would be for the government to stop managing these revenues and turn over a large fraction of these funds directly to the people, as is done in the US state of Alaska and the Canadian province of Alberta. At the earliest opportunity, Nigeria's government should convene a conference of all national and regional leaders and secure agreement on a constitutional provision whereby each household would be guaranteed a share of oil revenues, with the amount determined by prevailing prices and quotas
More here

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Why Francophone Africa is less dynamic than Anglophone...

Subsaharska points us to an incisive post on Neo's blog regarding the Franco-Anglo divide:
I think it's the fact that the English were better integrated, along with colonization, and a culture of economic neo-liberalism... This economic culture is based entirely on concepts and Anglo-Saxon ideology (English 18th and 19th century and American 20th) of the Protestant...France, like other Latin countries as part of a Catholic Christian tradition has always encouraged people to focus on poverty and humility (for easier entry into the kingdom of God), the Middle Ages until the nineteenth century, when capitalism was strongly criticized...
More here
For further context see Underdevelopment is a State of Mind & Culture Matters
HT Hash!

Monday, November 09, 2009

Why do our leaders hate us?

In an interview Chidi Anselm Odinkalu contends that:
If African leaders cannot see that there is something fundamentally wrong with an African man, an African woman, an African child being treated worse on their own continent than foreigners from Europe and North America are being treated, then we are in sad and serious trouble...
More here

Sunday, November 08, 2009

Kleptomania

In Bombastic Element:
Sola Odunfa's elaboration on Economic and Financial Crimes Commission czar Farida Waziri's comments that the "extent of aggrandisement and gluttonous accumulation of wealth" has led her to believe some Nigerians might be "psychologically unsuitable for public office," is even more danming when read out loud:


Saturday, November 07, 2009

Nuhu Ribadu & the Corruption Hunters

Nuhu Ribadu and others at a 'Symposium on Investigative Reporting on bribery and corruption',  in Bombastic Element:
A high profile panel aptly titled "Corruption Hunters," answered questions about international corruption and the role of the media during the 3rd Annual Logan Symposium on Investigative Reporting back in April.

Friday, November 06, 2009

"...In Lagos, everything is informal..."

An excerpt from Robert Neuwirth's Lecture 'The Extroverted City of System D' a contribution to the book Open City:
In Lagos, everything is informal. The bus system is informal—the government got out of mass transit business decades ago (though it has recently stepped back into public transport with a bus rapid transit line) and the system that includes more than 75,000 danfos was held together informally by the National Union of Road Transport Workers as one-part mass transit and one-part Ponzi scheme. One of the largest formal supermarkets in Lagos buys most of its product from informal wholesalers. Some major multinationals here distribute their products through informal networks. And informal merchants invest in the formal world.

Authorities in the city acknowledge that as much as 80 percent of the work force—and Lagos has between nine and 17 million inhabitants, depending on where you draw the boundaries and who’s doing the counting—is involved in the informal sector. The federal government also suggests that somewhere around 60 to 70 percent of the country’s economic activity derives in some way from the informal sector—and this means that, in aggregate, merchants like Prince Chidi Onyeyirim and Fatai Agbalaya are more important to Nigeria’s future than Shell, Mobil, and Chevron, the multinational oil giants that pump sweet crude from the Niger River Delta.

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Mama Lucy's Shepherds Junior School


From the Epic Change website:
Mama Lucy Kampton is the founder and headmistress of Shepherds Junior School. Mama Lucy used to sell chickens. She saved her income and, in 2003, used it to start a primary school near her home in Tanzania, believing that education is the key to transforming a country gripped by poverty. Her spirit, determination and skill has enabled the school to grow over the last six years from one classroom with fewer than ten students, to a school that now serves more than 300 children at eight grade levels.



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Tuesday, November 03, 2009

The Saudi-isation of Pakistan and warning's for Africa

Pervez Hoodbhoy writes:
For three decades, deep tectonic forces have been silently tearing Pakistan away from the Indian subcontinent and driving it towards the Arabian peninsula. This continental drift is not physical but cultural, driven by a belief that Pakistan must exchange its South Asian identity for an Arab-Muslim one. Grain by grain, the desert sands of Saudi Arabia are replacing the rich soil that had nurtured a magnificent Muslim culture in India for a thousand years. This culture produced Mughul architecture, the Taj Mahal, the poetry of Asadullah Khan Ghalib, and much more. Now a stern, unyielding version of Islam (Wahhabism) is replacing the kinder, gentler Islam of the Sufis and saints who had walked on this land for hundreds of years.
via 3quarksDaily
Perve's piece is almost a corollary to Philip Smucker's 2004 article which reported on efforts being taken via dissemination of historical texts to reaffirm a liberal African version of Islam.A cause all the more pertinent as the region confronts a most intolerant version of the faith:
Particularly relevant, black African and Arab scholars say, are accounts of how the African interpretation of Islam helped regulate the affairs of men, resolve disputes and provide a model of tolerance. Buried in the crumbling manuscripts of Timbuktu and neighboring cities, scholars are finding evidence of wars averted, sieges ended and lawlessness put to rest.
The information is all the more valuable for moderate Muslim leaders because of the rise of less tolerant forms of Islam, like Saudi Arabia's Wahhabism or the Salafist movement in Algeria, that are expanding their foothold.
Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Monday, November 02, 2009

The Musical or the Lack Thereof


Michel Amarger writes:
The musicals made in Egypt and Asia form a genre that is always highly popular with audiences in Africa. Yet the continent's filmmakers seem practically to ignore this art form, which has fed their own imaginations. What with the Egyptian musicals, Asian adventure films, and American productions, little place is left on Africa's screens for its local tales. However, even if African productions still face the same distribution difficulties on the continent, their singularity has developed and become more polished since Independence. It a priori seems paradoxical, therefore, that Africa's directors only rarely go down the musical route in cultures that are impregnated with music, song, dance, humour
More here

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Nontsikelelo Veleko-Photographer


Nontsikelelo Veleko lives and works in Johannesburg. She is a highly original photographer and project manager/co-coordinator at the Market Photo Workshop, where she previously trained in the art of photography.
via FlyGirls