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We
need good governors, not aid
David Blair,
Telegraph News
March 11, 2005
http://www.telegraph.co.uk
Africa is short
of everything except good intentions, platitudes and promises of
money from Western taxpayers. Yet it will be showered with all three
today when Tony Blair's Commission for Africa unveils its report
on the world's poorest continent.
Thanks to advance
leaks of the contents of this 400-page tome, we know exactly what
the 17 international luminaries, ranging from the Prime Minister
to Bob Geldof, who sit on this august body think is needed for a
"strong and prosperous Africa".
Many of their
ideas are sensible and necessary. And yet the report has one glaring
flaw: it is passionate and detailed on what the West should do for
Africa, but silent or vacuous on what Africa should do for itself.
Its main remedy
for the continent's ills is thus a depressing throwback to the 1960s
school of aid and development - that Africa should get an extra
£13 billion of aid by 2010 and another £13 billion after that.
Bitter experience
suggests that even if these huge sums were multiplied tenfold, they
would do little good. For Africa received £220 billion of aid between
1960 and 1997, the equivalent of six Marshall Plans, and finished
up even poorer than before.
With the possible
exception of President Robert Mugabe, everyone now accepts that
Africa's central problem is not a shortage of aid but "bad governance".
Put simply, the continent is filled with repressive and incompetent
regimes whose chief pastime is grand larceny.
The onus to
revive their own continent must be on Africans themselves. Indeed
the report pays lip service to this notion, declaring: "Africa must
take the lead in this partnership, take on responsibility for its
problems and take ownership of the solutions."
Hilary Benn,
the international development secretary and a commission member,
has even claimed that the report was not just about "what we need
to do" but also "the things Africa needs to do to help itself".
In fact, more
than two thirds of the report's recommendations are directed at
the rich world. "Governance" is rightly identified as Africa's "core
problem". But, astonishingly, the report proceeds to give eight
recommendations to the West on how to fix African governments and
only one to those administrations themselves.
This lonely
prescription calls for Africa to "draw-up comprehensive capacity-building
strategies" - whatever that may mean. Even more remarkable is the
failure of the recommendations on "governance" to include the word
"democracy".
Decades of bitter
experience have shown that authoritarianism is the enemy of development.
But a British-sponsored commission has dodged an unambiguous demand
for every African regime to embrace democracy. It is little short
of incredible that this vital issue can still be skirted.
Still more depressing
is the report's coverage of corruption. This, we are told, is a
"systemic challenge facing African leaders". In a continent where
Gen Sani Abacha, the late Nigerian dictator, was able to steal between
£1 billion and £3 billion in less five years, this is no exaggeration.
Yet, by some
warped logic, all three of the report's recommendations for fighting
corruption in Africa are directed not at Africans but at Western
nations.
They are urged
to take "all necessary" measures to "repatriate illicitly acquired
funds and assets held in the financial systems of their countries".
What about insisting that African governments stop those "illicitly
acquired funds" from being looted in the first place?
Mr Blair's passion
for Africa is undoubtedly genuine. But his liking for grandiose
schemes does the continent no service. A commission that would genuinely
help Africa would focus on three simple themes.
First, the West
must stop acting in ways that damage Africa. This is the one area
where the report's ideas are spot-on. Debts that can never be repaid
and barriers to trade in agriculture impose crippling burdens on
Africa.
It bears repeating
that trade barriers cost poor countries £55 billion every year,
about twice what they receive in aid. Lifting them should be the
highest priority.
Second, African
regime should never again be allowed to excuse their monumental
failings behind rhetoric about the evils of colonialism. If they
fall short of the standards that western citizens demand of their
own governments, they must be condemned and isolated.
Both African
leaders chosen by Mr Blair to serve on his Commission are unfit
to represent their continent. Meles Zenawi, the Ethiopian prime
minister, fought a pointless border war with neighbouring Eritrea
that claimed 70,000 lives, cost billions and set back the development
of the Horn of Africa by years, if not decades.
President Benjamin
Mkapa of Tanzania is an outspoken fan of Mr Mugabe and entertains
the curious belief that this dictator is a "champion of democracy".
In fact, if he is a "champion" of anything, it is misery, as illustrated
by yesterday's figures showing that life expectancy in Zimbabwe
has fallen to just 33, compared with 63 in 1988.
There are African
leaders who preside over democratic, relatively clean governments
- President John Kufuor of Ghana or President Festus Mogae of Botswana
come to mind. It is scandalous that only Mr Zenawi and Mr Mkapa
found themselves on the Commission.
Thirdly, but
most of all, the West must only offer more aid if African governments
reform and improve. Aid must be an incentive for better behaviour,
not an unconditional handout.
A pledge that
apparently binds the West to give Africa £26 billion over the next
10 years, based on a report that cannot even bring itself to recommend
democracy for the continent, does no one any good.
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