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Apology
no cure-all for Africa's ills
Mavis Makuni,
The Financial Gazette
September 14, 2006
http://allafrica.com/stories/200609070950.html
HARARE: It was
an extraordinary sight. The chairperson of the so-called European
African Reconciliation Process, Christ Seaton, who was draped in
the Union Jack, was shown on Zimbabwean television kneeling on a
richly coloured and luxuriant mat before former Mozambican president,
Joachim Chissano.
Seaton led a
delegation of Christian leaders from Britain, Germany, France, Portugal,
Spain, the Netherlands and the United States of America to Zimbabwe
last week to ask for forgiveness for sins committed by their ancestors
against Africa. These included the slave trade, exploitation of
the continent, the killing of innocent people and causing conflicts.
Chissano, who
accepted the apologies on behalf of the continent, said he was humbled
and wished he had "the mandate to ask for forgiveness as well because
most of the sins committed by Europeans were not committed by them
alone"
Apologising
specifically for the havoc wreaked by Cecil John Rhodes in Zimbabwe,
Seaton said his ancestors tricked King Lobengula into signing the
Rudd Concession more than 100 years ago, paving the way for occupation
of the land by white settlers.
There was an
inexplicable sense of deja vu about the scene, may be because history
was repeating itself. While Seaton's ancestors had used tricks and
material inducements to dupe illiterate chiefs to act against their
own people's interests during the partitioning of Africa, he and
his colleagues have now resorted to semantics to stroke the inflated
egos of our authoritarian 21st century rulers. They risk causing
offence and polarisation between rulers and the governed as ordinary
people cannot be sure whose side they are on.
While it is
accepted that the apology was only symbolic, it is still true that
such a gesture can be totally meaningless as long as it does not
focus on the present and future. What happened in the past cannot
be changed and beyond mouthing the words, "We are sorry", the European
men of the cloth have not enunciated what practical steps they propose
to take to repair the damage and make life better for those alive
today.
These European
churchmen needed to explain how their contrition would be translated
into meaningful initiatives to help prevent a recurrence in modern
day Africa of the very injustices and atrocities committed by their
forebears.
The churchmen
have chosen to ignore the fact that an apology for sins committed
a century ago means absolutely nothing to oppressed, displaced,
diseased, impoverished and starving Africans who are unnecessarily
subjected to these ills by erstwhile liberation heroes who spearheaded
the fight for independence from colonial rule.
Since the end
of colonialism, different situations have prevailed in various African
countries, depending on the style of governance of the black rulers.
Some countries have been devastated by civil wars, genocide, disease
or famine. Progress has been impeded in some others by natural disasters,
rampant corruption and oppressive governance.
It should be
obvious to Seaton and his group that a grovelling apology in Harare
can not be a cure-all to ease the plight of present-day Africans.
They live in countries that are at different levels of political
and economic development and have had different experiences since
the end of colonialism. They are grappling with problems requiring
specific solutions, not a blanket apology.
Expressing emotional
regret for events that took place in the 19th century cannot, for
example, mean very much to the people of Rwanda who are still grappling
with the trauma of the genocide of 1994 when almost one million
people were massacred under an African dispensation. The same goes
for the people of the Darfur region of Western Sudan, Liberia and
Sierra Leone who have endured years of political upheaval and civil
strife.
Instead of limiting
their efforts to meaningless platitudes, those involved in European
African Reconciliation would make greater impact if they came up
with initiatives tailored to address current pressing African needs
such as poverty alleviation, AIDS, education and health issues.
These churchmen should take a leaf out of the book of celebrities
such as Bob Geldof, who was galvanised into action to address massive
famine in Ethiopia some years ago by doing something practical.
African leaders
have always said that what they need to ensure development in their
countries is fair trade rather than aid and it follows that apologies
are even less effective. Chissano's observation that if he had a
mandate he would do his own apologising has been echoed by Ugandan
President Yoweri Museveni who has said imperialists were not solely
to blame for the colonisation of Africa.
"It is also
the fault of our chiefs, who so divided our people that they could
not defend our sovereignty. It is also the fault of many of the
post-independence leaders of Africa who have failed to transform
our economies and end Africa's balkanisation in order to create
power blocs on our continent with global influence when it comes
to our legitimate interests", Museveni has said.
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