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The
conspiracy against Africa
Gerald
Caplan
November
14, 2006
http://www.walrusmagazine.com/print/international-affairs-the-conspiracy-against-africa/
Africa is a
mess and it’s not going to get better any time soon. That’s the
awful truth that’s so hard to face — or to state publicly — for
those of us who have had a long, intimate relationship with the
continent. Mine has lasted for almost forty-five years. But from
the very start, my experiences in Africa began conflicting with
my hopes, indicating trouble afoot, foretelling that our utopian
dreams were going to lead to crushing disappointments. Of course,
we should have known what the entire twentieth century taught: that
all utopian dreams fail, not least those wrapped in progressive
rhetoric. Still, the reality in so much of Africa has been infinitely
more appalling than anything we might have feared.
The regret,
disappointment, even the cynicism runs deep, but alongside the many
wonderful, committed, and dedicated Africans I know from one end
of Africa to the other,1 the struggle for a more just and equitable
continent must continue. All too often it feels like a Sisyphean
task.
Besides the
fear of spreading hopelessness, there’s a genuine risk in publicly
facing Africa’s mess. Reasonably enough, Westerners of goodwill
want to know how to account for Africa’s apparently endless list
of problems. But behind the question often lurks the unspoken implication
that the answer has to do with race: are Africans really incapable
of governing themselves?
Most people
are aware of the African condition: corruption, conflict, famine,
aids, wretched governance, grinding poverty. At the time of its
independence in 1957, Ghana — the second sub- Saharan African country
to free itself of colonial rule and the white hope (as it were)
of the emerging continent — was in development terms on a par with
South Korea, near the bottom of the scale. Today, the United Nations’
Human Development Index ranks South Korea twenty-eighth among 177
nations, Ghana 138th. For many, this is a vivid and fair symbol
of the African record in the past half-century.
I ran into troubling
omens from my first immersion in Africa as a graduate student in
London in the early 1960s. When I was working on my doctorate at
the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies,
one of my friends was Gilchrist Olympio, from Togo, a tiny former
French colony in West Africa. Gil failed to appear one day, and
on the following day we read in the Times that his father, the first
president of independent Togo, had been ousted in the first coup
of post-colonial Africa. No one had foreseen the military threat
to the new Africa, yet soon enough military governments became as
commonplace as the heat.
In white-ruled
Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where I was based for part of
my doctoral work, a few of us used to unwind at a dance hall in
one of the segregated African townships. After two years of teaching,
researching, and regularly demonstrating against the government,
I was arrested. Later, I learned that the racist security service
knew every rocking Congo jive number I ever danced to and that African
informers had been paid to keep an eye on us white liberal troublemakers.
In Zambia, living by the Upper Zambezi River, the traditional elite
of an anachronistic kingdom struck an alliance with South African
apartheid leaders against the new nationalist government of Kenneth
Kaunda — another shocking lesson to a nice ignorant boy from Toronto.
In 1968, back in Canada, I hosted a zapu "freedom fighter"
from Rhodesia, only to listen to him viciously badmouth the competing
liberation movement, zanu, composed mainly of members of Rhodesia’s
other major ethnic group. He could not have detested his white oppressors
more. Much later still, I marvelled at another bitter irony — that
I had gone to prison in old Rhodesia to help Robert Mugabe become
president of Zimbabwe.
From the relative
comfort of Toronto, I became deeply involved in a Canadian advocacy
group supporting the right of the Igbo people of eastern Nigeria
to secede. Soon after independence Nigeria was already in chaos,
having undergone murderous coups and internecine conflict among
its three main peoples, and now the majority were prepared to starve
the entire Igbo "nation" to death rather than allow it
to secede. I soon realized that the Igbo never had a chance, and
that the leadership, with our blind support, was prepared to see
its people starve to death for a wholly chimerical cause.
Ten years on,
I was the director of the cuso volunteer program in Nigeria, where
more than 200 Canadians served as low-paid teachers, nurses, physiotherapists,
and the like. Then, as now, Nigeria’s reputation on the continent
was unique, and overwhelmingly awful. Despite many marvellous Nigerians,
collectively the country is belligerent, fractious, and always on
the verge of erupting into violence. I feared that many of my young
wards would return home as confirmed racists. The problem was convincingly
explaining to them why Nigeria is the way it is.
Now the task
is explaining why almost all of Africa is the way it is. Finding
myself plunged into a study of the 1994 Rwandan genocide and its
aftermath, the calamitous wars of the neighbouring Democratic Republic
of the Congo, does not make the task any easier. Not much does.
I was frequently in Addis Ababa early in this new century as two
of the world’s poorest countries, Ethiopia and Eritrea, former allies
led by promising new leaders, slaughtered each other’s young soldiers
over an economic disagreement. Rural Ethiopia faced a desperate
famine, and the government appealed to the world for relief; at
the same time, the markets of Addis sold a gorgeous abundance of
fresh fruits and vegetables, and in luxury hotels the sumptuous
buffets never ran out. During most African famines, people starve
because of a lack of money, not a lack of food. In December 2005,
I spoke at a series of conferences and marches across Canada about
the Lord’s Resistance Army in Uganda, the quasi-genocide in Darfur,
and the instability still threatening the Great Lakes region of
Africa. It seems as if the horror stories never stop.
Writing in 2001,
bbc correspondent George Alagiah noted that since independence there
have been over eighty violent or unconstitutional changes of government,
and in twenty countries such eruptions have been repeat occurrences.
In A Passage to Africa, Alagiah concludes that it is in the nature
of African politics that by the time any such statistics are published
they are likely to be out of date. Indeed, over the years African
leaders have become synonymous with monstrous tyranny — Mobutu,
Idi Amin, Abacha, Bokassa, Sam Doe, Charles Taylor, Mugabe, Habre,
Mengistu, Moi, Bashir. The list is very long. It is not possible
to calculate the millions of people murdered by these men, or the
amount of suffering they caused, or the amount of money they stole:
Africans slaughtering Africans, Africans immiserating other Africans,
Africans brutally exploiting other Africans. None of this is in
dispute.
Nor is the corruption
so widely associated with Africa an exaggeration. Police, civil
servants, even teachers regularly demand bribes in order to make
ends meet on their meagre salaries; the well-connected are just
insatiably greedy. According to a much-quoted report prepared for
the African Union, African elites steal $148 billion (all figures
US) a year from their fellow citizens while national budgets often
total less than $1 billion a year. African countries routinely dominate
Transparency International’s Corruption Perception indices; predatory
African leaders have clearly turned the skill of manipulating political
systems to their own advantage into a fine art.
Africa is not
a poor continent, and not all Africans are poor. Merrill Lynch’s
World Wealth Report for 2006 calculates that there are 82,000 African
millionaires — a mere bagatelle out of some billion people, but
surely a surprising number nonetheless. Their total worth is $786
billion. But instead of providing moderate prosperity for all, many
African nations are the most unequal places on earth. You see it
immediately: the gated communities and guarded monster homes of
expatriates and local elites right next to mile upon mile of squalid
townships with their tiny hovels, filthy water, open sewers, piles
of rubbish. Even the rich can’t escape the broken roads, the ubiquitous
garbage, the gridlocked traffic, the suicidal drivers, the gangs
of feckless young men, the beggars so thick on the ground that even
liberals keep the windows closed in their air-conditioned suvs.
These are the
external signs of the larger economic reality. Of the 177 countries
on the undp’s Human Development Index, the bottom twentyfour are
all African, as are thirty-six of the bottom forty. Most of these
countries can’t be expected to improve their lot because they lack
the basic institutions and capital needed to develop. Future generations
will likely be more numerous, poorer, less educated, and more desperate.
According to the Economic Commission for Africa’s flagship Economic
Report on Africa 2005, African poverty "is chronic and rising.
The share of the total population living below the $1 a day threshold
is higher today than in the 1980s and 1990s — this despite significant
improvements in the growth of African gdp in recent years. The implication:
poverty has been unresponsive to economic growth. Underlying this
trend is the fact that the majority of people have no jobs or secure
sources of income."
Forty thousand
branches of international aid agencies now operate throughout Africa.
Many make a significant contribution through small local projects.
Yet as American travel writer Paul Theroux found when he returned
to areas where he had worked as a Peace Corps volunteer in the 1960s,
virtually everywhere today things are shabbier and less hopeful
than they were four decades earlier. Who can resist sharing Theroux’s
disillusion about foreign aid or his dour overall view of the continent
forty years later?
In the face
of these disappointing developments, African leaders continue to
bring shame on their countries. South Africa’s Thabo Mbeki and his
barking-mad minister of health are undermining serious attempts
to deal with one of the world’s greatest aids crises. Zimbabwe’s
Robert Mugabe has systematically devastated his country. In Malawi,
which ranks 165 of 177 on the Human Development Index, the newly
elected "reform" president chose the huge legislative
building for his official residence, bought a half-million-dollar
Chrysler Maybach 62 (and, in so doing, kept up with the reckless
king of impoverished, aids-ridden Swaziland), and was to have an
official portrait painted at a cost of $800,000. Uganda’s Yoweri
Museveni, a long-time favourite of the US and Britain and head of
state for twenty years, changed the constitution so that he could
run for a third time. He had his leading opponent charged with treason
and rape. It is as if these men are deliberately seeking to humiliate
their continent in the eyes of the world.
Failed or ruined
non-states are commonplace. Angola, Liberia, Burundi, Sierra Leone,
Ivory Coast, Central African Republic, southern Sudan, and the Republic
of Congo are all emerging from ghastly fighting, all of it internally
driven. The challenges each faces even to reach normal levels of
African underdevelopment border on the intractable. Conflicts of
varying degrees of destructiveness continue in western Sudan (Darfur),
between Sudan and Chad, in northern Uganda with the Lord’s Resistance
Army, in Somalia, throughout the vast Democratic Republic of the
Congo (aided and abetted by Rwanda and Uganda). Nigeria is in a
state of imminent implosion. The resumption of war between Ethiopia
and Eritrea is a distinct possibility. Across southern Africa, the
spread of hiv/aids threatens the very existence of Lesotho, Swaziland,
Botswana, and Zambia; South Africa, whose well-being is key to Africa’s
future, has more hiv/aids sufferers than anywhere else on earth
save for India.
Perhaps the
most depressing phenomenon is the situation of girls and women.
Many African countries boast the most egalitarian protocols and
regulations imaginable promoting the status of women. Rwanda’s parliament
has a higher percentage of women members than any other country
in the world. Africa has produced a significant number of powerhouse
women as well as impressive feminist ngos. Yet the distance between
this development and the reality facing the majority of African
women seems unbridgeable. In many African countries, in fact, women
have no rights at all — they are regarded by customary law as minors,
their lives in the hands of their husbands. From legal status to
education to manual labour to social obligations to family responsibilities
to sexual victimization, life for many, perhaps most, African girls
and women is truly Hobbesian.
This portrait,
of course, is not the entire reality of Africa today. The continent
is endlessly diverse, and all generalizations have exceptions. Hundreds
of millions of Africans are just like the majority of people everywhere
— hardworking, trying to cope, and full of the multiple complexities
of our species. Nonetheless, it’s virtually impossible not to be
stunned by the pages and pages of horrid news that constitute the
reality of modern-day Africa in a way that’s not true of any other
part of the world. In the forty-odd years since my first visit,
the dream of a continent that would show the rest of us new possibilities
for the human condition has turned into a grotesque nightmare.
How do we account
for Africa’s plight and what should be done? The conventional wisdom
is that the problem is African and the solution is for the rich,
white Western world to save Africa from itself, its leaders, its
appetites, and its apparent incapacity for civilization. We give,
they take. We’re active and entrepreneurial, they’re passive and
dependent. We help, they’re helpless.
There is in
this neat equation more than a hint of centuries-old racist attitudes
toward Africans, our era’s version of the white man’s burden. But
there’s an alternative perspective on the "African problem,"
one that is not nearly as self-congratulatory and dishonest. This
interpretation says that rather than being the solution to Africa’s
plight, Westerners are a very substantial part of the problem and
have been for centuries. None of this condones or justifies African
malfeasance. But it does help to explain it and to indicate different
directions that need to be taken if Africa is to find its path to
a better future.
The very notion
of Africa as "the dark continent" — dark in skin colour,
in obscurity, in primitivism — is a major distortion of historical
reality. Over the millennia before colonialism, sub-Saharan Africa
was home to a series of great civilizations. Mali, Bornu, Fulani,
Dahomey, Ashanti, Songhay, Zimbabwe, Axum — all powerful empires
that made their mark on the world. Here is Basil Davidson, the British
historian who did much to rescue Africa’s remarkable history from
oblivion and Western derision: "The great lords of the Western
Sudan grew famous far outside Africa for their stores of gold, their
lavish gifts, their dazzling regalia and ceremonial display. When
the most powerful of the emperors of Mali passed through Cairo on
pilgrimage to Mecca in the fourteenth century, he ruined the price
of the Egyptian gold-based dinar for several years by his presents
and payments of unminted gold to courtiers and merchants."
No one who has seen the underground churches of Lalibela in northern
Ethiopia or the magnificent bronze and brass Ife sculptures of western
Nigeria can doubt the extraordinary potential of African technology
and creativity. For much of its history, Europe had little to surpass
these achievements. We’ll never know the outcome had Africa been
permitted to develop based on its own skills and resources, as Europe
was, but it was allowed no such luxury.
History matters,
and for Africa the slave trade and colonialism matter enormously
in understanding its subsequent evolution. In many respects the
continent has never recovered from either. Enlightenment Europe
had guns and ships, and it unleashed them against Africa. The slave
trade ended barely 150 years ago, three and a half centuries in
which an estimated twenty million Africans — an astonishing proportion
of the continent’s population — were uprooted from their lands.
Perhaps twelve million finally arrived alive, and their labour enabled
the development of both the United States and Europe, a relationship
between Africa and the West that has remained largely unaltered.
Arab slavers shipped millions more Africans out of eastern Africa.
The continent was left reeling.
Hard on the
heels of the slave trade came full-blown Western colonialism, institutionalized
with the "scramble for Africa" at the Congress of Berlin
in 1884-85. Undeterred by ignorance and driven by greed and racism,
Europe’s leaders blithely partitioned almost the entire continent
among themselves. To this day, probably every single border in Africa
arbitrarily divides at least one ethnic or cultural group. South
Africa has been free from white rule for only a dozen years, and
until their very last moments of power, the white minority kept
nearly 40 percent of the continent destabilized. From Angola, Zambia,
and Tanzania south, no normal governance was possible while apartheid
wielded its formidable power. The rest of the continent has been
independent for a mere forty to forty-five years, and every country
endured colonialism for many decades longer than it’s been independent.
The paternalistic
fashion of the moment is to rhapsodize about the good old colonial
days. What Africa needs, we are told, is a form of benign colonialism
or liberal imperialism. British scholar Niall Ferguson, for example,
has gained prominence arguing that imperialism was the greatest
thing that could have happened to Africa (and Asia). Nothing could
be further from the truth. Colonialism by definition and in practice
was based on dictatorship, violence, coercion, oppression, forced
taxation, and daily racial humiliation. Not a single colonial power
— France, Germany, Britain, Portugal, Belgium, Italy — is innocent.
Look at King Leopold’s Congo: half of its twenty million people
dead. In the name of bringing civilization to Africa, Belgium introduced
the practice of amputating arms as punishment, an abomination replicated
a century later by Africans in Sierra Leone’s civil war. The list
of atrocities perpetrated by Europeans is long and bloody — Belgian-like
tactics emulated in the surrounding French and Portuguese colonies,
Germany’s genocide against the Herero people of South West Africa
(now Namibia), the blatant theft of land by Afrikaners and Cecil
Rhodes’s British-backed gang of marauders across southern Africa,
the wars of the British in the Gold Coast, the cruelty of the Portuguese
in Angola and Mozambique, the indiscriminate slaughter of Ethiopians
by Italy. In today’s terms, every single European power in Africa
was guilty of multiple crimes against humanity.
Africa’s partition
by European powers was implemented with a fine disdain for existing
realities. Families, clans, ethnic groups, and nations were all
divided from each other in a purely arbitrary manner. Those unrelated
to each other suddenly found themselves locked together under new
and alien governments. For many Africans, iden tifying with these
new artificial colonial constructs made little sense; rather than
adopting Nigerian or Rwandan or Kenyan nationality, they found it
more natural to reaffirm their identities as Yoruba or Hutu or Luo.
Paradoxically, then, the imposition by Europe of new nations in
Africa served instead to reinforce ties of ethnicity or clan.
In most colonies,
with only a tiny number of whites actually on hand, indirect rule
prevailed. The European occupier, frequently in collaboration with
Christian missionaries, privileged a particular group to help administer
the new territory, invariably causing the hapless majority to deeply
resent the chosen minority. Together with the meaningless boundaries,
such divideand- rule strategies undermined loyalty to the new nation.
Instead, as the end of colonial rule and the emergence of independent
African governments drew nearer, the state came to be seen as an
ethnic preserve rather than a national entity. Control of the state
became the means to reward the rulers’ ethnic followers and to exploit,
oppress, or ignore all others.
This phenomenon
is still prevalent. Political parties and liberation movements became
— and often remain — the instruments of specific ethnic groups.
This made untenable the notion of a loyal opposition that could
form a new government after winning a free election. It would be
tantamount to turning the state over to an illegitimate, antagonistic,
and hitherto excluded ethnic group. For the loser, surrendering
control of the instruments of the state meant losing everything
under a new ethnicity-based government. The role of government came
to be seen not as developing the entire nation but as maintaining
the loyalty of the rulers’ followers and clients. Political dictatorship
became the form of government most appealing to ruling groups. Conversely,
violent coups to usurp those dictatorships, often led by factions
within the military, seemed the logical means for marginalized groups
to dislodge them. Voluntarily surrendering power was unthinkable,
sometimes literally suicidal. A substantial chunk of post-independence
African history, from the Biafran War to the genocide in Rwanda,
can be accounted for in this way.
Much of the
tumult that has engulfed Africa over the past halfcentury results
from policies imposed by European powers during the colonial era.
All metropolitan governments criminally neglected the welfare of
their colonies. Colonies had one purpose only — to serve the interests
of the metropole. Only when the spectre of independence finally
loomed after World War II was some small thought given to local
interests. Even then, until the very last moment, the Belgians in
the Congo, the British in Kenya, the French in Guinea, and the Portuguese
in Mozambique demonstrated all that was most malignant about colonialism.
Historian Walter
Rodney caught the spirit with his powerful indictment of the colonial
system, neatly summarized in the title of his 1972 book How Europe
Underdeveloped Africa. In country after country, independence was
ushered in under ethnic leaders pretending to be nationalists, in
countries with minimal infrastructure or human capacity, with a
heritage of violence and authoritarianism, and through structures
that drained Africa’s wealth and resources to the rich world.
Throughout the
1940s and 1950s, the struggle to end colonial rule spread inexorably
through the Third World. In the imperial homelands, the anti-colonial
movement was one of the great causes of the mid-twentieth century.
Progressive internationalists were convinced that independence would
open a dramatic new chapter in the history of human emancipation.
Africa, especially, embodied the boundless dream of a continent
that would show the world how to live without racism, violence,
oppression, exploitation, and inequality. But almost everywhere,
what in fact followed the raising of national flags was the continued
underdevelopment of Africa. An implicit bargain was struck between
the new African ruling elites and their old oppressors in Western
governments, plus the corporate world, plus the new international
financial institutions, to perpetuate old patterns under new circumstances.
Instead of building
nations that repudiated the policies and behaviour of the colonial
era, the reign of the "Big Men" spread across Africa,
bringing with it terrible brutality, bottomless venality, and an
almost sadistic callousness. All the while, Africa’s resources continued
to pour out of the continent into the coffers of the rich world.
The difference now was that the new African elites — whether Jomo
Kenyatta and his Kikuyu cronies in Kenya, Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire,
or the new rulers in every one of the former French African colonies
save for maverick Guinea — split the plunder with their former Western
overlords.
The betrayal
by the new elites is not the entire story of the continent’s continuing
crises. For centuries Africa’s history and development had been
profoundly influenced by outsiders, both Europeans and Arabs, and
external influence by no means disappeared with independence. And
just as most of the pre-independence impact was exploitative, so
has it remained. Yet the conventional wisdom remains the opposite:
Africa is the problem, the West is the solution. The Blair commission
on Africa, the 2005 Gleneagles summit and the Geldof/Bono singalongs
are all manifestations of the West fulfilling its sacred moral obligation
to save Africa from itself.
The reality
is demonstrably different. The fact is the West is deeply complicit
in the crises bedevilling Africa, and we’re up to our necks in all
manner of retrograde practices, virtual coconspirators with monstrous
African Big Men in underdeveloping the continent and betraying its
people. In almost every case of egregious African governance, Western
powers have played a central role. Hardly a single rogue government
would have attained power and remained in office without the active
support of one or another Western government, primarily the United
States and France, with the United Kingdom and Belgium in the game
as well. And few of the conflicts that have ravaged the continent
would have lasted long without the active intervention of mainly
Western governments or, in certain cases, the ussr, including the
promiscuous provision of weapons to any and all parties.
Both Ronald
Reagan and Margaret Thatcher had soft spots for the apartheid rulers
of South Africa, who were, after all, passionate fellow anti-Communists;
it was Bob Woodward who exposed the close personal working relations
between Bill Casey, Reagan’s cia director, and key South African
government officials, including its intelligence service. In Angola
and Mozambique, the US came in behind Portugal and South Africa
to train and arm rebel groups against African governments. To the
satisfaction of Belgian mine owners and the US, Belgium conspired
with Congo secessionists to murder Patrice Lumumba, the Congo’s
first and only democratically elected president. France propped
up an array of tinpot tyrants in nearly all its former sub-Saharan
colonies, most notoriously the sadistic "Emperor" Jean
Bédel Bokassa in the Central African Republic. Virtually
all researchers agree that the Catholic Church and the Belgian,
French, and US governments bore some of the responsibility for the
Rwandan genocide.
Oil companies
grow fat from the Gulf of Guinea, increasingly a source of American
oil supplies, while the citizens of half a dozen countries go without
lights, clean water, good health, and jobs. The US colludes with
the government of Sudan in the "war on terrorism," while
accusing that same government of orchestrating a genocide in Darfur.
Africa’s most deadly and intractable crisis, in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, has its roots in America’s thirty-year unconditional
support for Mobutu in Zaire (which is now the drc).
But Western
governments, international financial institutions, and transnational
corporations do far more harm than merely bolstering and arming
tyrannical regimes. Western commercial and financial activities
in Africa, as a wealth of research by Human Rights Watch, among
others, confirms, are overwhelmingly exploitative and destructive.
Research carried out by the well-respected Washingtonbased ngo Africa
Action comes to this startling conclusion: "[Africa] subsidizes
the wealthy economies of the world through a net transfer of wealth
in the form of payments for illegitimate debts. More money flows
out of Africa each year in the form of debt service payments, than
goes into Africa in the form of aid."
Southern African
academic and researcher Patrick Bond looked at other variables:
"Although remittances from the Diaspora now fund development
and even a limited amount of capital accumulation, capital flight
is far greater. At more than $10 billion each year since the early
1970s, collectively the citizens of Nigeria, the Ivory Coast, the
drc, Angola and Zambia have been especially vulnerable to the overseas
drain of their national wealth." Based on the evidence at hand
and contrary to popular belief, it is likely that since the West
and Africa first began their multiple interactions, more wealth
has drained out of Africa to the West than has been infused into
Africa by all Western sources.
In truth, not
a single African country has the sovereign right to introduce policies
that would significantly direct or alter its own destiny. Governments
must either implement the demonstrably failed policies of the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank or forfeit aid, loans, debt relief,
and general international acceptance. This is the new imperialism,
or neo-colonialism, in practice. As noted by prominent American
economist Jeffrey Sachs, "The imf routinely works with the
finance ministers of impoverished countries to set budget ceilings
on health, education, water, sanitation, agricultural infrastructure
and other basic needs, in the full knowledge that the consequence
is mass suffering and death." As a Zambian pediatrician told
me, for him imf will always stand for Infant Mortality Fund.
Joseph Stiglitz,
former senior vicepresident of the World Bank and author of Globalization
and Its Discontents, calls it market fundamentalism. He means the
extreme version of free-market nostrums that the imf and World Bank,
backed by Western governments, have unilaterally imposed on Africa
over the past twenty-five years. These policies have overwhelmingly
failed to grow African economies, but they have succeeded magnificently
in increasing poverty and the gap between rich and poor, both between
Africa and the West as well as within African countries. Failures
when known as Structural Adjustment Policies, these same prescriptions
were cynically renamed poverty-reduction strategies with the same
destructive consequences.
Forcing Africans
to pay for schooling and health care meant that fewer went to school
or attended health clinics, an outcome that apparently came as a
shock to the experts at the imf and World Bank. Imposing tight ceilings
on health and school staff, slashing funds to schools, health clinics,
and hospitals, and failing to maintain or expand health infrastructures,
have inevitably led to deteriorating health and school systems across
the continent. All these deliberately severe austerity programs
were imposed at exactly the same moment the aids pandemic was surging
out of control. According to the ngo Essential Action, when the
World Bank demanded that Kenya begin charging $2.15 for services
at clinics for sexually transmitted diseases, attendance fell by
as much as 60 percent.
At the same
time, Western financiers offered generous loans to African leaders,
including the most monstrous among them. Then interest rates rose
usuriously, and the debt crisis became yet another component of
the African reality. This crisis led to an enormous outflow of scarce
capital from Africa to the West, a direct reverse transfer from
the poorest of the poor to Western governments and their financial
surrogates at the World Bank. According to the UN Conference on
Trade and Development, between 1970 and 2002 sub-Saharan Africa
received $294 billion in loans, paid out $268 billion in debt service,
and yet still owed $210 billion. Even while the G8 industrialized
nations were promising debt relief in 2005, African countries had
to surrender $23.4 billion in interest and principal payments. The
consequence for individual African countries is breathtaking. In
2003, Senegal and Malawi spent about one-third of government revenues
on debt-servicing. Angola and Zambia spent more on debt-servicing
than they did on health care and education combined.
In a sane world,
where commerce yields to justice, much of Africa’s debt to Western
institutions and governments would be considered odious and cancelled.
Yet not even in the case of Rwanda, where a $1-billion debt was
incurred by a government largely responsible for the 1994 genocide,
or of South Africa, which inherited a debt of $22 billion from its
apartheid predecessor, or in some sixteen other states left unbearable
debts by their Westernbacked dictators, is there discussion of unconditionally
cancelling these debilitating debts. Contrast this with the Bush
administration’s successful call for the full cancellation of Iraq’s
debt incurred under Saddam Hussein.
The imf and
World Bank’s Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative and its
successor, the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (g8), have delivered
debt relief. However, it amounts to far less than the 100-percent
debt cancellation the world was deliberately led to expect. Furthermore,
in order to become or remain eligible for debt relief, all countries
must comply with the same free-market policies that have already
damaged Africa so brutally.
Even when it
seems the West is actually investing in Africa, the reality is almost
exactly the opposite. With few exceptions, Africa’s fabulous natural
riches — from Nigeria to Angola to Chad to eastern Congo to southern
Sudan — have become a "resource curse." Of Africa’s less
than 3-percent share of the world’s foreign direct investment, almost
all goes to extractive industries — oil, minerals (gold, diamond,
coltan, platinum), and timber. Two-thirds of American capital entering
Africa goes into mining and petroleum. But to label this "investment"
badly distorts the concept. Although there are exceptions, in the
majority of cases foreign companies pay little or no taxes, increase
corruption by bribing their way to their objectives, build no lasting
infrastructures, pay starvation wages, destabilize communities,
become involved in local conflicts, then disappear, leaving behind
an environmental and social disaster. Last year, the Guardian undertook
a major investigation of resource-plundering and corruption in three
African countries — Angola, Liberia, and Equatorial Guinea; their
harsh conclusions led them to label the situation "The new
scramble for Africa."
The bribes paid
by Western companies to loot Africa’s natural resources are useful
reminders of what should be self-evident: it would be quite impossible
for Africans to steal the quantities involved without outside help.
In fact, such bribes are just one component in what Patrick Smith,
editor of London’s Africa Confidential magazine, calls "a system
run by an international network of criminals: from the corrupt bankers
in London and Geneva who launder the money; the lawyers and accountants
in London and Paris who set up the front companies and trusts to
collect the bribes or ‘commissions’; the contract-hungry Western
company directors who offer the bribes and pocket some for themselves."
As Michela Wrong illustrates in her book In the Footsteps of Mr.
Kurtz, the scale of theft carried out by Mobutu suggests his foreign
financial backers must have been aware that much of the aid and
loan monies intended for Zaire were actually destined for this African
kleptocrat’s Swiss bank accounts. The most conservative estimates
state that Mobutu had a $50-million nest egg when he ended his twenty-two-year
reign. During the same period, Zaire’s debt grew to an astonishing
$13 billion.
Natural resources
and cash are by no means the only items being drained out of Africa.
As it did during the slave trade, the continent is once again giving
the West its most precious resource — its best, brightest, healthiest,
and most productive people. In effect, African countries are using
their meagre resources — often from foreign aid ostensibly aimed
at "capacity building" — to train professionals who end
up in Europe or North America. Thus, a good chunk of our foreign
aid to Africa actually benefits us, not them.
This includes
university graduates and professionals in all fields, but is most
extreme in the health sector. No African country can afford to lose
a single health-care professional. The US has 937 nurses per 100,000
people, Uganda has 61. Canada has 214 physicians per 100,000 people,
Ghana, one of the continent’s more stable countries, has 15. Collectively,
African countries already fall far short of the who minimum standard
of 250 health-care workers per 100,000 people, while the brain drain
continues to suck doctors and nurses out of Africa and into the
developed world.
At every step,
Africa find itself the victim of double standards. The continent
is routinely forced to play by the rules of free trade though the
West ignores these rules at will. According to ngo Christian Aid,
sub- Saharan Africa is $272 billion worse off thanks to the free-trade
policies forced on it as a condition of receiving Western money.
At the same time, the countries of the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (oecd) spend $1 billion a day in agriculture
subsidies (mainly to large agribusinesses), allowing them to flood
Africa with commodities at lower prices than African producers can
match. This protects their own farmers and makes it virtually impossible
for African products to gain a foothold in Western markets. Bizarrely
enough, it’s now cheaper for a Ghanaian to buy an imported European-
raised chicken than a locally raised one. According to CorpWatch,
in 1992 domestic poultry farmers supplied 95 percent of the Ghanaian
market; by 2001, their market share had dwindled to 11 percent.
The pattern has been the same elsewhere; poor African countries
lose substantial and sustainable local industries as they are forced
to open their markets to cheap imports.
As for the overseas
development assistance (oda) that all Western governments include
in their budgets, there’s a dirty little secret about all those
billions. It’s not just that most countries could easily be far
more generous; the real story of oda is how much less has been delivered
than almost everyone believes. Many bemoan the billions of aid dollars
that have flooded into Africa over the past forty-odd years with
precious little to show for it. Now recent research by the British
ngo ActionAid, among others, has demonstrated the pathetic reality
behind the official numbers. It’s often difficult to determine what
constitutes oda in any country’s budget; debt relief, for example,
is often lumped in as a form of aid, and some countries still commonly
receive aid money for geopolitical rather than developmental purposes,
badly distorting the data. Much aid, in fact, directly benefits
the donor country, as it is tied to the purchase of goods and services
from the donor. This makes little sense in terms of costs or efficiency:
food purchased through tied aid, for example, is 40 percent more
expensive than what could be acquired through open market transactions.
As a result, sub-Saharan Africa effectively loses between $1.6 and
$2.3 billion of the annual aid it receives. Though the US and Italy
are the worst offenders, Canada is not much better. By most estimates,
more than half of all Canadian aid is tied to the purchase of Canadian
goods and services.
Tied aid is
but a manifestation of a larger category known as "phantom
aid." As described by ActionAid, in addition to tied aid, phantom
aid involves a "failure to target aid at the poorest countries,
runaway spending on overpriced technical assistance from international
consultants, tying aid to purchases from donor countries’ own firms,
cumbersome and ill-coordinated planning, implementation, monitoring
and reporting requirements, excessive administrative costs, late
and partial disbursements, double counting of debt relief, and aid
spending on immigration services." All of these factors deflate
the value of actual aid being delivered. Of the $79 billion reported
as aid granted by the oecd in 2004, ActionAid insists that only
$42 billion was actual aid. In real aid terms, the US spends 0.06
percent of its Gross National Income, less than one-tenth of the
UN’s 0.7-percent target. With the exceptions of five small northern
European states, the prospect of the developed world ever reaching
a real 0.7 percent of gnp in oda is a cruel hoax. Not a single one
of the large European countries is even close.
Between meagre
aid, phantom aid, tied aid, and aid pilfered by recipient governments,
it’s far from evident how much of an impact aid actually makes on
Africa. While there’s little question of the benefits aid confers
upon the private sector in donor countries, for Africans the consequences
of the aid scam, together with other facets of the great collusion
between Western and African elites, could hardly be clearer. Africa
faces a permanent tsunami, almost entirely ignored by the rest of
the world. Every week an estimated 130,000 Africans die of causes
that, in most cases, are easily preventable. Four major killers
of children are diarrhea, malaria, pneumonia, and measles; for all
of these, cheap, safe, available interventions already exist.
To meet their
bottomless pit of urgent needs, African governments have available
resources so grossly inadequate that it’s almost laughable. Many
Westerners travel to Africa with more health paraphernalia than
can be found in typical African clinics. When I visited a clinic
in Rwanda responsible for the care of thousands of local widows
who had been raped and infected with aids during the genocide, there
were fewer drugs in its fridge than I had in my hotel room. In Canada,
we spend annually approximately $3,000 per capita on public and
private health care; Malawi spends $13, Rwanda $7, Ethiopia $5.
In Canada, annual drug spending per capita is $681; in Africa it’s
two bucks.
Things change.
Until 1945, Europe had been a hopeless war zone for millennia. South
Korea has changed beyond recognition in the past halfcentury. China
and India are changing. And Africa will change too, though it’s
always been Africa’s bad luck that it has no Africa of its own to
exploit. What will expedite that change in the right directions?
A facile mantra is now widely recited by politicians both Western
and African: African solutions for African problems. At best, that’s
only a half-truth. Certainly Africa’s political, business, and professional
elites must change. We have a new African Union — the continent’s
equivalent of the European Union — which already outshines the shoddy
record of its predecessor, the Organization of African Unity, scornfully
known as the African Dictators’ Club. But as the disappointing experience
of the AU forces in Darfur revealed, it is so dependent on the West
for resources and is so divided by all the troublesome African fault
lines — French versus English speakers, north versus south, Christian
versus Muslim, South Africa versus Nigeria, terribly poor versus
very poor — that it will take years before it plays a truly significant
continental role. In reaction to Western demands, African governments
initiated the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (nepad),
described grandly as "a vision and strategic framework for
Africa’s renewal." But since nepad from the first has rested
on discredited neoliberal assumptions about growth and development,
it is a frail reed on which to rest the continent’s hopes. It’s
destined to play a modest role, at best, for the foreseeable future.
The best hope
for Africa lies with two developments. First is the increased number
of countries that are experiencing political democracy, however
tenuously. Second is the emergence of local civil society groups
determined to entrench the idea that governments must rule on behalf
of all their citizens, not merely cronies and kin. Everywhere, local
ngos fighting for social justice, democracy, clean government, gender
equity, children’s rights, the environment, the rule of law, and
human rights are well placed to have an impact. Many women’s groups
and aids support groups play an especially inspiring and often courageous
role. Heaven knows it’s a slow, frustrating, dangerous crusade,
but you don’t reverse centuries of entrenched patterns and monstrous
deeds overnight. If you’re looking for places where funds are well
spent, here’s a pretty good bet.
But whatever
steps Africa takes, unless the West radically changes its role few
positive results can be expected. What we should do is obvious enough:
the evidence from success stories beyond Africa tells us that rejecting
the dogmas and programs that the World Bank and imf unilaterally
impose on poor countries is a sine qua non of successful development
and poverty reduction.
If the West
were truly serious about helping Africa, it would not use the World
Trade Organization as a tool of the richest against the poorest.
It would not dump its surplus food and clothing on African countries.
It would not force down the price of African commodities sold on
the world market. It would not insist on growth without redistribution.
It would not tolerate tax havens and the massive tax evasion they
facilitate. It would not strip Africa of its non-renewable resources
without paying a fair price. It would not continue to drain away
Africa’s best brains. It would not charge prohibitive prices for
medicines. In a word, it would end the hundred and one ways in which
the West quietly ensures that more wealth pours out of Africa each
day than the West transfers to Africa.
But that’s the
catch. It’s the assumption that we want to help that needs to be
questioned. I’ve no doubt ordinary Westerners sympathetic to Africa’s
plight take for granted that our policies are meant to help; after
all, that’s what they’re invariably told. In the face of palpable
reality, rich countries largely continue to insist that their interest
in Africa is based on compassion, philanthropy, and generosity.
Let the word go forth: the white man’s (and woman’s) burden lives
again. Occasionally, our missionary duty becomes so taxing, so exhausting,
so damn boring, that we westerners suffer from bouts of "compassion
fatigue." We feel sorry not for those in need but for ourselves.
But we pull ourselves together and re-embark on our "civilizing
mission" — saving Africa from its leaders, its incapacity,
its self-destructive tendencies.
But all this
nobility serves to conceal the real obligation of the rich world
— to pay back the incalculable debt we owe Africa. We need to help
Africa not out of our selflessness and compassion but as restitution,
compensation, as an act of justice for the generations of crises,
conflicts, atrocities, exploitation, and underdevelopment for which
we bear so much responsibility. Many speak without irony of the
desire to "give something back," not realizing the cruel
reality of the phrase. In fact, that’s exactly what the rich world
should do. We should give back what we’ve plundered and looted.
Until we face up honestly to the West’s relationship with Africa,
until we acknowledge our culpability and complicity in the African
mess, until then we’ll continue — in our caring and compassionate
way — to impose policies that actually make the mess even worse.
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