About Me

International Relations fellow whose heart bleeds to tell the African story sweedylul@hotmail.com

Monday 31 October 2011

Who are the real tyrants?

''All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent'' Thomas Jefferson
I thought i could remain silent over the brutal killing of Muammar Gaddafi but i just can't otherwise i will be equal to those who choose to be blind to atrocities. So they killed him in cold blood and treated his body with so much disregard for human life and human rights going against the laws of Islam, the same law that the new Libya claims to be founded on. Jamie Tarabay in this article says
''those who were fighting to depose him might be as ruthless as the person they were determined to replace''
Where was the logic in this brutality? does Libyans even know that we live in a democratic world that guarantees everybody the right to life no matter how tyrannical one is perceived to be. Worse tyrants are those in 'civilized countries' who celebrated the death of Muammar. Such is Simon Sebag Montefiore who wrote an Op-ed called Dictators Get the Deaths They Deserve shamelessly justified the killings quoting biblical instances he says
''There is no greater achievement for the tyrant — short of immortality — than to die in his own bed''
He further states
''His preposterously exuberant cult of personality was surely shattered by the spectacle of his pathetic demolition''
In another article by Ellen Knickmeyer 'Ladies love Libyan Rebels- the sexual Revolution arrives in Tripoli' further ignores the atrocities the rebels committed on the women and children in their quest to oust Gaddafi. It endevours to paint a propagandist picture by adding a sexual dimension to the war. How can the Libyan woman see the rebel who wiped her family as a 'sexual liberator'? How possible is this scenario? What prompted me to write this article was such kinds of literature being circulated and published in respected and widely read newspapers. The amount of moral and social decay being presented here is one of utmost disgust.

Friday 28 October 2011

No more a Dark Continent

I have never felt like I am in the right place at the right time more than I do now - living in the once famous Dark Continent of Africa - that is now illuminating so much light which it had been absorbing from other continents in the past. Previously living in Africa was nothing but a quandary that required great mental, physical and psychological efforts to make things happen. Just a few decades ago, there were few success stories coming from this ‘dark’ continent. With a dearth of positive media, excessive brain drain, poor infrastructure and technology inter alia African success story was on the periphery. However, Africa is now on the center stage-a force that can not be avoided. It has been breathing so heavily for many years and it’s only now that the world is recognizing the centrality of Africa in the global arena. But now relative shifts in the global structure has witnessed the emergence of popular concepts such as Fareed Zakaria’s ‘rise of the rest’ or the ‘decline of the West’ . Such concepts are showing the increasing importance of not only Asia and China but particularly Africa. To feel the rhythms and sounds of this new Africa many are flocking to the Kenyan Capital Nairobi, which for a long time has been termed as the ‘NewYork of Africa’ As Jonathan Kalan observes there is a massive migration pattern from West to East especially among fresh Gen-Y whom he describes as
Flocking from America's top universities, grad programs and consulting firms to the pulsing heart of a new Africa
Most of them are here for the 'African rush' either for investment, development, travel, adventure or to study. With the financial crisis still biting hard in many parts of the world many prefer to come live or study at African top institutions which are relatively much cheaper than they would have paid back at home. The prospect of making it in Africa seems higher than in most parts of the world especially now that Africa is viewed as a new frontier that still has room for development and innovations. With the right infrastructure, policies, a vibrant middle class as well as flourishing democracies Africa could be a global leader. Behind this movement are the African elites and firm believers of this continent who want to show the good side of Africa alongside it's challenges and who are actually doing something to push this agenda. Such initiatives are the likes of this project and this blog that want to tell the great ideas of Africa in a book!!!

Thursday 27 October 2011

The "patron saint of demography"

Thomas Malthus would have called 31st October, 2011 a demographical catastrophe. That is the day the world population is supposed to hit 7 Billion according to a UNFPA report.Malthus argued that population if left unchecked would lead to starvation. At his time, Malthus ideas were viewed as controversial and benign as the world was witnessing the industrial revolution and food was in abundance.However his views could be more popular now more than ever when the world is unable to feed itself due to diminishing resources and high population growth.Unlike Malthus who saw disasters such as famine, earthquakes, war and diseases as necessary in preventing population boom, Lester R. Brown a Neo-Malthusian theorist offers a softer solution like birth controls as a way to reduce over population. The Malthusian catastrophe could be a reality and not a fallacy as many saw it. Regardless how absurd his ideas were or how extreme it was regarding the 'positive' and 'negative' checks as well as giving birth to social-Darwinism theory that is known to have justified racism and propelled imperialism in the past. Malthus could be right.Of the projected 7 billion population 1 Billion is hungry according to a FAO report this is the fraction of population whom Paul Collier calls the 'Bottom Billion'. In addition I Billion of the population lives in the slums while 3 Billion continue to stay in urban settlements. It has been projected that 70 percent of the world population will be urban by 2050, and that most urban growth will occur in less developed countries. We should be wary of population explosion especially developing countries that are still faced with developmental crisis of sanitation, hygiene and unemployment. In a world of global warming, food shortages, and fuel crisis a 7 Billion + population could be a catastrophe!!
I believe that it is the intention of the Creator that the earth should be replenished; but certainly with a healthy, virtuous and happy population, not an unhealthy, vicious and miserable one
Thomas Malthus

Wednesday 19 October 2011

US troops move to Uganda, Kenya's advances to Somalia

As the economic milieu seems bleak in most developed countries, the IMF has projected a 6% economic growth for Sub Saharan African (SSA) economies beginning next year.In Nairobi, Ms Sayeh, Director of the IMF's African is in the country to launch the African economic outlook. The organization has warned that the economic momentum in SSA could be affected by the global financial volatility, and calls for a rethink in government policies in order to insulate the countries from the effects in global slowdown. However, a different predicament looms, that of a political contagion-spill over of conflicts. As president Obama announced this week that he will send 100 troops to Uganda’s troubled Northern region for peacekeeping and counter terrorism against the belligerent Joseph Kony, Kenyan army together with the Somali Transitional Federal Government TFG have launched a military action that will create a buffer zone against the Somali Islamists Al Shabaab to weed out the insurgents’ infamous rule. What has prompted the Obama government to be involved in what has long been seen as a ‘forgotten conflict’? The Kony reign of terror has been ongoing for the last 25 years with various attempts by both the US and Ugandan army to end it having failed. The US government could be using this as an opportunity to be involved in peacekeeping and counter terrorism in not only East Africa but also SSA. Major shifts in tectonic plates in this part of the world could have prompted the US government, such as the piracy issue in Somalia that for the past few weeks has witnessed the capturing and killing of foreign nationals along the Kenyan coast, discovery of oil in Uganda as well as the ever increasing threat of Al Shabaab militia. There is a direct correlation between US and Kenya’s security concerns that has annals in the 1998 US embassies bombings in Nairobi. Additionally the Kampala bombing this year in which the Somali Islamists claimed responsibility has raised alarm between the governments. In regards to the Kenyan forces action on the Somali soil, the Al Shabaab militia have already issued warnings of a retaliatory attacks against Kenya following the latter's decision to send troops into the neighboring Somalia. Kenya on the hand is claiming that it is not at war with Somalia but rather trying to stabilize the country. The US military approach to Uganda seems similar whereby it is not necessarily attacking the LRA but only offering logistical, military and intelligence support to the Ugandan army. Max Fisher analysis of the US increasing involvement in SSA is that;
''It's difficult to find a U.S. interest at stake in the Lord's Resistance Army's campaign of violence. The group could go on killing and enslaving for decades -- as they well might -- and the American way of life would continue chugging along. It's possible that there's some immediate U.S. interest at stake we can't obviously see. Maybe, for example, Uganda is offering the U.S. more help with peacekeeping and counter terrorism in East Africa, where the U.S. does have concrete interests, in exchange for the troops’’.
Whether it is the global financial crisis that will affect the SSA economies more or is the subsequent political risks is still unknown.