AfricaFocus Bulletins on Economy and Development - 2005-2006
Jan 18, 2005 Africa: Debt Issue Unresolved
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/dbt0501a.php
The first test this year for rich countries' willingness to act on
world poverty is coming soon, as finance ministers from rich
countries meet in London on Feb. 4. A new report from the United
Nations has stressed the need for new investments in strategically
targeted new investments through doubling aid (see
http://unmp.forumone.com). But halting debt payments to
international financial institutions could have even quicker
effects, through freeing up resources for health, education, and
other urgent needs.
Jan 18, 2005 Africa: Multilateral Debt Cancellation
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/dbt0501b.php
"Given the urgency and need for immediate action, we urge the G8 to
begin immediately and in particular for G7 finance ministers to
reach agreement on 100 percent multilateral debt relief at their
February 4th meeting," African finance ministers said in Cape Town
after concluding a meeting with British finance minister Gordon
Brown. But despite Brown's high-profile African visit, accompanied
by pledges of debt cancellation and increased aid, debt campaigners
still have questions about the details of Britain's plan and the
will of other rich countries to act.
Feb 1, 2005 USA/Africa: Textile Meltdown?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/text0502.php
U.S. imports of apparel from Sub-Saharan Africa rose in 2003 and
2004 to more than $1.5 billion a year, benefitting from duty-free
access under the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). This
year, however, with new competition from China and India expected
after abolition of quotas under the international Multi-Fiber
Agreement, textile industries in African countries face the
prospect of rapid decline in export potential.
Feb 8, 2005 Africa: Postponing Debt Decisions
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/debt0502.php
Finance ministers of the G7 group of the world's richest countries,
meeting in London from February 4 to 5, stated their willingness to
consider "as much as 100 per cent multilateral debt relief" for the
poorest countries. They also asked the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) to consider how it might contribute to financing such debt
relief. In theory, these could be significant steps forward. In
practice, the G7 countries remain deeply divided. They disagree
both about the political urgency and about the possible mechanisms
for acting to free up more resources to fight global poverty.
Feb 11, 2005 Kenya: Corruption Fight Stalling
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/ken0502.php
The resignation of respected anti-corruption campaigner John
Githongo from the Kenyan government has touched off new political
furor that seems certain to escalate in coming weeks. In its two
years in office, President Mwai Kibabi's government has initiated
numerous anti-corruption investigations. But there is widespread
skepticism that it has the will to deal with high-level corruption
within its own ranks.
Feb 20, 2005 Chad: Oil Transparency Loopholes
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/oil0502.php
Oil revenues for Chad are now beginning to increase rapidly from
the long-debated "model project" involving World Bank financing, a
pipeline through Cameroon, and a consortium of major oil companies.
A new report from two U.S.-based groups says the mechanisms for
transparency and accountability, while welcome, are still full of
loopholes.
Mar 18, 2005 UK/Africa: Commissioning Development?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/act0503.php
UK Prime Minister Tony Blair's Commission for Africa report,
released earlier this month and intended to galvanize common action
by rich countries on African development, has received mixed
reviews. The report is largely a composite of frequently repeated
but not yet implemented proposals on issues such as increasing aid,
reducing rich-country trade subsidies, canceling debt, and
improving governance. It did, however, also feature new stress on
how rich countries themselves fuel corruption in Africa through
failure to stop money-laundering and bribery by their own
institutions.
Mar 23 2005 USA/Africa: Cotton Dumping
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/cot0503.php
Pressure to reduce rich-country subsidies for agricultural exports
ratchetted upward this month when the World Trade Organization
(WTO) issued its final ruling that U.S. current payments to cotton
farmers were illegal. The Bush administration's 2006 budget
submitted to Congress proposes reduction in these subsidies by
setting new upper limits on payments. But the outcome in Congress
is uncertain, and African cotton farmers need more than promises of
somewhat fairer terms for their exports in the distant future.
Apr 12, 2005 Africa: Unions Call for Debt Cancellation
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/debt0504.php
"In spite of positive rhetoric ... concrete actions [on new debt
relief] have been delayed from meeting to meeting, in part because
of disagreements between donor countries on the specific elements
of an expanded debt relief initiative." In a new statement released
in March, global unions joined other campaigners for debt cancellation in calling
on international financial institutions to stop delaying and act for full debt
cancellation for developing countries fighting poverty. But the
prospects for action at this week's meeting of the World Bank and
IMF remain uncertain.
Apr 22, 2005 Africa: Internet Advances
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/itc0504.php
As of April 2005, the African continent now has its own regional
internet registry, AfriNic, with responsibility for assignment of
internet addresses within the continent. This long-awaited
development has the potential to save some $500 million in fees
paid outside the continent each year to registries in Europe and
North America. The agency, which received formal approval at an
international meeting in Argentina on April 8, is headquartered in
Mauritius, with an operations center in South Africa and back-up
facilities in Egypt.
May 9, 2005 Africa: Economic Growth Improving
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/eca0505.php
"Africa's real GDP grew by 4.6 per cent in 2004, the highest in
almost a decade, up from 4.3 per cent in 2003. ... [this] reflects
a continued upward trend since 1998. Unfortunately, the growth has
so far not been translated to employment creation or poverty
reduction." - United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)
May 20, 2005 Europe/Africa: Partnership for Whom?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/epa0505.php
"The likely results of these new Economic Partnership Agreements
(EPAs) are not hard to imagine. With their diverse range of
products and muscle in the marketplace, European producers can
outstrip ACP [African, Caribbean, and Pacific] rivals in their
domestic markets. ... [African countries] stand to lose existing
industries and the potential to develop new ones as products from
Europe flood their markets." - Christian Aid
May 20, 2005 Africa: No Development in Development Round
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/iatp0505.php
"Looking at the current proposals on the table, it is clear that
members are not moving towards a fairer multilateral trading
system. ...The sad reality for most developing countries is that
this round [of trade talks] has become an exercise in how to
minimize losses; a far cry from the promise rich countries made to
support development objectives and to launch a so-called
development round." - Geneva Update, Institute for Agriculture and
Trade Policy
May 25, 2005 Africa: Kenyan Bishops on Debt Cancellation
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/debt0505.php
"The efforts at debt cancellation that were made till now could be
compared to the scraps that Lazarus hoped he could feed on at the
rich man's table: they are illusory promises without real
substances. ...Giving to others scraps rather than what they
deserve means basically treating them in a sub-human way, not as
human beings!" - Catholic Bishops of Kenya, Pastoral Letter, May
17, 2005
Jun 3, 2005 Africa: Gold Industry Blocking Debt Plan
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/gold0506.php
"If you could improve the lives of hundreds of millions of the
world's most destitute people with a program that might - just
might - temporarily reduce the profits of the global gold industry,
most people would probably think it is worth doing. Even most
members of Congress. That's why it has been so disturbing to see
gold producers strong-arm Congress and the White House into
blocking just such a desperately needed measure." - The New York
Times, June 3, 2005
Jun 3, 2005 Congo (Kinshasa): Gold and Violence
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/drc0506.php
"The lure of gold has fueled massive human rights atrocities in the
northeastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Human
Rights Watch said in a new report published [on June 2]. Local warlords
and international companies are among those benefitting from access
to gold rich areas while local people suffer from ethnic slaughter,
torture and rape." - Human Rights Watch, releasing new report "The
Curse of Gold"
Jun 13, 2005 Africa: Debt Deal Substantive but Modest
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/debt0506.php
G8 finance ministers have decided to write off 100% of stocks of
debt owed to international financial institutions by 18 countries,
including 14 in Africa. This decision, still to be ratified by the
G8 summit in July and by the annual meetings of the IMF, World
Bank, and African Development Bank in the fall, is estimated to
cover some $40 billion in debt, with annual savings to
the 18 countries coming to about $1.5 billion.
Jun 28, 2005 Africa: "Aid" Reality Checks
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/aid0506.php
The world's richest nations greatly exaggerate the amount they
spend on aid to poor countries, says a study released by ActionAid
International. The report says that between 60%-90% of aid funds
are 'phantom' rather than 'real' with a significant proportion
being lost to waste, internal recycling within donor countries,
misdirected spending and high fees for consultants.
Jul 1, 2005 Africa: Polls and Policy
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/poll0507.php
The Program on International Policy Attitudes
has released new poll data, from the United States and from eight
African countries, showing wide public support for stronger
international action to confront African problems, including United
Nations intervention to stop "severe human rights violations such
as genocide" and fulfillment of the pledge by rich countries to
spend 0.7% of national income to combat world poverty.
Jul 5, 2005 Africa: The Costs of Free Trade
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/trad0507.php
"Trade liberalisation has cost sub-Saharan Africa US$272 billion
over the past 20 years. Had they not been forced to liberalise as
the price of aid, loans and debt relief, sub-Saharan African
countries would have had enough extra income to wipe out their
debts and have sufficient left over to pay for every child to be
vaccinated and go to school." - Christian Aid
Jul 5, 2005 Ghana: Playing Chicken
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/gh0507.php
"For the last few years the Ghanaian market has been flooded with
cheap imported chicken from the European Union and the United
States. These are usually fatty chicken parts that come in packages
without labels. Nonetheless, demand for local poultry has
collapsed, threatening the livelihoods of over 400,000 poultry
farmers in the small West African nation." - Corpwatch
Jul 13, 2005 Africa: G8 Reaction, Perspectives
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/glen0507.php
"Outside of British officialdom," writes Sanjay Suri of Inter Press
Service from the Gleneagles summit, "celebrations of increased G8
aid for Africa were confined mostly to a population of two - rock
stars Bob Geldof and Bono." Non-governmental groups in the Make
Poverty History campaign, in contrast, were generally skeptical.
Jul 13, 2005 UK/Africa: The Damage We Do
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/ras0507.php
"The African Union estimates that the continent loses as much as
$148 billion a year to corruption. This money is rarely invested in
Africa but finds its way into the international banking system and
often into western banks. The proceeds of corrupt practices in
Africa ... are often laundered and made respectable by some of the
most well known banks in the City of London." - Royal African
Society, London
Jul 22, 2005 Niger: Background to Famine
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/nig0507.php
With a BBC film crew in Niger broadcasting images of starving
children to the world, food aid shipments to the country are
starting to pick up. But UN under secretary-general for
humanitarian affairs Jan Egeland, who has repeatedly warned of
neglected emergencies in African countries, told reporters that if
donors had responded to earlier appeals, a child's life could have
been saved for little more than a dollar a day. Now the estimated
cost has risen to 80 times that, and for many it is too late.
Jul 28, 2005 Zimbabwe: Housing Tsunami Continues
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/zim0507.php
Despite a devastatingly critical report by UN-HABITAT Director Anna
Tibaijuka, the government of Zimbabwe is continuing its drive to
destroy "illegal" housing and shops that is estimated to have made
at least 700,000 people homeless in the last two months.
Zimbabweans, rejecting the government's term Operation
Murambatsvina ("Clean Out Garbage") compare the assault on the
country's poor to a "tsunami."
Sep 6, 2005 USA/Africa: Call for Food Aid Reform
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/iatp0509.php
On August 26, just before Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast of
the United States, the World Food Programme called for the
international community not to turn away from Niger, as food
contributions began to tail off with less than half of the budget
funded. As subsequent images of devastated New Orleans both
displaced and evoked comparisons with "Third World" catastrophes,
there was abundant material for reflection on U.S. and international
responses to entirely predictable disasters.
Sep 15, 2005 Africa: Human Development Report
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/hdr2005.php
Among the many reports issued as world leaders gather in New York
to discuss their commitment to fighting world poverty, the annual
Human Development Report is among the most blunt in concluding that
the "promise to the world's poor is being broken." In addition to
documenting the failures and presenting its annual measurement of
the Human Development Index (HDI) for 177 countries, this year's
report identifies specific actions that could begin to reverse the
trend.
Sep 22, 2005 Africa: Debt Deal in Question
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/debt0509.php
"Arbitrary criteria have been used to exclude most countries from
debt relief. While it may be politically expedient for powerful
countries to pretend that only a small set of countries need debt
cancellation, it is time to explode this myth." - Christian Aid
Oct 3, 2005 Africa: Whose Energy Future?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/gw0510.php
With oil prices rising worldwide, African oil-producing countries
are expecting windfall earnings. Global oil companies and consuming
countries are giving even greater attention to Africa's oil. The
World Petroleum Congress, held last month in Africa for the first
time, in Sandton, South Africa, celebrated the potential. But a new
report from South Africa's groundWork questions the fundamental
structure of the oil industry on the continent.
Oct 15, 2005 Africa: Trade Smoke and Mirrors
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/ag0510.php
In an effort to give momentum to international trade talks, the
United States and the European Union this week released new offers
to cut widely-criticized subsidies to rich-country farmers. The
proposals have already provoked opposition from defenders of
subsidies, including U.S. legislators and French officials. But
non-governmental analysts say in fact the concessions to developing
countries are "smoke and mirrors."
Oct 18, 2005 Southern Africa: Food Emergency Shortfall
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/food0510.php
With attention diverted and disaster fatigue accentuated by
response to the hurricanes in North America, the UN's World Food
Programme (WFP) as well as private agencies are finding responses
slow to the earthquake in South Asia and to food crises in Africa.
The WFP appeal for Niger, which briefly hit world headlines in
July, has still only raised $36 million of its $58 million target;
the appeal for 12 million people in Southern Africa has only raised
$245 million out of an estimated $622 million needed.
Oct 24, 2005 Africa: Cotton Producers Demand Results
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/cot0510.php
Two years ago in Cancun, the issue of the damage done to African cotton producers
by rich-country subsidies sparked the breakdown of world trade talks, highlighting the
failure of rich countries to make this round of trade talks a "development round."
In Geneva last week, African countries warned that their interests were still being ignored.
Oct 27, 2005 Nigeria: Debt Deal Views
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/nig0510.php
Nigeria has reached a new agreement on debt with its bilateral
creditors, gaining $18 billion in debt cancellation at the price of
$12 billion in payments over the next year and a new program of
economic monitoring by the International Monetary Fund. Reactions
to the deal are mixed.
Nov 13, 2005 Nigeria: Delta Oil & Human Rights
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/nig0511.php
Ten years after the execution of human rights campaigner Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight of his
colleagues by the Nigerian government, the issues of human rights
and environmental devastation in the oil-producing Niger Delta
remain unresolved. Despite the return to civilian rule in 1999 and
pledges by oil companies to implement voluntary corporate
responsibility standards, new reports by Environmental Rights
Action and Amnesty International document only limited action to
correct abuses and deliver benefits to the residents of the
oil-producing areas.
Dec 6, 2005 Africa: Health, Patents Clash
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/trip0512.php
In 2001, the World Trade Organization (WTO) approved the Doha
Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health which affirms the right of
countries to prioritize access to medicines and public health over
intellectual property rights. However, this statement did not
address the issue of how countries with insufficient manufacturing
capacity can make use of these rights. Now developed countries want
the WTO to extend a complex interim "solution" to the problem that
has not worked.
Dec 16, 2005 Africa: Trade Talks Analysis, 1
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/wto0512a.php
"Any expectations that developing countries or the public might
have of Hongkong marking progress to achieving 'development' in the
Doha negotiations have been very much dashed. The 'Doha Development
Agenda' (DDA) got its nickname when the developed countries
pressurised the developing countries to accept a new Work Programme
at the Doha Ministerial in November 2001. To cover the fact that
the programme was really aimed at opening the markets of the South,
the WTO secretariat leadership and the major developed countries
dubbed it the DDA." - Third World Network
Dec 16, 2005 Africa: Trade Talks Analysis, 2
http://www.africafocus.org/docs05/wto0512b.php
Having failed to come up with a joint proposal on agriculture that
begins to satisfy the demands of developing countries, Europe and
the United States have proposed a "development package" that they
hope will preserve some image of success in the World Trade
Organization ministerial conference in Hong Kong. But critics say
whatever the face-saving agreements reached by the weekend, the
results will clearly show no progress at all for poor countries in
what was supposed to have been a "development round."
Jan 21, 2006 Africa: Imagining the Digital Future
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/bal0601.php
Russell Southwood's Balancing Act Africa's News Update, coming out
weekly in English and monthly in French, is packed with news about new developments in African
telecommunications, internet, and computer technology
(http://www.balancingact-africa.com). In the latest issue,
Southwood imagines what the scene could look like five years from
now.
Jan 27, 2006 Africa: Economic Prospects, Obstacles
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/econ0601.php
"Africa's real GDP is estimated to have grown by 5.1 per cent in
2005, roughly the same rate that was achieved in 2004. ... the
relatively high rates of growth recorded over the last five years
confirm the continued recovery of African economies. ... Thus far
[however] increased growth seems to have had a limited effect on
poverty reduction. In fact, growth has largely concentrated in
relatively capital-intensive sectors with little spillover effects
on employment creation and on the rest of the economy." - United
Nations
Jan 31, 2006 Africa: Predictable Emergencies
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/food0601.php
"Imagine if your local fire department had to petition the mayor
for money every time it needed water to douse a raging fire. That's
the predicament faced by anguished humanitarian aid workers when
they seek to save lives but have no funds to pay for the water - or
medicine, shelter, or food - urgently needed to put out a fire." -
Jan Egeland, UN Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs
Feb 8, 2006 Africa: Fix Resource Leaks
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/abug0602.php
"What matters for ensuring that governments have adequate resources
to finance development are net flows. This means factoring in not
just inflows ... but also what is lost to the rest of the world.
Debt servicing is [only] one [such] outflow. ... Indeed, the
reality of Africa is that the resources that leak out far exceed
those that flow in." - Charles Abugre
Feb 21, 2006 East Africa: Dams and Lake Victoria
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/vic0602.php
Low water levels in Lake Victoria, at their lowest point in 50
years, are threatening the livelihood of people dependent on
fishing, raising the prices of fish, and provoking shortages of
water for electricity generation. And now a new report charges that
the crisis is due not only to drought but also to overuse of the
lake's water for power generation by existing powerplants. At the
same time the Uganda government has signed a new $500 million
contract for building a third power plant, on the Bujagali Falls.
Environmentalists charge that the new plant is likely to have more
negative effects and that the hope of providing more electricity
will prove unsustainable.
Feb 26, 2006 Kenya: Githongo Report
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/git0602.php
John Githongo, who resigned a year ago as Kenya's anti-corruption
chief, this month released a report on scandals he was
investigating that has already forced the resignation of Kenya's
finance minister and threatens to bring down other top officials.
The report is based on detailed records he kept during his
investigation, and spells out how officials used security contracts
worth as much as $1 billion to siphon off government funds into
non-existent companies.
Mar 9, 2006 Africa: Digital Dumps
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/dd0603.php
Recycled computers and other electronic equipment have the
potential to help bridge the digital divide. But, says a recently
published study by the Basel Action Network (BAN), many quickly
find their way to toxic waste dumps, being not economically repairable or
usable.
Apr 2, 2006 Africa: User Fees
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/user0604.php
"The government of Zambia today (1 April) introduced free health
care for people living in rural areas, scrapping fees which for
years had made health care inaccessible for millions. The move was
made possible using money from the debt cancellation and aid
increases agreed at the G8 in Gleneagles last July, when Zambia
received $4 billion of debt relief; money it is now investing in
health and education." - Oxfam International
Apr 2, 2006 Africa: Social Transfers
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/soc0604.php
According to a new research report from the UK Department for
International Development says social transfers - that is, regular
and predictable grants to households - can have significant
positive effects on human development for the poor, and
particularly on health and education, even when the grants are not
specifically targeted to those sectors. In other words, one of the
most immediate and effective remedies for poverty is money.
Apr 14, 2006 Africa: Stolen Wealth
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/corr0604.php
"Corruption is bleeding Africa to death and the cost is borne by
the poor. ... Much of the money is banked in Britain or our
overseas territories and dependencies. ... We want our government
to get tough on corruption." - Hugh Bayley, MP, Chair of the Africa
All Party Parliamentary Group
Apr 23, 2006 Africa: Trade Talks Skip Priority Issues
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/trad0604.php
The European Union and the United States blamed each other for the
failure to progress in world trade talks, as a "mini-ministerial"
scheduled to complete the next stage of negotiations before the end
of April was again postponed earlier this month. But African
countries say there are more fundamental flaws. Recent statements
by African trade ministers and by non-governmental analysts point
out that priority African issues supposed to be included in this
"development round" are still being sidelined.
May 9, 2006 Southern Africa: Slowing Fast-Track Trade
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/sacu0605.php
Civil society groups in both South Africa and the Untied Statets
are applauding the halt in progress in trade talks between the
United States and the Southern African Customs Union (SACU). The
groups say that U.S. insistence on a "one-size fits all approach"
is inappropriate for SACU, which includes five southern African
countries at different stages of development. Moreover, they say,
the U.S. approach contains many provisions that would damage
health, workers' rights, and the prospects of small farmers.
May 22, 2006 Africa: Unions, Scholars Meet
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/work0605.php
Meeting in Cairo earlier this month, representatives of African
unions and African intellectuals met to share their critiques of
current development policies, targeting both international
financial institutions and African governments. African scholars
had documented the failures of structural adjustment decades ago,
noted political economist Adebayo Olukoshi. But with few exceptions
these policies are still being imposed.
May 30, 2006 Africa: Debt Relief Update
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/debt0605.php
Debt relief has become a significant vehicle of resource transfer
to countries under the World Bank/IMF HIPC program, concludes a new
internal World Bank evaluation. But in eight countries completing
the program, debt ratios already again exceed the Bank's
sustainability level of 150 percent debt-to-exports ratio.
Jul 1, 2006 Africa: Doha Deception Round
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/tr0606.php
As negotiators again reported "no progress" at international trade
negotiations in Geneva, 100 developing nations released a statement
saying they were still willing to negotiate but that the chasm
between the views of rich and poor countries was huge. Even if a
face-saving agreement is reached over the next months, critics said
that major powers had already demonstrated that they had no
interest in proposals to address developing country concerns.
Jul 17, 2006 Africa: Phantom Technical Assistance
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/aid0607b.php
"Technical assistance - donor spending on consultants, training and
research - is one of the most heavily criticised forms of aid. ...
[yet it is] still one of the most heavily used forms of aid,
accounting for between a quarter and a half of all ODA [Official
Development Assistance]." A significant proportion of this aid,
charges ActionAid in a new report, is both over-priced and
ineffective.
Jul 17, 2006 Africa: Real Aid?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/aid0607a.php
World leaders gathered at the G8 Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia,
gave only token attention to Africa issues that had been a major
focus at last year's meeting in Gleneagles, Scotland. Although they
pledged to keep Africa on the agenda for Germany next year,
evaluations of the summit noted little progress beyond the pledges on
debt relief implemented over the past year.
Aug 6, 2006 Zimbabwe: Shadows and Lies
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/zim0608a.php
"There is no reason why Zimbabweans today should watch our country
go down the drain. Look at the time it took to build it up. That
one can just destroy it overnight is something very painful. It
was not about creating another dictatorship, creating another
oppressive system, where you cannot exercise your rights." -
Margaret Dongo
Aug 6, 2006 Zimbabwe: Displacement and Survival
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/zim0608b.php
One year after "Operation Murambatsvina" ("Clean-Up"), the damaging
effects of the government campaign aimed at the urban poor are
still visible, reports a recent delegation from South African
social movements. With Zimbabweans expressing little hope in a
divided opposition, internal efforts at resistance are
concentrating on survival.
Aug 13, 2006 Nigeria: Swamps of Insurgency
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/nig0608.php
"Over the past quarter century, unrest in the Niger Delta has
slowly graduated into a guerrilla-style conflict that leaves
hundreds dead each year. The battle lines are drawn over the
region's crude oil and gas that make Nigeria the number one oil
producer in Africa and the world's tenth largest crude oil
producer." - International Crisis Group
Sep 10, 2006 Africa: Africa's Lakes
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/lake0609.php
"For now, the future of Lake Chad does indeed look bleak. With a
high population growth rate, pressures on water resources in the
lake basin will invariably continue. While in the past Lake Chad
has been able to rebound from low to high water levels, climate
change and people's water use may now act in concert to block the
natural forces of recovery." - atlas of Africa's Lakes
Sep 10, 2006 Africa: Environmental Threats/Opportunities
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/unep0609.php
Many of Africa's ecosystems are not just serving the region, but
the whole world, for example, through the carbon soaking value of
tropical forests. This alone probably equals or exceeds the current
or exceeds the current level of international aid being provided to
developing countries.
Sep 16, 2006 Africa: Migration and Rights
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/mig0609a.php
Chartered planes started flying illegal African immigrants back
from Spain to Senegal last week, resuming a repatriation program
aimed at stemming the flow of immigrants to this southern European
country. But judging by experience, the return is unlikely to stop
thousands of others from risking their lives in small boats to
reach the Canary Islands from the West African coast, or finding
other perilous ways of reaching the European continent.
Sep 16, 2006 Africa: Migration and Development
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/mig0609b.php
"[The] potential benefits [from international migration] are larger
than the potential gains from freer international trade,
particularly for developing countries," notes an extensive recent
United Nations report on migration. But while the liberalization of
the flow of goods and capital continues to increase, restrictions
on the movement of people are leading to thousands of deaths in
border areas such as the U.S. southwest desert and the sea routes
between Africa and Europe.
Sep 23, 2006 Africa: Girl Power
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/educ0609.php
"Girls who complete secondary school are up to five time less
likely to contract HIV than girls with no education," according to
a new ActionAid review of over 600 research studies. But in Africa,
an estimated 22 million girls have never been to primary school.
Sep 30, 2006 Africa: Innovative Financing
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/aid0609b.php
Beginning in July, international air travelers from France have
been paying a 4 euro tax on an economy ticket and 40 euros on a
first-class ticket, with proceeds going to pay for treatment of
children with AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Eighteen other
countries have pledged to implement the tax, including Brazil, the
United Kingdom, Norway, Mali, and South Korea.
Sep 30, 2006 Africa: Making Aid Multilateral
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/aid0609a.php
The current international aid system, says a new UN report, is
chaotic, and suffers from high transaction costs, politicization,
lack of transparency, incoherence, and unpredictability. What is
needed, says the report, is a shift to a multilateral model similar
to the Marshall Plan and to the European Community's regional
funds.
Oct 6, 2006 Africa: Forced Evictions
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/evic0610.php
"Forced evictions are one of the most widespread and unrecognised
human rights violations in Africa," - Kolawole Olaniyan, Director
of Amnesty International's Africa Programme. According to research
by Amnesty International and the Geneva-based Centre on Housing
Rights and Evictions (COHRE), more than three million Africans have
been forcibly evicted from their homes since 2000.
Oct 15, 2006 Africa: Green Revolution?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/gr0610.php
The Gates Foundation has joined with the Rockefeller Foundation in
promoting a new "Green Revolution" in Africa. But will the new
effort learn from the mistakes of earlier "Green Revolution"
initiatives? Sceptics say that the new proposals still disregard
the interests of small farmers and the environment.
Oct 15, 2006 Africa: Rice Congress
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/rice0610.php
Rice development will be one of the key testing grounds of whether
Africa's new "Green Revolution" can avoid some of the failures of
earlier Green Revolution efforts, and reduce African rice imports.
Enthusiasts point to the Participatory Varietal Selection methods
used by the Africa Rice Centre to disseminate new rice varieties,
and to growth in small-farmer income as well as yields.
Oct 22, 2006 Africa: New Silk Road
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/asia0610.php
"Exports from Africa to Asia tripled in the last five years, making
Asia Africa's third largest trading partner (27 percent) after the
European Union (32 percent) and the United States (29 percent),"
reports a new World Bank study.
Nov 5, 2006 Africa: Up in Smoke?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/clim0611.php
"The level of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is historically a
result of rich world activity. Therefore to be fair, the rich world
should bear the full costs of adapting to climate change, at least
in the early years." - Working Group on Climate Change and
Development
Nov 5, 2006 Africa: Economics of Climate Change
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/ster0611.php
"All countries will be affected. The most vulnerable - the poorest
countries and populations - will suffer earliest and most, even
though they have contributed least to the causes of climate
change." - Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change
Nov 12, 2006 Lesotho: Anti-Corruption Actions
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/les0611.php
Search the World Bank's website section on anti-corruption
(http://www.worldbank.org/anticorruption) for "Lesotho" and you
will get the following response: Your search - Lesotho - did not
match any documents. No pages were found containing "Lesotho".
But while the World Bank may not be paying attention, the small
Southern African country has taken the lead in attacking
corruption in the Lesotho Highlands Water Project, a giant scheme
financed by the World Bank itself.
Nov 15, 2006 Africa: Global Fund as Legacy of Innovation
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/gf0611.php
After more than 20 hours of deliberations early this month, the
board of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria
was unable to agree on a new executive director. Despite the resulting delay,
some observers say the failure actually indicates how seriously the
Fund is taking its mandate to build a consensus between developed
and developing countries.
Nov 24, 2006 Africa: Water, Health, and Development
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/hdr0611b.php
"We estimate that the African region loses five per cent of GDP
annually as a result of both women having to walk huge distances to
collect water - which diverts labor, apart from the huge personal
cost that it puts someone in - and the impact of disease on
productivity." - Kevin Watkins, lead author, UN Human Development
Report 2006
Nov 24, 2006 Africa: Global Apartheid Update
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/hdr0611a.php
Speaking at the global launch of the 2006 Human Development Report
in Cape Town, South African President Thabo Mbeki called for the
world to fight "domestic and global apartheid in terms of access to
water." The report documented high levels of inequality both within
and between nations, with sub-Saharan African countries losing some
five percent of GDP annually as a result of the water and sanitation
crisis, far more than the region receives in international aid.
Dec 7, 2006 Africa: Bandwidth Reports
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/apc0612.php
"Bandwidth is the life-blood of the world's knowledge economy,
but it is scarcest where it is most needed ... For those
[African institutions] that can afford it, their costs are
usually thousands of times higher than for their counterparts in
the developed world, and even Africa's most well-endowed centres
of excellence have less bandwidth than a home broadband user in
North America or Europe, and it must be shared amongst hundreds
or even thousands of users. A variety of factors are
responsible for this situation, but the biggest cause is the
high cost of international connections to the global
telecommunication backbones." - Mike Jensen
Dec 7, 2006 Africa: Balancing Act Internet News
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/ba0612.php
"In less than two years, the bandwidth of traffic on Internet
services provided by Senegal's telecom Sonatel has doubled. By
today, Internet services provided by Sonatel are the most
extensive in sub-Saharan Africa, second only to those in South
Africa, a country of much bigger resources." - Balancing Act
News Update
Dec 12, 2006 Zimbabwe: Symptoms of Decline
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/zim0612.php
"Zimbabwe was once the publishing capital of southern Africa.
It used to host the best book fair in Africa. But years of neglect,
as with Zimbabwe itself, [have revived the saying]: 'We cannot eat
books.' With few visitors and even fewer sales, neither can the
publishers."
Dec 22, 2006 South Africa: Water for All?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/wat0612.php
Two recent issues of AfricaFocus Bulletin featured material from
the latest UNDP Human Development Report, focusing on
implications of the global water crisis for Africa. The introduction
mentioned in passing that South Africa had affirmed water as a human
right, but that there was active debate about whether government
policies were actually meeting that goal.
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