February 5, 2012

A Taste of African Bloggers

Recently, one of our readers indicated that he’d like to see more blogs by Africans in Africa about their daily lives in their own countries–something different from what is already in the news media. I immediately got to thinking about some bloggers that I personally follow and I also scoured the web to find some more for this list.

1. Bankele:
A blogger who lives in Kenya and writes mostly about banking, finance, technology and investments in the country. From time to time he has guest posts, mostly on travel around the continent, as well as personal posts about life in Kenya, mostly in the city of Nairobi.

2. Bikozulu
Another Kenyan writer who has a way with words and tells riveting stories. “About people” and “things that define people.” You will love it.

3. Wamathai
A multi-author blog in Kenya dedicated to original poems, short stories and all things art in Kenya. As a bonus, there is a list of blogs Wamathai likes.

James Wamathai

4. The Days of a Lifer
A blog by a Zambian in Lusaka, who seeks to document recent history in his country by writing about his own life experiences, or stories he has heard first-hand.

5. Other Things Amanzi
A South African surgeon “working in the notorious… province of Mpumalanga” blogs here. I suppose you’ll have to read his blog to find out why Mpumalanga is notorious. Like all doctors I know who are also storytellers, Bongi is a fine griot.

6. Ndagha
He comes to us from Malawi, with tales of his everyday life as a “the boss of an institution.” Change to the Timeslide view if you want to read his stories in chronological order.

7. Ghana Rising
Exists to celebrate “all the yummy goodness of Ghana: its people, its culture and its [far reaching] influences.” Enjoy!

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It’s Time African Union Turned its Attention to Something Worthwhile

African Union have been meeting for the first time since the death of its former leader and financial backer in chief, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi last October. The issue of future funding for the organisation may yet be on the agenda even though the proceedings have been dominated by leadership elections.

Emblem of the African Union

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Whatever is on the agenda, it is unlikely many Africans, let alone the international community really expect much from an organisation that has always shown its weakness at crucial moments, the Libyan case being the most recent example.

Yet 2012 could prove to be one of the most crucial and challenging year for the continental body. 25 of the continent’s 54 (UN figure) nations will be holding elections of some sort, from presidential, parliamentary to local and provincial. 5 of these elections will be crucial presidential contests in Angola, Kenya, Madagascar, Senegal and Zimbabwe.

Trouble has been reported in Senegal ahead of February’s presidential elections. People are opposing the decision by the country’s courts to allow the 85 years old incumbent President, Abdoulaye Wade to stand for a third term, which is against the constitution that Wade himself apparently amended in the early 2000s to restrict presidents to only two terms in office. Things could get worse before the elections, and AU may have to intervene at some point.

Madagascar is already a troubled spot; José Eduardo dos Santos in Angola has been facing protests from the country’s youth frustrated by lack of opportunities and unfair distribution of oil wealth. Previous elections in Zimbabwe and Kenya that produced “no winners” and ended up “governments of national unity”, suggest fragile and nervy electoral period ahead.

“Governments of national unity” may have somewhat steadied Zimbabwe and Kenya but the truth remains that these governments are a fiasco. Why give up when you can negotiate for “government of national unity”? It is these governments that gave former Cote d’Ivoire’s President, Lauren Gbagbo an incentive to cling on to power after a lost election in November of 2010. After AU’s envoy and “government of national unity” broker in chief Thobo Mbeki failed to negotiate for one in Cote d’Ivoire, unrest broke and hundreds of innocent people lost their lives and property. Some are displaced, yet to return to their homes.

Of course AU has no mandate to decide winning candidates anywhere but these events suggests that the organisation need a strict code of ethics that will force presidents to respect their constitutions; no third terms where a constitution restricts a president to two terms; presidents must relinquish power once they have lost elections.

After Zimbabwe, Kenya and Cote d’Ivoire, why is there still no policy towards this goal? What would happen if Robert Mugabe loses election and refuse to go, again? Another “government of national unity”? Has the organisation learn any lessons? Or is it that our leaders are reluctant to bring strict rules in case they are trapped themselves? It is time AU turned its attention to something worthwhile and perhaps justifying its continued existence.

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Fitting tribute to Wangari Maathai at COP17: Now to take her vision forward


 

Just had an inspiring day. The kind that makes you want to go out there and do something significant. Sign your name to a large portion of the earth, to remain there for eternity. I sat through a session that did just that for me today. The Forest Day 5 at COP17 in Durban South Africa gave a fitting send off and tribute to Wangari Maathai. A touching 8 minute video documented her vision and some of her achievements (based on the video below). Speaker after speaker showered unending praises for her visionary work. It got me thinking.

Wangari Maathai: greenbeltmovement.org

 

Just how much of a difference can a single person or a “not-so-empowered” group of people with an idea to serve make? In Wangari’s words, “Grass roots people can change the world.” That she did. A single and simple idea to plant a tree and get the rest of the world doing the same started movements on the continent and all over the world which have changed the lives of ordinary people, the way we see and appreciate the environment and demonstrated how much well organised pressure from ordinary people can force politicians into action. Whats more, all this she did from humble beginnings.

 

The Forest Day 5 sessions focused on REDD+ and how to operationalize it (among a few other related issues). Most ideas thrown around by delegates circled around community ownership of land, community-led reforestation projects, and incorporation of agriculture and gender issues. Interesting, especially considering that this is exactly what Wangari thought and set out to do when she started the Green Belt Movement(GBM) in Kenya in the year…wait for it…wait for it… 1977! Suprisingly, more than 3 decades later, the world’s leading thinkers, policy-makers and civic organisations are still debating such a “no-brainer.” The results of Wangari’s approach are self-evident in Kenya,and the mobiliation of global movements. Yet, progress on REDD+ is still very slow.


 

How did she do it? She was fearless, she got involved, rolled her sleeves and dug in (see video). Wangari challenged the powers that be and forced them to do that which needed to be done. She started small with what was around her and scaled up. Without taking anything away from current well-meaning efforts to get REDD+ working, it looks to me like there is lots to be learnt from Wangari Maathai and GBM. Sealing the REDD+ deal would be a fitting tribute to her. The question is, how? Are we willing to take the stand that she did and can we get the “powers that be” to do what obviously needs to be done, in the way it needs to be done?

At COP17 Forest Day 5 with M Dhlamini (CANGO-Swaziland) and E. Chivhenge (Gottingen University- Germany)

 

 

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Africa Rising in the Tech World

I recently watched a couple of videos that show how African innovations in technology are influencing the rest of the world. In the first video presented at TEDx Vienna, Alexander Oswald uses numerous examples to show “why Kenyans do it better” when it comes to mobile solutions. The video is worth watching to see how “the scarcity of resources brings the best out of people.”

I cannot remember how many hundred times I heard the saying in Kenya, “Necessity is the mother of invention.” Africans are some of the most innovative people I know. When I was growing up in Kenya, most people couldn’t afford to buy the latest technology, but they would still find a way to meet their needs by inventing something from the meager resources available to them. Watch this video to see how simple mobile solutions are changing the face of Kenya and teaching the developed world the art of simplicity.

 

The second video is a presentation by American Erik Hersman who spent part of his childhood in Kenya, and now lives and works in Kenya. He challenges the world to discard its outdated view of Africa as an impoverished continent (we’re not even talking about the people who consider Africa a country!) full of starving people and warring factions. Erik tells the story of the Africa you hardly ever see in mainstream media: Africa as a rising tech power.

Africans are intellectually active, curious, aware and making their mark on the world with their innovations. I celebrate that.
In the words of Erik Hersman, “[The West] shouldn’t be trying to make Africa more like us, …we should be more like Africa.”

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Strikes : Negotiations or Blackmail?

For a week now,  Kenyan University Lecturers have been on strike demanding better pay and fresh recognition of their contribution to society.

This has been in the wake of a  somewhat successful strike by the  Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT) over similar grievances. The non medical staff of the country’s largest referral hospital had also gone on strike in the same period though their issues were sorted out in lightening speed.

In the whole cacophony, the gravest sufferers were the Students who really have nothing to do with paying lecturers and teachers fairly.  The government was thus forced to bend to the union’s (KNUT) demands because they were timed in synchrony with the schools opening period thus putting both the parents and aspiring candidates for the national exams in undue stress and strain both financially and psychologically. This can only be called blackmail.

Similar tactics are being employed by the University Unions in agitating for what they deem as their rights.

Next month public service doctors also plan on striking.

Only Time will tell if these tactics will prove to be the tried and tested ways of getting your fair share from the Government.

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The Beauty of the Kenyan Coast

Even though we were still quite a few miles away from Mombasa, I could smell the briny air wafting in from the sea. We had made the nearly 300 mile journey from Nakuru by road. More road hours than we cared to count. Bathroom breaks. Notable scenery changes from the fertile highlands of the Rift Valley, to the savanna grasslands and flat-topped acacia trees of the Tsavo plains.Finally, finally, we approached the wide expanse of the Indian Ocean as we reached the Kenyan Coast.

Image courtesy of ownersdirect.co.ukI returned to Mombasa several times after that first trip as a preteen. The deep blue seas always called out my name and I answered, this love for water bodies having been passed down to me from my forefathers. I’ve stayed both on the North Coast and the South Coast (the city of Mombasa is an island, you see) and found that my heart generally gravitates towards the South Coast.

Driving down the main road in Mombasa, the huge tusks that arch over the street were amazing to behold. That first time, I wondered how big the elephants who had worn those tusks had to have been. Exploring the beautiful, mysterious waters of Malindi National Marine Park in a glass bottomed boat was my favorite experience of all time. So many wonderfully colored species of sea-wildlife: fishes, seahorses, sea urchins. Next time I go, I’ll try scuba diving.

Other places of interest in or near Mombasa include historical monuments (Fort Jesus, Old Town, the Vasco da Gama pillar and the House of Columns–the latter two in Malindi), the Gede ruins, the Haller Park animal sanctuary, spectacular geological formations at Hell’s Kitchen, the flora and fauna around the mouth of River Sabaki, coral reefs, and the Mamba Village, among others.

There’s so much to experience (not merely see) at the Kenyan coast, with the rich blend of cultures from its centuries of history: a conglomeration of Bantu ethnicities, some emigrated watu wa bara (Swahili for “people of the mainland”) and influences of Arabic, Portuguese and British culture. Really, I just couldn’t ever say enough good things about the intensely blue skies and seas, the white sandy beaches and the glorious days of fun possible at the Kenyan coast. No crowded beaches like you find in Western countries. If you haven’t been on a Kenyan beach, you haven’t really lived. So, two words for you: Go! Experience!

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Mobile phones in Africa – an interview with Chris Locke of the GSMA Development Fund

The Samsung Omnia i900 Homescreen.

Image via Wikipedia

Chris Locke works for an organisation that represents the interests of nearly 800 of the world’s mobile phone operators. In this interview, he shares his thoughts on Africa’s mobile phones market, the developmental impact mobile tech is having and what he sees as the greatest barrier to bringing the internet to the rural poor.

 

To start us off, please tell me a little about what you do

I’m the managing director of the development fund at the GSMA. What the development fund does is work with the mobile operator community, our members, and also the development community, such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, USAID, Rockefeller etc. Looking at how the mobile industry can take development technologies to scale.

 

So, we concentrate very specifically on how you can take technologies to a country-wide or multi-country-wide level by showing that it is sustainable business for the mobile phone operator. So the mobile operators then play an important role in investing themselves in time and resources to take take those things to a very large number of users.

 

The exponential growth of mobile phone usage in Africa has been widely reported, particularly the evidence of how parts of the continent have leapfrogged into interesting and complex uses of mobile phone technology. Did GSMA predict or expect that rate of growth?

 

We hoped to stimulate growth that back in 2005. The very first project of the development fund was a project called Emerging Market Handset. We realised that affordability was a major barrier for people at the base of the pyramid – to get access to mobile phones and therefore benefit from the ways in which a mobile can support you, personally or in your business. What we did was get a bunch of operators to agree to buy in scale then we sent an RFP [request for proposals] to handset manufacturers to say that there will be a significant order from the mobile industry – if they could  get a handset below $30. It needs to be below $30 to be affordable. Motorola won and released a handset that was the first handset that was specifically targeting users at the base of the pyramid and well over 20 million handsets went into the marketplace.

 

Five to six years ago, we were already stimulating the space but as you say, we’re now in a situation where many countries are leapfrogging. Kenya is always the example people use – there needs to be more case studies than just Kenya – but what you see with M-Pesa is that Kenya is one of the most sophisticated countries in the world  when it comes to using mobile money. And not a small pilot scale, at a massive national scale.

 

So I think the exciting time we’re in now is that mobile usage has become pretty much the only ubiquitous connected technology at the pyramid and people are now innovating on that as a platform, coming up with services and products which, in many cases, are leapfrogging what we have in more developed countries.

 

The African Development Bank published a report in May which suggest that one-in-three Africans were now part of the ‘middle class’. Do you think they’ve been accurately labelled and  how could mobile phone usage change?

 

We’re now seeing, especially with M-Pesa, services specifically built to support entrepreneurship and to support businesses. But even before that, one saw very creative and innovative uses. Jonathan Donner  [an academic who researches the subject of mobile usage in developing countries] wrote a paper in 2004 on the way mobile phones were being used in Rwanda by small businesses in very interesting ways to help them support their business.

 

So, I think mobiles are being used in ways that is supporting  a new class – I don’t know if I would call them middle class, or if the categorisation works in the same way it does in developed markets – but I think you are certainly seeing a new connected class and a new enabled class.

 

The thing that’s really going to excite me is when people start using mobile data. I’m always saying to people what I’m looking for is the first game like Angry Birds written by someone in Kampala. Suddenly people have access, with very little overhead, to app platforms that can potentially reach global distribution and have a global source of revenue – for a one or two-person operation. I think the mobile web will bring an entirely new level of innovation in developing markets beyond just outsourcing data processing to countries like India. I think we’ll see a new creativity and a new sense of energy as people get entrepreneurial in the same way as people are entrepreneurial in the [Silicon] valley but in developing markets.

 

Development tends to be optimistic about what new technology can achieve but so far a lot of the services respond to basic needs, for example, access to market or mobile health. Could the next Silicon Valley really be in Africa?

 

Absolutely. This is a market of a couple of billion people. Creating mobile data services to serve the needs of Kenyans and Ugandans and Tanzanians is in itself a huge market. I think there are fantastic sustainable businesses that will come out of those countries. I don’t think that it’s a given that the understanding of what those customer needs are will come from the existing large corporations. There is a tremendous opportunity for entrepreneurial innovation in those countries, developed to serve the needs of those communities and I can absolutely see that happening.

 

Can you be confident of that?

 

Well, we’re getting to the stage where the tools you need to be able to [reach large markets] are readily available, accessible and affordable. The ideas are also all there in people’s heads, it’s just giving them the opportunity to develop them and launch them.

 

What about regulation and opening up the market? There were protests in Accra last year about the lack of competitive pricing and poor services from Ghana’s mobile phone operators. Do you intervene on pricing?

 

We cannot intervene as we are a trade association and are legally forbidden from doing so – we’d be done for anti-trust. However, what we do do, is work with mobile operators on policy. One of the significant aspects of handset and airtime costs in Africa is taxation, so we have worked a lot with regulators and governments. There are many African countries who levy luxury taxes on the most basic mobile phone services and I think mobile has gone beyond being a luxury to a necessity. If luxury taxes were removed, it would improve the affordability of the service.

 

Tell me a little about the fund’s gender project mWomen. What are the gender implications of mobile phone usage? How do you specifically target women with mobile phone services?

 

We conducted a piece of research called ‘mobiles and women: a global opportunity’ and what we pointed out first of all was the severe disparity in terms of ownership of mobile phones. We know access is becoming easier and programmes such as Village Phone by the Grameen Foundation, a lot has been done but ownership still remains an obstacle.

 

Owning a phone gives rural women a sense of autonomy and a sense of identity – often for the first time. There are two reasons for why we think targeting women is a good idea. The first, and in purely commercial terms, is that it’s a big market. We’ve pointed out to the industry that it is a $13 billion opportunity to deliver services to women. But the double bottomline we show in all of our programmes, is that there is then a massive developmental impact as well. In our research we show that women felt more secure if they had a mobile phone, were able to start their own businesses and what we’re seeing is that by encouraging operators – who spend a fortune on marketing, let’s not forget – to recognise women in their communications, there’s also a certain amount of cultural change.

 

A good example is Roshan in Afghanistan where it is very difficult for women to get a mobile phone. Roshan were very creative and put out marketing targeted at men, explaining to them why it would be beneficial for their households for the women to get a phone. It was hugely successful and increased the number of women on their network from a couple of percentage points to double digits. It is important to understand what the cultural constraints are but also what the cultural impact could be from empowering women.

 

Another operator we think has a very good programme and we are encouraging people to copy is in India where Uninor have a ‘hand-in-hand’ project which develops centres that are training women in ICT skills, showing women how to use mobile phones to develop businesses and supporting their businesses in other ways. One Uninor beneficiary has gone from starting a small business and through the confidence she’s built, the skills she’s developed and the exposure she’s received, is now running for a position in local government. That’s a single anecdote but it’s indicative of the kind of impact you can have when you’re giving someone a mobile phone. Obviously, the technology alone doesn’t do that but it acts as a catalyst to give someone the ability to have a certain amount of autonomy.

 

How many operators are enabling women through their phones to alert someone of dangers to their personal safety?

 

The operator, Cell C,  in South Africa is already do this. One of the aspects of Cell C’s tariff for women is a specific number they can call to report abuse or violence and get access to help.

 

We don’t mandate to operators the services they should run. What we do is show them the case studies and best practice and they develop what they need for their own market. What Cell C has done with their tarrif is look at what the needs of women are in the local market. Our work is to give them the tools and services to meet those needs.

 

Has it gotten easier to speak to your stakeholders about the developmental not just the financial benefits of mobile phones?

 

What drives a lot of the thinking is the market, understandably. We face both ways: explaining to the development industry how the mobile industry can achieve development goals much faster.

 

The one thing the mobile industry has is scale: both in terms of network and people-reach. There are interesting ways you can use that scale infrastructure. One of our programmes, Community Power, [http://www.gsm.org/our-work/mobile_planet/green_power_for_mobile/4599.htm] recognised that a lot of off-grid base stations produced up to 50% more electricity than they used, so we are working with operators to redistribute that electricity to the local community. Suddenly, you’re distributing power as well as communication.

 

There is much to be excited about. One of the projects within that programme is looking at vaccine fridges. Vaccines are often spoiled due to a lack of refrigeration. We have 680,000 off-grid base stations around the world, many in areas where vaccines are spoiled. So projects are looking at connecting fridges to the base stations, using the excess power – a cheap form of electricity that currently is being wasted. This will then have a massive impact on reducing spoilage of vaccines and in turn improving health outcomes.

 

Viom Networks, in India, is going one step further and putting in along with the fridges, computers linked to local governance sites, charging stations and health centres. These centres  have become a development army knife of sorts.

 

Switching direction somewhat, mobile phones have in part become the new way for organising and communicating protests, with anxious governments putting pressure on mobile phone operators to suspend services – as MTN Cameroon was temporarily forced to do in March. Do you advise your members on best-practice during times of civil unrest? And how does the foundation negotiate being both a development fund and a business proposition?

 

I can’t comment on that. We’re an apolitical trade association and we’re there to support the industry to launch services that we know have  development impact but we don’t have a political agenda.

 

Finally, what then does the future hold? Are there any challenges that might change the growth trajectory?

 

Both the opportunity and the difficulty is in mobile data. I think there is huge potential there as we’ll genuinely be giving people access to one of the best inventions of the human race, the internet. Giving those at the base of the pyramid, who have been information-poor, suddenly access to information in an affordable way will just be incredible. But you never know what might happen and that’s what makes it exciting. Listening to and watching this innovation develop over the next few years is going to be a phenomenal thing.

 

But ultimately, the massive barrier to that is literacy. And what do you do about that? We’re seeing the price of handsets and smart phones dropping and we seeing the price of access to data also dropping but if we still have massive illiterate populations, they will certainly not benefit.

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HIV Transmission Through Medical Procedures in Africa

Main symptoms of acute HIV infection. Sources ...

Image via Wikipedia

 

 

Even back in the 1980s, not long after HIV was identified as the virus that caused AIDS, medical transmission was recognised as one of the possible modes of transmission.

[http://sites.google.com/site/davidgisselquist/pointstoconsider] Some important research went into establishing the extent of unsafe medical practices and the results suggested that these practices could transmit HIV very rapidly.

As a result of this research the possibility of medical transmission was all but eliminated in Western countries. But virtually no research was carried out to establish the contribution of this kind of transmission in African countries.

WHO, various UN agencies, leaders of all descriptions, professionals of all descriptions, various globally represented organisations, institutions, universities and others flew the flag for heterosexual transmission of HIV in developing countries (though not in developed countries).

The few exceptions to this were considered to be denialists or trouble makers. There are still few exceptions and they are still quickly branded and dismissed by the HIV industry elite. [http://ijsa.rsmjournals.com/cgi/content/abstract/20/12/812]

Well, maybe medical transmission of HIV is not very high; maybe it is lower than heterosexual transmission. Maybe all the fuss is about nothing and maybe I’m just one more person poking his nose in where it doesn’t belong.

But we are entitled to know why medical transmission of HIV has not been properly investigated, why it is still dismissed as being almost non-existent. The recently published (though based on out of date data) Modes of Transmission Survey for Kenya suggests that medical transmission accounts for 0.6% of all transmission, based on an assumption that seems to have been pulled out of thin air. [http://www.unaidsrstesa.org/files/MoT_0.pdf]

The same survey notes a finding that puts the rate at 2%, over three times higher. But this is still dwarfed by most of the other modes of transmission, especially heterosexual transmission. And even 2% sounds ridiculously low.

But those who are still being branded as mavericks for questioning the received view point to many bodies of data that have managed to investigate medical transmission rates of HIV. [http://sites.google.com/site/davidgisselquist/pointstoconsider]

Those bodies of data show that medical transmission is extremely significant, perhaps even more significant than any other mode of transmission, including heterosexual transmission.

All the dissenters are asking is that these results be taken seriously and subjected to rigorous testing. [http://ijsa.rsmjournals.com/cgi/content/citation/20/1/69r] If medical transmission of HIV even stands at 5%, this would still account for millions of people currently living with HIV and hundreds of thousands of people who have died of HIV.

One of the most heartrending things about people dying of HIV, as opposed to other diseases, is that they are, because of the unexamined and long held assumptions of so many ‘brilliant minds’, vilified, ridiculed, shunned, persecuted, sneered at and humiliated just when they are in most need of sympathy, love and basic humanity.

If it is even remotely possible that we as people are guilty of such terrible injustice to fellow human beings, surely that is in urgent need of investigation? Far from dying because they have engaged in what may or may not be risky sexual activity, people may be dying because they have followed the advice of well educated professionals.

It’s almost unthinkable that many, or even any recent cases of HIV have been transmitted by the very professionals that are supposed to be preventing and treating the disease. But it is even more unthinkable that we could suspect such a thing is happening and do nothing about it.

Maybe there is a danger that people will stop going to health professionals and stop seeking medical treatment, even vital vaccinations and life saving treatment, because of a complete lack of confidence in the profession. But that is something the profession will have to deal with because they certainly don’t deserve any confidence or respect until they have fulfilled obligations that have so long been outstanding.

It is possible that in some countries, going to the doctor may curently be a significant health hazard, carrying risks of infection with HIV and many other blood borne diseases. In the field of HIV, nothing is more important right now than establishing the extent of HIV transmission through medical treatment.

 

Guesst Post from Simon Collery: I am campaigning for the recognition of non-sexually transmitted HIV, which may be a significant contributor to some of the most serious epidemics, which are all in sub-Saharan Africa. The extent of non-sexual HIV transmission is unknown because no comprehensive investigations have been carried out. But there is a lot of evidence against the view that sexual behavior alone can explain the massive epidemics found in countries such as Swaziland, Botswana and South Africa. While I do blog about other subjects relating to Africa, this is my main concern.

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How cheap life can be

Slum Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya.

Image via Wikipedia

Over the month of October, watching news in kenya has been the equivalent of a serialised horror movie. every day there is news of  a grisly road accident, a couple of people going blind due to drinking toxic concoctions in the name of alcohol and  fuel pipelines incinerating slum dwellers.

The Sinai slum tragedy has claimed over a hundred lives. Information has leaked that it could have been avoided if the right measures like evicting the slum dwellers, fixing a faulty seal in the pipeline and proper deterrence for stealing fuel were implemented years ago. But ofcourse politicians would hear non of this seeing as the voter gravy train would grow alittle thin if the slum was moved to say the next constituency.

Almost 200 people die monthly on Kenyan roads mostly due to negligence and drunk driving. Some accidents are so grisly and cost so many lives that even the president attended a burial in Mwingi due to the sheer loss. barely a week later a similar accident on the same route claimed a similar no.

Tales of drinkers going blind due to drinking some illicit brew are fast becoming regular such that its no longer news. This is even beyond the fact that a law was enacted recently to control exactly this kind of behavior.

To date no one has resigned, been suspended,fired or arrested for being responsible for any of the above tragedies. In my view this cheapens the lives lost to some sort of collateral damage that is acceptable.

When does it end?

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Food security and the impact of agriculture commercialisation

CIA World Factbook map of the country of Uganda.

Image via Wikipedia

In early part of 2009, shortly before March the 13th, the impact of industrialisation in Africa sore its seed during an intense contemplatation program set up to look at ways of promoting for food security in Africa. I (even though not an agriculaturist) and perhaps quite a number of persons; perceived an incoming industrial revolution in Africa that might pose a significant threat to agricultural advancement if government policy goes negatively unchecked. Let me make it clear that I do accept that industrialisation is great; it will allow Africa a bigger room in the goods and service market of the world. It will engulf as well enable agriculture with a lot of great prospects as agro-industries might receive a greater attention of government and both domestic and foreign investors as is already happening in Zambia and Rwanda. Both small scale and large scale commercial agriculture will be the drive for both the young and old. Industrialization will also help African countries trade among one another in a unique way. This is because, most countries in Africa have almost the same commodity type; from agricultural resources to mineral resources. For instance, Uganda would not sell coffee beans to Kenya and vice versa because they both produce it on commercial quantities. However, the story can greatly change if Uganda’s coffee is taken through an industrial process and well processed and packaged branded coffee is produced out of it.  I am biased in stating that Uganda’s coffee is the best in Africa; the government and private sector actors in Kenya might readily patronize a lot of Uganda coffee but will not do same for Uganda’s coffee beans because Kenya is the leading exporter of coffee in Africa. These are some positive externalities of industrialization.

Many governments in Africa have pursued industrialization vigorously as part of their developmental plan over the decades. This has given rise to a lot of commercial agriculture where agro-industries are concerned. As a result, larger lands (arable lands) has been dedicated to industries. But, we all know that the greater percentage of the food provided the continent comes from indigenous Africans who own smaller farm lands. Now, imagine if the same size of arable lands allocated to factories are given to farmers whose desire is to invest their energies and time in large scale subsistence farming. It is subsistence farming that feeds Africa but when large scale commercial farming comes in, factories to process the cash crops cultivated on this commercial farms for exports will be a necessity. The question is: Will Africa export food whereas over 200million people of its people are chronically undernourished? Africa spends over $18billion on food importation; this means, greater percentage of the monies derived from Africa’s food exports are used to buy food into Africa again, sometimes with costs higher than what it earns during export. The reality is that, the dependency theory always works against Africa, farm inputs are heavily subsidized for farmers in most of the countries outside of the continent we directly trade with. Hence, African agriculture will have to decrease the prices of her commodities so they can get a market for the foods exported.

Advantages:

This is where industrialization provokes a positive externality, where it embraces processed foods, some for export and some for domestic consumption. This will greatly help decrease a lot of processed foods imported. But, when industrialization completely shifts from agriculture into the manufacturing goods and services there will be a threat of an intense state of food insecurity. In Africa, it is only prospects for food security that was not dated among all of the things stated in the financial times of 2003; 9th July (read Financial Times, July 9, 2003; p.1). It is said that over 500 children die of malnutrition every day and the situation is worsening.

Disadvantages:

The negative externalities of industrialization are many but the significant among them, to me, are global warming and the provocation of acid rains it will command upon African soils.  Africa already lies at the heart of the over-head sun. Emission of more Carbon dioxide gasses into its atmosphere will spell disaster. The depletion of the Ozone layer will make the situation unbearable for some crops to thrive as well as dehydrate farmers who use their natural energies to farm. Many children suffering from malnutrition, especially diarrhoea, are at greater risk since they lose too much energy. Smaller streams that naturally irrigate certain farms lands dry up as well as rivers and other important water bodies useful for irrigational purposes. This is already evidenced in parts of Africa (experiencing famines or threat of famines) where there has been political instability coupled with the extreme unforgiving weather patterns such as in the Horn of Africa.

Secondly, poisonous gases emitted to the atmosphere from industries will induce acid rains, rich in sulfur and other chemicals, upon soils. Microorganisms that should add nutrients into the soil will eventually die; the only option will rest upon fertilizer usage, especially inorganic fertilizers, which is equally a disaster. A lot of inorganic materials in the body will pose health risk and many will die from food related diseases because Africa’s health systems are so weak to cater well for the sick. Furthermore; additional monies will be spent on fertilizer importation, causing losses to Africa’s foreign currency reserves and consequently sky-rocketing food prices. Already, most of the humus layers of Africa’s agricultural soils have been completely destroyed by ploughs whose blades are several inches larger than the thickness of the humus layer. For example, in Uganda, the humus layer is about six inches thick so when you use ploughs with disk sizes of say, 26 or 32 inches on Uganda’s soil, you will actually be burrying the micro-organisms deep down leaving no nutrients to be absorbed by plants. This will result in more money being spent on the importation of inorganic fertilizers. Many farmers who cannot afford the high cost of production will subsequently move out of business. In 2008, the Algerian government invested $10billion into agriculture and it yielded great dividends, this is to tell you how risky the venture is. Therefore, since agriculture is such a risky venture (a reason that scares most African government away from investing heavily into it) we must not further heighten the risk by imposing unmanageable factors on it.

There must be a limit for things we do. Food security is paramount. African leaders must not allow themselves to be driven by this proclivity for modernity to the degree where all they care about is GDP growth rather than strengthening local food reserves. For most of these leaders, growth in GDP means an opportunity to attract more inter-governmental financial aid in-flows from the Western countries that never gets to the African people.

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