Issue 377
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Opinion |
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By Kayode Oladele
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGS) were declared and made
“compulsory” social policy option for third world countries. About the
same time the United Nations adopted these goals as a palliative
“arrest” option for the third world, the World Bank came up with a huge
document on African, entitled “Can Africa Reclaim the Twenty first
Century?” Without anybody saying so, both the UN and the World Bank held
very pessimistic view about Africa ’s capacity to meet up to its social
challenges, to reach or accomplish the limited and tentative targets set
for it, but they did say so in too many words.
The World Bank, on a different note had complained about the quality of
labor produced in Africa, the bad training received by students in
tertiary institutions and the general decay in infrastructure. At a
point, the World Bank said that Africa no longer needed universities,
all it needed was mid level manpower training for its youth, and this
could be acquired at the mono- and polytechnics. Many people were angry
and vexed by this recommendation from the external agencies and
financial cartels. However, what did they do internally to revamp
African universities? Nothing. Even appointment to the post of Vice
Chancellorship remains heavily politicized like partisan politics,
appointees often do not have nuanced experience of the system neither
did they command the respect of colleagues; and many cannot carry the
entire community along. These are the calibre of people often appointed
Vice-Chancellors-their commitment is more to the state rather than to
their communities.
The social diary reads as follows: many people remained unemployed,
young graduates from most tertiary institutions will go out to swell the
queue of those who have been there for close to two decades without
jobs, with access to micro-credit and without the privilege of
unemployment benefit. Many young applicants will not have access to
tertiary institutions while some who apply to private institutions will
never be able to afford the tuition and cost of sustenance. This is
because they are self-sponsored, their parents are either retired or
cannot afford the tuition; they are from humble backgrounds; the biting
economic crisis has made even feeding a rare privileged. There are not
enough kind-hearted philanthropists to come it the rescue and the state
has abdicated its social responsibility to the citizens.
It is a theory of “fend-for-thyself”. This is a theory that has not
worked in Europe and America, and it cannot work in Africa either, where
we claim to be our brothers and sisters keepers and live a communitarian
life. I challenge the view that communitarian life is still a dominant
social feature in Africa: increasing urbanization, marketization and
individualized based on the ideology of competition and reforms have
systematically undermined our social values. Everybody is more concerned
with the nuclear rather than extended family system, some for selfish
reasons and others because of the harsh reality of the times.
Poverty, as I have repeatedly stated or noted is growing in Africa and
this has been caused by at least ten factors that I know of namely: bad
leadership, visionlessness, wrong policies, external dependence on loans
and investment (Foreign Direct Investment), obsession with the market
economy, lack of focus or understanding of what constitutes development,
the destruction of social infrastructure, bad training received at
schools resulting in malformed and badly trained graduates, this takes
place at all levels in public schools. Many private schools are in bad
physical shape, managed by quacks and with semi-quacks as teachers, such
teachers are underpaid and malnourished. In a word, there is no quality
assurance or quality control in both public and private schools in
Nigeria . Lastly but not least, is the weak nature of the private sector
which has resulted in low capacity of the sector. This has had negative
impact on employment profile of private employers. The consequences have
been devastating for young job seekers.
All over Africa , people are displaced whether internally through
internal displacement or external displacement resulting in the refugee
crisis. In some cases, these African refugees, just like the
Palestinians in South Lebanon , are denied the “right of return”. In
such cases, they are engaged in internal contestation for leadership.
Such is the case in DR Congo and in other cases; they are engaged in a
forcible case of irredentism or ungovernability, as is the case of
Somalia and Somaliland, the crisis inside and across, Sudan , Zimbabwe ,
Botswana , Chad and Rwanda .
Africa is afflicted with the crisis of what I called the Seven Ds:
Divestiture, Debt, Desertification, Drought, Deforestation,
De-vegetation De-democratization, which sometimes combined with famine
and war to wrought havoc on social life in Africa. The seven Ds are
crucial to understanding poverty in Africa . For instance, long wars
have displaced many families in Africa.For close to 15 years, children
of school age were unable to attend school in Liberia and Rwanda, the
same thing happened in Somalia and Sierra Leone.
What are the social consequences of this for Africa in the next twenty
years? Nobody is bordered about that. Many of those who have been
fighting in the numerous wars across Africa have always used child
soldiers from Angola to Rwanda to Dr Congo to Liberia and Sierra Leone.
The lives of these children have virtually been destroyed because in the
post-conflict or what is called reconstruction and integration era and
the DDR process, nobody remembers the youth; because in the first case,
the AU and UN laws criminalize the concept of child soldier, but in
criminalizing them, they also excluded them from the rehabilitation
processes. The children who fought and carried guns were not allowed to
submit their guns in return/exchange for US dollars, instead it was the
adults that collected the guns from the children and fronted to collect
the dollars, without giving these children the money. This is increasing
tension in Liberia and Sierra Leone and it is one core reason why
President Koroma won the presidential election in Sierra Leone because
many of the youth were disenchanted and disillusioned with the
corruption, greed and alienation that had overwhelmed politicians in
Sierra Leone .
Poverty level in Africa is high because African leaders have no clue
about how to strategically address poverty. They believe that poverty is
better addressed through the same mechanisms and policies that plunged
African economies into crisis-reliance on external masters and forces;
they feel that mere palliatives such as NAPEP in Nigeria and GEAR in
South Africa can address poverty. However, they all miss the point. The
irony of Africa is that over 67% of the population is youth, able-bodied
and therefore potentially a huge asset. However, the youth have been
turned by African governments into a wasting asset and a liability. In
Europe and America, they are worried about the increasingly aging and
gerontocratic population and how much will be expended for their upkeep,
while in Africa the reverse is the case, nobody cares about the youth,
there are no Borstals, few juvenile homes, parenting has given way to
the crass pursuit of money. In the name of being professionals, more and
more parents are abandoning their children to nannies and housemaids.
This is wrong.
Employment generation anywhere in the world is always often based on the
potentials of the people, on the opportunities that can be created in
the economy. In Many countries of Africa , both those that are well
endowed and those that are less endowed, the only opportunities created
are those for corruption and not those for gainful employment and
development. Even where agencies and structures are created for
mitigating poverty, they also become spaces for further corruption,
greed and avarice.
We can solve the problem of poverty in Africa only when we take five
core steps, first recognize that the state has a fundamental role to
play in the social and economic development of a country, second when
there is a humanist theory of society upon which development and social
progress is designed and measured, third when there is accountability
and inclusive political system, fourth when there is a proper monitoring
and evaluation of state programs, and last but not least, when the goal
of the state is to serve the public good and the public purpose. The
moment we lose track of that notion, we would have stripped ourselves of
our humanity and the essence of living. We would have left the future of
our youth to chances, we would have mortgaged the future of the yet
unborn, we would have betrayed our forebears who labored hard to win
Nigeria independence, and we would have also betrayed our own
generational responsibility as a people.
Life is not all about money only, it is not all about “self”, the
purpose of life is about “service” and about “others”. The day we feel
or think others do not matter, or that they are external to us; the
moment we feel that the next neighbor’s child is not my problem but
his/her parent’s problem, that day we have compromised our humanity,
sacrificed our future and endangered our security. A child that is not
collectively trained and told the values of life is bound to grow a bad
and ill brought up child, he is likely to be the robber next door and he
may end up in prison. In the process a soul may have been destroyed for
life; even if he/she is rehabilitated, he/she cannot may go and live in
the ghetto, and have contempt for education or school. That is what we
risk as a people, as a neighborhood, as a collective and as a society or
country. As a result, those who have, the wealthy must also think about
how to create employment opportunities, educational opportunities
through scholarships and endowments, they must endorse/embrace the
concept of public private partnership in a genuine and concerted manner.
That is the way to grow.
Above all, confidence and hope must be restored in the poor, they must
be educated to know that not all is lost, that others care and that
lives could be better if they cooperate and work in certain ways. They
must be treated as citizens and granted equal entitlements and
privileges as others; they should not be seen and treated as the
“wretched of the earth”. No matter what we do about poverty or how we
treat the poor, the moment they feel that they are being segregated,
humiliated and treated with contempt, they will never appreciate what is
done for them and they will prefer to live in poverty with their dignity
and freedom, rather than being uplifted into wealth and losing their
self-respect and dignity. This is akin to what late President Sekou
Toure of Guinea Conakry told the departing French colonial masters that
his people would prefer freedom in poverty rather than wealth in
bondage.
The African poor want a better life, but they do not want to be
humiliated or treated with contempt and indignity. Instead, they will
prefer to remain in their poverty. However, we all know the social and
political consequences of this. What becomes of poverty in Africa
depends on us and not on external donors and philanthropists and African
leaders must stop ridiculing our poor with the patronizing policies they
have put in place, policies which simply do not and cannot work.
Source:www.economicconfidential.com/Daily Triumph, TUESDAY APRIL, 14
2009.
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