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Africa's Expectations From President Obama

Issue 381

Front Page

News Headlines

Terrorists Captured In Hargeysa

Presidential Security Eject Haatuf Reporters

American Experts Train Somaliland’s Security

Dahabshil Opens A New Building In Borama

Road Maintenance

Hollywood Beckons For Somali Pirate Negotiator
Welcome To Somaliland, The Nicer Part Of Crumbling Country

About 300 Foreigners Fighting Somali Government - UN

Local and Regional Affairs

1909 Egyptian Sirdar In Somaliland

Somalia: Al-Shabab Forcing Opposition Leader To Hand Over Weapons

Somaliland Mps In Uganda

Somaliland Court Jails 14 For Piracy

SOMALIA: Plea over water scarcity in Sool region

Pastoralists Hardest-Hit By Drought In Somaliland

Written answers From British House of Lords

Budget In Ush1.7 Trillion Financial Deficit

Qatar Super Grand Prix and Jama Karaiin’s Team Gold Victory

SRSG calls for immediate direct aid to alleviate suffering in Somalia

 Statement by France
Somalia: civilians trapped amid fighting in Mogadishu
Somalia: Amputations And Public Killings Must Stop

Somali Pirates Can Locate Ships Without Need For London Mole

Editorial

Chickens Come Home To Roost

Editor's Choice

War in Somalia: Protecting Somaliland's Peace Should Be a Priority

Features & Commentary

Why Are We Lending Money To Warmongering Kleptocrats?

Somewhere In Africa: Not All Somalias Are Created Equal

Concerned U.S. Voices Concern About The Concerning Politics In Kenya. Concern

U.S. Policy Re. Somali Pirates

Somalia: A state of failure

South Africa's "Racist" Muslims

Free-Makhtal Working Coalition Town Hall Meeting: RESOLUTION

Why Don't We Care About Sri Lanka?

Are German Anti-Pirate Forces Hampered by Bureaucrats?

Cold War Origins Of The Somalia Crisis

The Pope And Palestine: A State Of Confusion

The pirate hunters

International News

 

UK Muslim Minister Resigns to Clear Name

Anger At Obama Guantanamo Ruling

Biden insults President Obama’s dog at Syracuse

Barack Obama Faces Tense Meeting With Benjamin Netanyahu

Opinion

R.I.P Somaliland: A Little Country Killed By Charcoal

The Al-Shabab’s Misunderstanding Of Al-Shari’ah

Somalia –Afghanistan Of Africa, Hassan Dahir Aweys The Trojan Horse Of Issayas Afeworki

How Islamic Banks Manage In Business Without Charging Interest??

Africa's Expectations From President Obama

 A Letter To H.E President Jacob Zuma

By Mukhtar Mohamed Abby

With the U.S. administration marking its 100 days in office, president Barack Obama has raised sky-scrapping expectations for his term as president, not only at home in the U.S., but also abroad in Africa. The 44th American president is the first with an Africa lineage and, not surprisingly, his rise to power has triggered a wave of hope amongst Africans as they look towards the West in anticipation of new beginnings in the U.S. foreign policy and diplomatic relations.

Examples of African reverence for Mr. Obama abound. Kenya has declared 5 November a national holiday in recognition of Mr. Obama's election. Parallels were drawn worldwide between Mr. Obama's inauguration ceremony in Washington earlier this year, as being eerily reminiscent in as scale and scope of Nelson Mandela's inauguration as South Africa's first black president in 1994. Will President Barack Obama be able to deliver in accordance with the super-hero status that Africans are bestowing on him?

In the coming months, Obama will be expected to address Africa's most pressing crises: Sudan's six-year conflict in Darfur continues unabated with U.N. forces being woefully understaffed and underfunded, despite former president Bush labeling it as "genocide"; Somalia has now been without a central government for 18 years and has lost more than one million people to civil conflict and famine; and the Democrat Republic of Congo is struggling to end a five-year conflict with a death toll deemed the world's highest since World War II. And, of course, there are the longstanding issues across the continent of food security, corruption, access to clean water and basic health care, and the looming threat of climate change.

There will be some tough decisions ahead in deciding on priorities and whether to drill down on development or security. The president remains true to the objectives identified in his election campaign, then three items could be expected on his African agenda: accelerate Africa's integration into the global economy; and strengthen relations with African governments to deepen democracy and accountability.

Already, Mr. Obama is making strides towards building good relations with Africa. In recent weeks, the president has surrounded himself with top African advisers – foremost amongst them in the appointment of Susan Rice, former assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs in the Clinton administration, to post of U.N. Ambassador. Mr. Obama had been in touch with South Africa's former interim president Kaglema Motlanthe about the ongoing political crisis in Zimbabwe.

But there are a number of factors working against him. No doubt the president's first loyalty is to serve the needs and heeds the priorities of the American people and, as the global financial crisis persists, his ability to deliver on foreign priorities above domestic ones will become increasingly constrained. Some critics even go as far as saying that it would be difficult for Mr. Obama to leave the kind of African legacy that his predecessor did given the many other foreign policy priorities of the day, notably Iraq, Afghanistan and Middle East crisis among others. With all the domestic failures and foreign policy blunders that undermined his creditability while in office, earning him the lowest approval rating in the recent memory, former U.S. president George Bush could confidently point to his widely deserved and often ignored achievements in Africa. The Bush administration devoted major attention in recent years to supporting Africa's battle to contain the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the devastating effects of malaria. His president's Emergence Plan for Aids Relief (Pepfar) describes as a revolution, in the sense that it radically altered the administration of healthcare on the continent, has been described as the largest ever global initiative dedicated to tackling a single disease. Since 2003, it provided $ 15 billion ($ 10 billion in new money) to fund desperately need drugs to more than 1.5 million people who would not have been able to afford them. This has had a tremendous impact on increasing access to AIDS treatment on the African continent.

Under the Bush administration, aid to Africa increased to more than $ 5.6 billion in 2008, from $ 1.3 billion in 2001. Mr. Bush introduced a less bureaucratic Millennium Challenge Account (MCA), targeted at a select group of countries. Using a 16- point indicator, this bilateral development aid fund is aimed at countries that satisfy various criteria, pertaining to free-market economic policies, democratic governance and ant-corruption reforms. Supporters point out that all of these were instrumental in ushering in a new level in African –U.S. relations, namely one based on investment and trade, rather than on aid alone.

In any event, it is unhelpful to speculate as to whether Mr. President Obama will match Bush's achievements in Africa and meet the enormous expectations of Africans over the coming period. Time will tell as to how Africa will come to judge the Obama administration. What is certain, however, is that Africa is too important to be ignored. The continent is slowly attempting to improve its efforts to govern itself: to resolve internal disputes, distrust, and grievances; to usher in political pluralism; and to integrate economically within the global economy. The U.S. cannot afford to continue to confining Africa to the realm of its lowest priorities, while failing to take notice of all the progress and achievements of the past decade, which countries such as China and India have either taken full advantage of, or taken part in. There is no better time than the present for U.S. to assure Africa of its full commitment to playing a more active and constructive role in the continent's rapid transformation and development.

India, Karnataka State

mukhtarcabi@hotmail.com

 


 


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