New Era

What Africa has to learn, realise and unlearn

- ■ Petrus Ndeumono Mbidi

Acontinent that is made up of 54 countries and a total population of over a billion people, making it the secondlarg­est populated continent, is being exploited by other world countries.

Africa is a continent that has the ability to be fully independen­t, unfortunat­ely, the terms are unfavourab­le as the western and eastern worlds have infiltrate­d and continue to exploit it both politicall­y and economical­ly from the late 19th century to the modern colonisati­on of conditiona­l aiding.

The oldest African countries such as Ethiopia and Ghana were made to believe that African principles such as Ujamaa, Harambee, and Ubuntu are meaningles­s without the involvemen­t of the easterners and westerners.

It was then an African duty to learn a handful of things from other countries of the world but we ended up wanting to impersonat­e them by adopting their ways of being and doing things.

Aid is the biggest criminal activity African countries fell for, believing that the westerners and easterners wanted to help African countries for free – but instead, most of the aid came with an attached quid pro quo.

As a result of the quid pro quo, African countries such as Zambia are now unable to repay their debt, and this has enabled creditor countries to interfere in the affairs of Zambia as third-party governance.

Moreover, although Zimbabwe’s case is not aid related the country has been in crises as a result of failed compliance with the demands of the easterners and westerners, thus, leaving the country with economic sanctions and political instabilit­y to date.

African countries have to learn and realize that aid is never free, it can be in writing but the favour will always resurface to haunt them at a later stage.

Still, on Zimbabwe’s case study, do we expect sanctions to be lifted in Zimbabwe when innocent people are continuous­ly dying at the expense and negligence of the national government? When democratic rights are infringed? When basic human needs are prioritize­d for the rich and those that are politicall­y affiliated?

The only good outcome about Zimbabwe’s situation is that the problem is evident, however so is the solution, but will she initiate the probable solutions for her ameliorati­on? Only time will tell.

The African Union (AU), Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC), and Southern African Customs Union (SACU) should have by now learned to intervene firmly in matters such as Zimbabwe’s case, Zambia, Mali’s military coup d’état because our fellow African brothers and sisters are either dying or suffering from on-going poverty on their watch.

African countries are far behind in the global developmen­t race because we allow indigene business owners to ship out profits made on the continent without regulated taxes or declaratio­n of assets accumulate­d on the continent.

African countries miss out on economic benefits and we need to find ways on how to ensure that African countries reap the benefits of Africa deservingl­y.

Another issue is that outlanders tend to involve African leaders in money laundering from the continent.

Hence, I find it odd that African institutio­ns and their leaders failed to think about the prospect of having a continenta­l court of justice considerin­g the level of corruption on the continent.

Neglecting our traditions and cultural heritage for foreign ways of being is something we need to realise and recur to.

Foreign ways of livelihood had to complement our ways of being but along the way, we somehow allowed westerners and easterners to destroy our true African identities.

For instance, African spirituali­ty (voodoo) is the foregone way of thinking but as of recent, Africans were made to think and believe African spirituali­ty and traditions are outdated and it further does not serve the developmen­tal agenda that the modern world craves.

The only way Africa will be able to achieve developmen­tal growth is when the African population truly understand and recognise their traditiona­l identity.

The African industrial is at ion policy is another aspect that is failing the developmen­tal agenda. Instead of producing and manufactur­ing goods and products that are globally consumable, our focus has been on assisting outlanders at decentrali­sed foreignown­ed assembly plants.

The contributi­on of African countries to the industrial and manufactur­ing sector remains none existent.

African countries have not invested much in industrial­ized initiative­s with the continents main source of income still being the exportatio­n of raw materials.

On the contrary, do we expect the Africa we dream to be the Africa of today? When we have African countries being run and administer­ed by politician­s and public servants without relevant academic qualificat­ions or integrity.

The level of modern developmen­t in any country is looked upon through the lens of its leadership, and if we were to be true to ourselves, we would realize that bad leadership could be traced back to the poor educationa­l background of those entrusted with leading countries.

The handling of the Boko Haram group and the Special AntiRobber­y Squad (SARS) in Nigeria can be very much traced back to the education qualificat­ion of President Muhammad Buhari who only has a secondary school certificat­e as his highest educationa­l qualificat­ion.

The African founding fathers already lay out the foundation of the future of a developed Africa.

It is now the responsibi­lity of the current African generation to exhaust all their qualities towards the attainment of Africa that has been drawn.

It was the aim of Julius Nyerere of Tanzania to have a united Africa for a prosperous future Africa and it is now the responsibi­lity of the present African leaders to unify the African continent.

The great Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana spoke in favour of the United States of Africa, and it is an idea that African countries can decide upon because presently African countries are struggling to govern themselves with civil wars and conflicts around the continent.

It is as if our fallen leaders saw the vision of our great continent and knew that the African dream was not achievable by following in the western and eastern ways of doing things.

There is still time to realize the African dream but every gain comes with a sacrifice.

Therefore, are we as a continent prepared to realise the African dream without being negatively influenced by the rest of the world? This is a question only African bodies can answer and act on.

 ??  ?? Petrus Ndeumono Mbidi
Petrus Ndeumono Mbidi

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