Kiswahili for a place of convergence, these are the voices of Africa you don't hear...
Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2008

On returning to the motherland

So I've been here for all of 3 days, coming from the heart of the Arabian desert, to visit my family and, my home.
Oh to breathe in Africa!

The obvious parody that exists between my South Africa life and my Middle East life, is too much not to repeatedly exclaim, "Over there we shop with our bags in the trolley", "We forget our keys outside the door every other day", "We leave our cars running so it can stay cool when we go into malls/restaurants" and other such blasphemy's. I am finding it hard to switch into paranoia mode, lock my doors, clutch my bag, look over my shoulder every minute and worst of all, not drive alone after dark!

Now that that is out of the way, lets move on to the more positive. I am enjoying every second of being here, of being surrounded by all things familiar, of being respected and treated as no less than an African (including being expected to bribe the customs official), regardless of my ethnicity, which is quite an issue in my new home, with people too often asking, "but where are you really from?" as they cannot understand how I, all light skinned and hijab clad, can possibly claim to be African!

To be born in a land is to forever be bound to it, not by ties of obligation, but by those of affection, for a land which brought you up. To move away from that land, is to live with feelings of guilt, at having abandoned what gave you life. Everyday, questions are asked, and answers are unanswered, "how can I change my country?", "how can I help if I'm so far away?", "Have I forsaken my responsibility?", "Everyone else lives with the crime, why cant I?"

On being away and coming home, I realize that every country, not just African countries, are challenged by changing times, but for as long as people remain true to the commitment for peace and development, hope is not lost. To come back, and see both icredible development and heart-wrenching desolation, is to know I am home.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Africa's Image, manufactured-perception dogging the real deal.


If wars, election chaos, xenophobia, genocide, corruption and Aids are indeed Africa's only news then the ostensible thrust of African journalism amounts to aping western standards of newsworthiness. There is no denying the problems crippling the continent, but is that all there is to Africa?

The recently adjourned, World Economic Forum for Africa at Cape Town's International Convention Centre was themed,“Capitalising on Opportunity”. The continent's first staging of The Fifa World Cup™ in 2010 was a major focus of the three-day forum, as the event is seen as 'arguably the biggest opportunity for the re-branding and reinforcing of a positive image of Africa'.

On Thursday, the panel that included, Mark Lamberti, chairperson of Massmart (SA), Wendy Luhabe, chairperson of of the Industrial Development Corporation (SA), Betty Maina, CE of the Kenya Association of Manufacturers, and Simon Kolawale, editor of Nigeria's This Day tackled the subject of crime. Well known, to be one of South Africa's major concerns, the panelists however, disagreed with the notion of crime being a uniquely South African problem, and instead labelled it a 'continent-wide crisis'. While a variety of competing explanations were offered in discussing the problem, Wendy Luhabe felt crime was a function of poverty and inequality. 'Africa is a wealthy continent, but its people are poor. Millions of Africans live on less than a dollar a day. This obscene economic gap is responsible for the high levels of crime and corruption,' she said. Lamberti, hoever, argued that South Africa's high levels of crime were a consequence of the parlous state of the criminal justice system on the one hand, and on the other, a consequence of social ills. Lamberti also pointed out that many countries , like India and China, have horrific poverty and inequality without our crime levels. It appears then, the crime problem is not easily explained away. It is an insidious problem, that is the product of a combination of factors, but how is it best tackled?

President Mbeki, earned the headline, 'Target: Mbeki' from Independent Newspapers after he publicly disagreed with the forum about there being a crisis of leadership on the continent. While President Mbeki's oft-published caricature as an ostrich-type figure, with its head in the sand while the world about him falls apart, would certainly deter the President himself from being a shining beacon of African leadership, he would not accept the criticism or the generalisations about the continent's leadership."There is much better clarity in the political leadership on the continent," he maintained. "There is greater clarity on how to respond to economic challenges. And there is an appreciation of the need to deal with conflict." In terms of governance, the continent was "evolving in the correct direction".While avoiding any mention of Zimbabwe, he used Nigeria as an example of the way the quality of leadership had changed. Mbeki told delegates that military strongman Sani Abacha had lied to him about the fate of activist Ken Saro Wiwa, promising he would not be harmed, only to hang him once he (Mbeki) left Nigeria. All these years later, Nigeria was developing in a good and positive way, with President Umaru Yar'Adua reviewing the electoral system.

Coca-Cola chairperson Neville Isdell, a speaker at the closing session of the forum, said he agreed with President Mbeki in that there has been change. This is underscored by the level of economic growth and investment in Africa. One can identify where improvement is taking place by looking where investment is going.There is also change at another level, in the growth of a middle class and a new educated elite, who have shaken off the shackles of the past and have a new view of Africa.This in itself has begun engineering democratic change and also underpins it.

Afro-pessimists would have had us believe that Africa could never host an event of the stature of the The Fifa World Cup™ , much less, develop the requisite infrastructure in time. Yet, just as the delegates of the forum in the picture above, visited the stadium in Green Point, Cape Town to note progress on construction, I was heartily warmed during a recent trip to the area around the FNB stadium in Johannesburg to note the stadium rapidly growing into the calabash shell of the artist's impression.