Africa – Open For Business

Booker Rising has a post on just how much President Bush has done for Africa – and it’s a lot more than most people have heard of. It’s a legacy to be proud of, and one with the potential for lasting change, not just the temporary handouts advocated by many folks. (Remember Bono’s pathetic temper tantrum? I guess his attitude is that the problem needs to be solved his way, or else let them continue to starve! This video contains ample evidence that Mwenda was right.)

Africa – Open for Business (originally posted on 4/25/07)


When you think of Africa, you think AIDS, huts with thatched roofs, the distended bellies of starving toddlers, and war. And those things are true. But it is also true that Africa has tremendous wealth. And I’m not just talking about those email opportunities you’ve received where you can get half of an enormous bank account in exchange for letting them transfer the money into your account. I’m talking about high-rises, exporting tons of food to the UK every day, cell phones, internet cafes, tourism, and countries with great credit ratings.President Clinton signed the African Growth and Opportunity Act into law in May of 2000, and President Bush expanded it in 2002, 2004 and 2006. And that legislation is helping Africa’s already thriving business community to continue to grow. The success stories are very encouraging. We have sponsored children in Africa for years and while there’s nothing wrong with that, it’s not a permanent fix. The growth of industry is what will eventually solve the poverty problem.Documentary filmmaker Carol Pineau created AFRICA Open for Business, a wonderful film that shows the rest of the story in Africa.

Yes, Africa is a land of wars, poverty and corruption. The situation in places like Darfur, Sudan, desperately cries out for more media attention and international action. But Africa is also a land of stock markets, high rises, Internet cafes and a growing middle class. This is the part of Africa that functions. And this Africa also needs media attention, if it’s to have any chance of fully joining the global economy.

Africa’s media image comes at a high cost, even, at the extreme, the cost of lives. Stories about hardship and tragedy aim to tug at our heartstrings, getting us to dig into our pockets or urge Congress to send more aid. But no country or region ever developed thanks to aid alone. Investment, and the job and wealth creation it generates, is the only road to lasting development. That’s how China, India and the Asian Tigers did it.

Yet while Africa, according to the U.S. government’s Overseas Private Investment Corp., offers the highest return in the world on direct foreign investment, it attracts the least. Unless investors see the Africa that’s worthy of investment, they won’t put their money into it. And that lack of investment translates into job stagnation, continued poverty and limited access to education and health care.

Consider a few facts: The Ghana Stock Exchange regularly tops the list of the world’s highest-performing stock markets. Botswana, with its A+ credit rating, boasts one of the highest per capita government savings rates in the world, topped only by Singapore and a handful of other fiscally prudent nations. Cell phones are making phenomenal profits on the continent. Brand-name companies like Coca-Cola, GM, Caterpillar and Citibank have invested in Africa for years and are quite bullish on the future.

The failure to show this side of Africa creates a one-dimensional caricature of a complex continent. Imagine if 9/11, the Oklahoma City bombing and school shootings were all that the rest of the world knew about America.

I recently produced a documentary on entrepreneurship and private enterprise in Africa. Throughout the year-long process, I came to realize how all of us in the media — even those with a true love of the continent — portray it in a way that’s truly to its detriment.

The first cameraman I called to film the documentary laughed and said, “Business and Africa, aren’t those contradictory terms?” The second got excited imagining heart-warming images of women’s co-ops and market stalls brimming with rustic crafts. Several friends simply assumed I was doing a documentary on AIDS. After all, what else does one film in Africa?

The little-known fact is that businesses are thriving throughout Africa. With good governance and sound fiscal policies, countries like Botswana, Ghana, Uganda, Senegal and many more are bustling, their economies growing at surprisingly robust rates.

Private enterprise is not just limited to the well-behaved nations. You can’t find a more war-ravaged land than Somalia, which has been without a central government for more than a decade. The big surprise? Private enterprise is flourishing. Mogadishu has the cheapest cell phone rates on the continent, mostly due to no government intervention. In the northern city of Hargeysa, the markets sell the latest satellite phone technology. The electricity works. When the state collapsed in 1991, the national airline went out of business. Today, there are five private carriers and price wars keep the cost of tickets down. This is not the Somalia you see in the media.

Obviously life there would be dramatically improved by good governance — or even just some governance — but it’s also true that, through resilience and resourcefulness, Somalis have been able to create a functioning society.

Most African businesses suffer from an extreme lack of infrastructure, but the people I met were too determined to let this stop them. It just costs them more. Without reliable electricity, most businesses have to use generators. They have to dig bore-holes for a dependable water source. Telephone lines are notoriously out of service, but cell phones are filling the gap.

Throughout Africa, what I found was a private sector working hard to find African solutions to African problems. One example that will always stick in my mind is the CEO of Vodacom Congo, the largest cell phone company in that country. Alieu Conteh started his business while the civil war was still raging. With rebel troops closing in on the airport in Kinshasa, no foreign manufacturer would send in a cell phone tower, so Conteh got locals to collect scrap metal, which they welded together to build one. That tower still stands today.

As I interviewed successful entrepreneurs, I was continually astounded by their ingenuity, creativity and steadfastness. These people are the future of the continent. They are the ones we should be talking to about how to move Africa forward. Instead, the media concentrates on victims or government officials, and as anyone who has worked in Africa knows, government is more often a part of the problem than of the solution.

The trailer is well worth a look:

More clips are here.What a damning indictment on the “if it bleeds it leads” philosophy of the media and the NGOs who are raising money to help Africa. “We hawk poverty,” one NGO worker admitted. As Ms. Pineau wrote,

There are lots of reasons for the media’s neglect of Africa: bean counters in the newsroom and the high cost of international coverage, the belief that American viewers aren’t interested in international stories, and the infotainment of news. There’s also journalists’ reluctance to pursue so-called “positive stories.” We all know that such stories don’t win awards or get front-page, above-the-fold placement. But what’s happening in Africa doesn’t need to be cast in any special light. The Ghana Stock Exchange was the fastest-growing exchange in the world in 2003. That’s not a “positive” story, that’s news, just like reports on the London Stock Exchange. I imagine a lot of consumers would have found it newsworthy to learn where they could have made a 144 percent return on their money.

My independent film was made possible by funding from the World Bank, for which I am extremely grateful. But the bank wouldn’t have had to step in if the media had been doing their job — showing all Africans in all facets of their lives. In a business that’s supposed to cover man-bites-dog stories, the idea that Africa doesn’t work is a dog-bites-man story. If the media were really looking for news, they’d look at the ways that Africa, despite all the odds, does work.

LiveLeak Caves

Hot Air has the story and notes, “Wilders’s point proven.” AP also cuts LiveLeak some slack, writing that now that the video has gone viral, “LiveLeak did its job for as long as it needed to.”

Following threats to our staff of a very serious nature, and some ill informed reports from certain corners of the British media that could directly lead to the harm of some of our staff, Liveleak.com has been left with no other choice but to remove Fitna from our servers.

This is a sad day for freedom of speech on the net but we have to place the safety and well being of our staff above all else. We would like to thank the thousands of people, from all backgrounds and religions, who gave us their support. They realised LiveLeak.com is a vehicle for many opinions and not just for the support of one.

Perhaps there is still hope that this situation may produce a discussion that could benefit and educate all of us as to how we can accept one anothers culture.

We stood for what we believe in, the ability to be heard, but in the end the price was too high.
LiveLeak.com – Redefining the Media

Well, I haven’t been threatened, so I don’t know how I’d react, so I’m not going to jump all over LiveLeak. And frankly in some ways, this is a really good outcome because it illustrates perfectly the seriousness of what we’re up against. It’s not a joke, a fad, an exaggeration, or fearmongering. People are being forced to choose between free speech and personal safety. That is unacceptable. That is dhimmitude.

From my 4/28/06 post, 101st Fighting Keyboardists, Chairborne Division:

This article by Dan Simmons includes a very prescient description of what is in store for us if we refuse to face the reality that Islamists mean what they say. When they say they want a global caliphate, they mean it. When they require that non-Muslims obey Islamic religious law, like not drawing pictures of Mohammed, they mean it. They don’t have the means to fully enforce it yet – hence the demonstrations in London where they carried signs demanding beheadings, instead of actually beheading people, but they do what they can. Ask Theo van Gogh. Google “honor killings in Germany.” I understand that all Muslims do not agree with the radical Islamists. All Germans did not agree with Hitler, but that did not stop World War II.

The adamant refusal by so many people to take them at their plainly stated words, while at the same time finding hidden meanings and conspiracies in nearly everything their own countrymen on the opposite side of the political spectrum say and do, is perplexing. The actions of the Islamists clearly fit with their words. Furthermore, they are not ignorant savages. The enemy is sophisticated and is easily using our own society and technology against us. They understand public relations. They are waiting out the current administration and hoping for someone more amenable to their long term goals in 2008. Aside from waging war through terrorism, as Iran has done through Hezbollah for nearly 30 years, they use our own free societies and the concept of multiculturalism against us. The demands for Sharia law are increasing in Western countries. Canada has a separate court system for Muslims. There does not need to be a global conspiracy or a fully networked group of people in order to overthrow the West. There only needs to be a shared philosophy.

It is astounding to me to see the lack of support for a war against enemies who have publicly, repeatedly declared their intention to destroy us. To those who say that the United States government is evil, that civil rights are in jeopardy, and that the Bush administration is the enemy, I would recommend a sense of proportion and of priorities. As the Dan Simmons article says, “Your enemy is he who will give his life to kill you. Your enemies are they that wish you and your children and your grandchildren dead and who are willing to sacrifice themselves, or support those fanatics who will sacrifice themselves, to see you and your institutions destroyed. You haven’t figured that out yet – the majority of you fat, sleeping, smug, infinitely stupid Americans and Europeans.” I understand that people of good will can honestly disagree about this. I know that people who say, “if the United States would just stop attacking Muslims, they will leave us alone,” are sincere. Then there are people who say the war is misapplied; they feel it’s more of a “police” issue and if Osama bin Laden could be found and brought to justice, the problem would be solved. At this point both sides have developed their own set of facts. The media chooses not to report on the newly translated Iraqi documents and many other things that don’t forward their agenda. My own brother stands on the opposite side of this debate. I believe the people who believe those things are making a serious category error. If you believe that we can go back to the way things used to be, before 9/11, (or 1998, 1996, 1988, 1983, or 1979…) then look up and learn the meanings of sharia, dhimmi, jizya, hudud, pbuh, kharaz, zakat, qadi, mahram, and burqa. You will need them. Learn what they did when they had control of Fallujah.

A friend of mine asked me why I’m writing this post. I don’t expect to change anyone’s mind, and I don’t want to debate the issue. The Time Traveler in the Dan Simmons article said, “It was important to me to come back to this time early on in the struggle. Even if only to remind myself of how unspeakably blind you all were.”

I’m writing this so that future generations, if they happen to read this, will know that all of us didn’t sign the suicide pact.

I don’t know what it’s going to take to shake us out of this complacency. But I do know that the consequences of it are and will continue to be severe.

Another One of Murtha's "Cold-Blooded Killers" Gets off Scot-Free

Cold-blooded killer? Not so much.

The Marine Corps is dropping all charges against a lance corporal who was accused of involuntary manslaughter in a squad’s killing of 24 Iraqis in Haditha in 2005.
Case dropped against Marine in Haditha probe – USATODAY.com

I guess the trial’s over now, Senator. How about that apology, if not to the group, then to those whose charges have been dropped? Because a United States Senator is the last person who ought to be engaging in guilt by association.

Update: Bumped from Quick Posts to add this -

Michelle Malkin has a ton of great links, including more details, a timeline, and video of Murtha being cornered and asked for an apology. (Murtha cut and ran redeployed somewhere people don’t ask inconvenient questions.) She also has links for the other Marines whose charges have been dropped. And from Defend Our Marines, which notes that eight were charged, and only three are still being charged.

They also note:

All charges were dismissed with prejudice against LCpl Tatum this morning, on the day his trial was to begin on allegations stemming from actions in Haditha, Iraq on 19 November 2005. The government said it was done to further the truth seeking function. We emphasize that LCpl Tatum will testify truthfully if called as a witness but there is no deal for his testimony.

Added: Locomotive Breath is also on the story.

Prayer or Doctors?

Here’s a little tip for these people who chose prayer over seeking medical attention and now have to bury their 11 year old daughter who died from a perfectly treatable form of diabetes:

You can use BOTH!

She had probably been ill for about a month, suffering symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, excessive thirst, loss of appetite and weakness, the chief said Wednesday, noting that he expects to complete the investigation by Friday and forward the results to the district attorney.

The girl’s mother, Leilani Neumann, said the family believes in the Bible and that healing comes from God, but she said they do not belong to an organized religion or faith, are not fanatics and have nothing against doctors.

We don’t run to the doctor for every little thing, but when someone is ill for that long, simple common sense will tell you that it needs to be investigated. And while symptoms may seem minor to begin with, surely after several weeks of vomiting and loss of appetite, this child was dehydrated, listless and weak? She was ill enough that other people noticed and tried to intervene:

Family members elsewhere called authorities to seek help for the girl.

“My sister-in-law, she’s very religious, she believes in faith instead of doctors …,” the girl’s aunt told a sheriff’s dispatcher Sunday afternoon in a call from California. “And she called my mother-in-law today … and she explained to us that she believes her daughter’s in a coma now and she’s relying on faith.”

The dispatcher got more information from the caller and asked if an ambulance should be sent.

“Please,” the woman replied. “I mean, she’s refusing. She’s going to fight it. … We’ve been trying to get her to take her to the hospital for a week, a few days now.”

If this is true, then these parents need to do some jail time, or at least some psych unit time. This is the part that drives me up a wall:

“We are remaining strong for our children,” Leilani Neumann said. “Only our faith in God is giving us strength at this time.”

The Neumanns said they moved from California to a modern, middle-class home in woodsy Weston, just outside Wassau in central Wisconsin, about two years ago to open a coffee shop and be closer to other relatives. A basketball hoop is set up in the driveway.

Leilani Neumann said she and her husband are not worried about the investigation because “our lives are in God’s hands. We know we did not do anything criminal. We know we did the best for our daughter we knew how to do.

Yes, our lives are in God’s hands. And when we’ve had serious illness to deal with – like my husband’s cancer and health problems I’ve had to deal with – we pray for healing. And there have been times that God has miraculously provided it. God has also graciously and mercifully given us medical technology as an avenue to healing, and it’s no lack of faith to use it.