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» BNW : Biafra Nigeria World Message Board: the Voice of a New Generation » BNW News, Current Events, and Politics Forums » The Great Forum » Bitain should Re-claim African Colonies now -- Bruce Anderson

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Author Topic: Bitain should Re-claim African Colonies now -- Bruce Anderson
Ohafia Udumeze
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Forumites:

It's good to be back. Boy,did I miss this place!

The following is a write-up by one of the regular Columnists with the British Independent Newspaper, a guy called Bruce Anderson.

Whatever your take, I'm sure you'd agree that Mr Anderson has touched on some pertinent issues. I want to believe that you and I have enough facts to tackle point- by-point all the issues he has raised.

I shall be issuing my rebuttal shortly and it is my intention to email/link this page to "The Independent". Enjoy!

Bruce Anderson: Africa was set adrift before it was ready to rule itself

quote:
'It is absurd to claim there is any way forward which would not include a large measure of neo-colonialism'

11 February 2002

Tony Blair is right. We should take an interest in Africa's welfare, and not only for sentimental reasons. As the Prime Minister more or less said – he was not so blunt – squalor and chaos in Africa is a potential threat to the leafy suburbs of England. A collapsing Africa could become a terrorgenic Africa.

After the cold war, Africa briefly dropped off the geopolitical map. Once the Russians lost interest in the continent, many in the West felt it was safe to do likewise, especially as some policymakers were already suffering from compassion fatigue. Billions had been poured into Africa via aid programmes, and almost all of it had been wasted – or embezzled. It seemed pointless to provide foreign aid which mostly ended up in Swiss bank accounts; still less, if it ensured the corrupt and oppressive rulers had just enough to pay their armed forces to maintain them in power while terrorising their populaces.

Not all aid was useless. A few projects were good, especially those sponsored by non-governmental organisations such as Save the Children. But as the economist Peter Bauer and others have argued so forcefully, the record of government-to-government aid has been disastrous. The continent would probably have been better off if there had never been any.

In the early '90s, benign neglect seemed to be an option. No longer. A few years ago, Henry Kissinger compared the Soviet Union to Upper Volta plus nuclear weapons. Since 11 September and Afghanistan, the humour has gone out of the comparison. We now know that any state, however crazily run, can provide a haven for political malignancy. We also know that, within a few years, as technology advances, states that are incapable of maintaining roads or providing clean water will be able to acquire weapons of mass destruction.

Map makers in the 16th and 17th centuries, to whom the interior of Africa was truly a dark continent, amused themselves by inventing picturesque descriptions. "Here be tygers''. "Here be anthropophagi.'' The modern equivalent would be "Here are terrorists''. "Here is a biological weapons programme.'' Those are amusements which we cannot afford. We now have good, sound selfish reasons for re-engaging with Africa in order to throw light on the darkness.

But this will require more than photo-calls or international conferences. It will require an exercise of will, starting with the willingness to acknowledge our own past misdeeds and moral failures.

Not all European powers were good colonists. The Belgians were a disgrace, while the Germans too behaved brutally, especially in South West Africa. But the British and French brought roads, schools, hospitals and law. We also sent out able and disinterested public servants. In the 1950s, Sudan was described as a country in which blacks were ruled by (Oxbridge) blues. Sudan was better run then than ever before or since. We have everything to be proud of in our African colonial record, except its premature end.

Forty years ago, the West betrayed Africa. Because we had lost the appetite for empire, and could no longer afford its burdens, we cast black Africa adrift, handing independence to territories which were in no way ready to rule themselves.

That unreadiness is now self-evident. It would be absurd to claim that Africa has any way to move forward which would not include a large measure of neo-colonialism. This need not mean direct white rule. It would involve a careful selection of local politicians who would administer their countries under Western tutelage.

In the West, we know what works: the rule of law, a market economy and democracy. In the case of Africa, the first two are the priorities; democracy can come later. In the interim, it is a question of finding clever, hardworking patriots who will run their countries in an authoritative manner, not a totalitarian one. Africa needs local equivalents of Ataturk, Franco, Pinochet and Musharraf – not Mobutu, Mugabe, Kaunda or Nyerere.

There is no reason why these African rulers should not grow rich in office. But their role model should be François Mitterrand, not Joseph Mobutu. We want characters who will pocket a tiny percentage of a rapidly growing GDP, not gangsters who will plunder an entire country.

Every British, French and American embassy in Africa should be easily able to identify suitable local politicians. It would then be a simple matter for the ambassador who has been designated to act as a covert governor general to call on the existing ruler, congratulate him on his impending retirement, assure him that his application for Swiss residence has been granted, and that he can take $50m with him, plus a guarantee of immunity for past misdeeds.

If the ruler in question protested that he had no intention of retiring and that he was worth $500m not $50m, the ambassador should make himself clear. Either he takes an honourable and affluent retirement – even though all theft in excess of $50m must be refunded – or he faces a drastic loss of life expectancy.

Such a threat would be more credible if we had not been so supine over Robert Mugabe. But past spinelessness must not be an excuse for future failure, in Zimbabwe or anywhere else. If Mr Mugabe hangs on to power for much longer, the West will have to use force against him to prevent his completing the ruin of a potentially rich country.

Over the past 40 years we have seen the ruin of a continent, full of attractive people who deserve so much better treatment than they have received at the hands of the brigands and kleptocrats who have mis-ruled them. My neo-colonial solution is unlikely to gain general acceptance. Some people will be shocked at the idea that Europeans have a better understanding of Africa's interests than most Africans do.

But the true moral outrage does not lie in proposals to make Africa a ward of a Western court. The outrage lies in allowing Africa to go on deteriorating; and Africans to go on suffering. The burden of proof should not lie with those who believe in importing good government on Africa, but with those who believe that Africa is capable of generating good government for itself.

None of this is likely to trouble Mr Blair, as he prepares for an international conference to discuss Africa's problems. From that conference, doubtless, will flow pious resolutions and impressive photographs. But so many conferences have been held over the past four decades, producing so little progress. There is no reason to believe this will change under Mr Blair's chairmanship.

Throughout Western capitals, it would be easy to assemble a group of experts who could assist well-inclined African rulers to improve their people's quality of life. They ought to be recruited and put to work. It is now time for the West to stop talking about Africa, and start telling Africans what to do.

___________________
Awo's political idea was based on the assumption that any town beyond Owo was Igbo or Hausa. Awo was not socialised; he was not a good mixer because he did not have the opportunity, which the secondary school offered. ~TOS Benson, Baba Oba of Lagos


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Teddy
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Ohafia,

Thanks for forwarding this article by Bruce Anderson.
I must confess that I have entertained some of the notions posited. However, I'm not inclined to think that recolonization of Africa is the solution. It's obvious the damage that has been done already- no more experiments with Africa.

Rather, I am in favor of the super powers abolishing all the military establishments in Africa, and confiscating all weapons.


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Ednut
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quote:
. It would then be a simple matter for the ambassador who has been designated to act as a covert governor general to call on the existing ruler, congratulate him on his impending retirement, assure him that his application for Swiss residence has been granted, and that he can take $50m with him, plus a guarantee of immunity for past misdeeds.

If the ruler in question protested that he had no intention of retiring and that he was worth $500m not $50m, the ambassador should make himself clear. Either he takes an honourable and affluent retirement – even though all theft in excess of $50m must be refunded – or he faces a drastic loss of life expectancy.


Ohafia,

I too, have contemplated that Africa need to be re-colonized. I had suggested that sometime in the past either here or their and I remeber that some people attacked me for even thinking like that. I had read somewhere about some Islands (Comoros? and another) both were colonized by France and some 30 years ago, the more developed of the two Islands became indpendent while the less developed remained a French colony. Well, to make a long story short, the "more developed" then have known nothing but coup and counter coup and today is a failed state like our BiafraNigeria, (while her sister Island have passed her) and has been asking France to come back.

Just look at BiafraNigeria, Obasanjo has no business coming anywhere close to even being a local government Chairman, at least not without serious therapy after years in prison condemed to death. He has no business being elected President of anything, not even a class prefect, if he was a Secondary School boy. Look at Charles Taylor, Moi, the guy in Gambia, Strasser of Sierra Leone who is now a street vagrant in Freetown after deportations from England where he flunked out of College. The list goes on.

All said, I think that the West is partly to blame for this and that had Republic of Biafra been allowed to successfully stand as a nation that it needs to be, all this would not have been necessary since the rest of Africa would have had a model of a nation to emmulate.

Teddy also made some good points about disarming this criminals that you call the amry in Africa. What Africa needs is a strong Police force only.

___________________
Feel me? Ofu onye ana asi unu abia go. - Ednut Igbo-American .
www.airamericaradio.com visit her.


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Ohafia Udumeze
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Teddy & Ednut:

Many thanks for your contributions. Teddy, where have you been?


On Mr Anderson's essay let me start by saying that I share Mr Anderson's opinion that the problem with the erstwhile colonies could be resolved with the active participation of the Colonial masters notably Britain. However, I disagree that the problems stem from the fact that the colonialists left in a hurry. My opinion as previously expressed in the Conference on Racism thread started by Renee, is that the colonial masters did not respect the rights of the peoples of Africa to live in their prefered groups and units.

In addition to mechanically merging nations with different cultures, ambitions and out-look together, Britain also ensured that clueless stooges were kept in place to rule these nations with the consequences that we are witnessing today.


I'll be back.........

___________________
Awo's political idea was based on the assumption that any town beyond Owo was Igbo or Hausa. Awo was not socialised; he was not a good mixer because he did not have the opportunity, which the secondary school offered. ~TOS Benson, Baba Oba of Lagos


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Ojoto
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I believe wholeheartedly that we Africa, Nigeria in particular, would be better off if governed by Britain or America. It is not even far-fatched to elicit this testimony.

Have we improved since the colonists left us alone? How about the schools and infrastructures the missionaries and colonists brought along with them? Did we keep up with the maintenance after they left?

Hell no! But we are good at blaming them, though.


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Emela
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Ojoto,
Please don't lump everything together.
That is what many critics do and they are wrong.

We rapidly educated our people because of our open arm to the Christian Missions. Hope Waddell Institute, Etinan High School, Ngwa High School, Birabi Memorial Grammar School, Elelewon Girls High School, St. Augustines Grammar School, Christ the King College, Dennis Memorial Grammar Schol and the list goes on; were all the blessings of Christian Missions to Biafra.

That was part of what made others to envy us because though they had theirs, ours were fully utilized. These schools produced balanced candidates for any University in the world.

During the war the vandals did not hesitate to destroy them. They roasted goats looted from the villages using books from the libraries of these schools and students' beds to sustain the meat above the flame. They even did the same in University of Nigeria Nsukka. That is another topic though.

All I am saying is that we should separate those from the selfish and wicked commercial interest of the colonial governments that exploited the countries they selfishly carved out.

Since Blair is talking about helping; the best help they can give to Nigeria is to split it into at least three. Let all the Mission Schools return to status quo ante. Let them interact in different sports and athletics including variuos clubs such as debating, social,French, Geograhical, historical etc clubs.

Let there be inter school competitions with trophies as it used to be. If this is done especially with Biafra actualised we abroad can contribute to scholarship funds for the benefits of youths.

Our doctors and engineers of today were groomed by those institutions away from our detractors. Before they knew it, we were all over the place with quality education.

Ofcourse you know what they resorted to, to stop us. The shame is that many of our elites who know these things are sitting down in their comfort zones compromising the future of our people by negotiating what can not be negotiated. The result as we know has been continuous murder in cold blood of our people.

It is not out of place for us to ask Tony Blair to support out quest for actualization of Biafra. Afterall their eyes should have cleared from the contemporary situation in Nigeria that they made blunders in 1914 and in 1966.

___________________
Chukwu gozie Nd'Igbo nile.


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Teddy
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Ohafia,

Thanks for asking, I've been quite busy of late, but have always checked in on the goings on in BiafraNigeria World. Many thanks to all for their spirited contributions.

Regardless of any distractions that has reared its ugly head, we owe it to our cause and posterity to stay the course.

A popular adage says that "one who is rejected, need not reject himself/herself"

There is no question that there has been a calculated and systematic attempt to ostracize Igbos in BiafraNigeria. We should welcome this situation as a springboard to our liberation, and meet the challenges head on.


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Ohafia Udumeze
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Teddy:

Once again thanks for your contribution. You see when the Durban conference on Racism and Xenophobia etc was going on, I made this post which I'm pasting here. It was deliberately out of point(O.P) and Renee did voice her disappointment in response to my posts.

I felt somewhat ashamed at writing the way I did at that time, but I was driven by the desire to get to the root of the problem rather than requesting for a "makeover" solution of debt reprieve.

Mr Anderson's fear about what a neglected and disorderly Africa would mean to his beloved country was what I predicted in this write-up titled The Monster they created will devour them !!!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

quote:
The west especially the "Great" Britain has continued to sqaunder opportunities to right the wrongs of the past in their dealings with Africa. My intelligent prediction is that they will soon be confronted with the ugly consequences of their misdeeds.

The news this morning here in Britain is that a leaked home office report indicates that Britain has effectively LOST the war on immigration control. The cost of dealing with assylum cases and benefits et al is staggering and is becoming a major source of concern for a welfarist nation whose productivity is on the decline. I personally do not believe that such huge numbers of people would have opted for these semi arctic Isles in place of the sun-kissed tropical environment.

The drift is because those nations are NOT working, and those nations and their leadership are the creation of the so called colonial masters.

In the case of BiafraNigeria, Professor Wole Soyinka describes this most ambiguous contraption as "the mistake of 1914", in reference to the year the North and south of BiafraNigeria was amalgamated without the consent of or cosultation with the constituent nations. The more depressing aspect of this simplistic fusion of compound and complex nations was also the foistering of reactionary leaders on the populace who were/are malleable materials for the colonialists.

Listen to professor Stanley Diamond, author of "Nigeria, the model of colonial failure" quote:

".... it is difficult to see the Federation of Nigeria as a great moral force to which one must automatically have a commitment. Rather it seems to be a category of those other British Federal experiments during the process of decolonization, Central Africa and South Arabia. There too, the most reactionary forces were placed in control and they were also failures.” unquote.

And this is what Professor Diamond thinks of Biafra as a nation without the attachment to Nigeria:

"The Ibo speaking peoples have been the national revolutionary population in West Africa. . This goes back for two generations. The fourth factor is that an industrious, self-modernizing independent population, having developed a national conscious" ness, would refuse to become an instrument of neo-colonial control and would therefore help to catalyze, as I have mentioned before, autonomous developments elsewhere in Africa".

That is the crux of the matter, that countries like Biafra would have blazed the trail of true independence for the rest of Africa and we won't be begging for alms today in the name of aids and "debt" reprieve, neither would Africans be drowning in their numbers in futile attempts to swim the Atlantic in a bid to escape the hardship at home. The forced unions has made it impossible for the nigerian half to benefit from the ingenuity and industry of the Biafran half simply because their is no sense of belonging.

Professor Arene agrees with the assessment on the capabilities of the Biafrans:

"I can make the assertion here that if what the 'Biafran' Scientists had achieved in weaponry and general civilian goods manufactures (without any foreign technicians and inputs) and the tempo with which they did those things, had been copied by Nigeria at the end of the Civil War in January 1970, when Gowon made his famous quote 'no victor, no vanquished", Nigeria might not now be where it is scientifically and technologically, still very dependent on foreign inputs (in raw materials and personnel) for virtually all its so-called scientific and technological advances."

~Professor Eugene Arene "The 'Biafran' Scientists (The Development of an African Indigenous Technology)" - January, 1996

And the English man and commentator on BiafraNigerian Affairs K W J Post wrote the following as far back as January 1968 and I quote:

"Given the nature of Nigeria as a colonial creation, the probable impossibility for the present leadership of running a plural society of its size and complexity, the economic and emotional heritage of the civil war, it seems inevitable that the question must be raised whether it might not have been better to allow Biafra to secede." unquote

But Great Britain was far too short sighted for that kind of reasoning at that point in time. Methinks, they found the following by the Nigerian propagandist on a mission to buy arms for use against Biafra more acceptable:

"The British created Nigeria and together we have built it. Britain has substantial commercial and industrial interests in Nigeria; the annual turnover of British trade with Nigeria, for example, is of the order of $510 million a year. Some 20,000 United Kingdom subjects live and work in Nigeria. Nigeria supplies 10% of Britain's oil requirements. For these and other reasons, the Nigerian crisis must be of some concern to people in Britain".
~ Anthony Enahoro, Nigerian war propagandist
London 1967


Let the west consider allowing Africans to quietly unmake the crude and cruel creation. By this I do not mean for the west to have another opportunity for a "demand creation" process for arms and ammunitions. For untill we unmake their mistakes, the monsters they created in the first place will devour them!


Now check out the posting from nobiorah on How Britain rigged the 1959 Independence Elections. Or this one on How Britain framed Zik

Truth is constant.

___________________
Awo's political idea was based on the assumption that any town beyond Owo was Igbo or Hausa. Awo was not socialised; he was not a good mixer because he did not have the opportunity, which the secondary school offered. ~TOS Benson, Baba Oba of Lagos


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