RasBenjamine
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RastafariSpeaks .com
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« on: November 18, 2003, 06:24:05 AM » |
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If you were someone who might prove useful to him, he'd dash you a substantial amount. But if he liked you, useful or not, you were almost sure to get something.
The expats working for TKE still talk about the time Prince Eze came to the Port Harcourt guesthouse, where the expats working for TKE in the south of the country stayed. One of the expats kept a young baboon chained to the front guardhouse as a pet.
As Prince Eze was leaving, he noticed the baboon.
"Whose monkey is that?" he asked the guard.
"That's Charlie's." the guard replied.
Prince Arthur Eze then reached into his pocket, took out a 20 Naira note, handed it to the baboon, and off he went.
Other hazards and annoyances of living in Nigeria are the tropical diseases (Lassa fever is named after the Nigerian village where it was first discovered, not far from one of the television stations I refurbished), the poverty (Nigeria has a lower per-capita income than Haiti), but what grates on the expat living there more than anything is the squalor. its everywhere. its inescapable, and even living in a nice home well guarded and kept, you're still affected by it.
What really stands out is how that squalor has cheapened the respect for human life. Abandoned children crowd around cars at intersections, begging for coins or trying to sell packs of gum, small bags of peanuts, rolls of toilet paper, combs, handkerchiefs, or just about anything else. The standard joke among expats there is that in Nigeria, you never have to go to the dime store, because it comes to you. Which all too sadly is true. A headpan of goods on the head of a child, one at a time.
The most disturbing aspect of this cheapness of life in Nigeria is that dead human bodies are a common sight along Nigerian roadways. Whether they were the bodies of unfortunate passengers of "mammywagon" cargo trucks (drivers make an extra income by illegally selling passengers rides high atop the cargo, where they occasionally fall to their deaths), or victims of motor vehicle accidents (the largest cause of death in Nigeria), or just plain murder or disease victims, human bodies along side roadways often remain there, uncollected for days, even weeks.
One day, on the morning bush radio schedule, the managing director, "Boss Hogg," told me that he was expecting a presidential visit to his work site that day. He said that the president was in for an unpleasant surprise. I knew what he was talking about.
"That wouldn't be a 'Delta Bravo,' would it?" I asked, meaning dead body.
Steve knew exactly what I meant. "That's a big Ten-four!” replied.
I said, "Well if it isn't gone by the time the president shows up, someone in the works department will be looking for a new job tomorrow!"
"That's a big ten-four!" he said, with a chuckle in his voice.
That night, on the evening schedule, I asked if the 'delta bravo' was still in place there when the president came.
"Ten-four!" he laughed.
Disease is a constant threat. Malaria is such a problem in Nigeria that it is a common test site for new pharmaceuticals intended to deal with the problem. All six species of the malaria parasite are present, and Plasmodium falciparum, the most deadly is also the most common. Malaria and cholera are the most common causes of childhood mortality. Cholera claimed the lives of two of my driver's children while I was there. I was stricken with malaria a total of seven times during my residency there, the first with P. falciparum, and it almost killed me.
Besides malaria, the first six months I was there I was ill with diarrhea almost every week.
Typhoid fever is another big killer, mostly because its symptoms often mimic malaria, and it is therefore commonly misdiagnosed. A similar though less serious illness, paratyphoid, is so common almost everyone in the country contracts it at one time or another. Typhoid and cholera are spread by poor sanitary practices, which despite constant vigilance on the part of the visitor, almost certainly will cause illness at some time or another.
While I was in Nigeria, one of the expats I worked with was stricken with cerebral malaria, and had it not been properly treated, it would have certainly killed him. Fortunately, he contracted it just after the introduction of a new drug, and before that strain had become immune to the drug he was treated with. He was back on his feet in a few weeks.
Medical treatment is widely available, but generally of poor quality. Nearly every town of any size has a clinic. The bad news is that the clinic is probably poorly supplied, drugs inadequate or nonexistent, and training of the staff poor at best. Most expats don't rely on the regular state-owned and supported medical care system, but instead use the private clinics that exist in the major cities.
One of my co-workers suffered from a slipped disk while I was working with him in Port Harcourt. He was taken to a private clinic there, where he received proper, adequate treatment, including about two weeks of traction. While whiling away his time, without benefit of radio or TV, someone visiting him noticed that his bed was supported by some mahogany 2x6 boards. (Mahogany is so common there, it is frequently used even for concrete forms.) Ron commented that "its nice to know my back is being supported by a hundred dollars worth of mahogany."
Nigeria is a country of tremendous potential wealth. It is blessed with a surprisingly well-educated workforce (literacy of a sort is almost universal), there is surprisingly good infrastructure (paved roads, railroads and airlines connect all the major cities), and generally Nigerians are willing, hard workers if they feel they are being treated fairly.
The natural resources are tremendous. Blessed with a climate that is perfect for the growth of a wide variety of crops, vast areas of unused land suitable for farming, soils that in many areas are naturally rich and two of the great rivers of Africa, Nigeria should be quite capable of feeding not only its hundred million, but most of the rest of Africa as well. It is a country the size of Texas and Oklahoma combined, with the climate of California's Imperial Valley. The Niger river flows through a mountain pass just north of Onitsha, which, if a dam were built there, the power generated could not only supply Nigeria, but most of West Africa too. The enormous amount of water in the Niger river that flows to the sea east of Port Harcourt is so vast, if even a small part of it were diverted north, it could turn vast areas of the Sahara desert into highly productive cropland. It wouldn't have to be lifted that far to be sent north, either.
In the south, rubber, coffee, oil palm and cocoa plantations once flourished. Tropical hardwoods once were the source of much of the hardwood used in the British empire. In the Niger river delta, oil of such high quality is found that Nigeria is today the fourth largest oil exporter in the world, and its crude commands premium prices on world markets. In the savannas, cotton was once grown for export on a vast scale. In the north, wheat and sorghum was grown for feed grains and human consumption.
In Plateau state, tin mines and gemstone mines once were the basis of a flourishing international minerals trade. The first railroad to the interior was built to bring those minerals to the coast. The names brought to the region by imported Chinese labour still grace some of the local place names.
Along the coast, tin and copper was the source of the metal used for bronze casting by some of the greatest indigenous artists of pre-colonial Africa. Many of the Benin bronzes are among the most valuable indigenous art pieces ever produced. Even today, many of the woodcarvings are of exceptional quality.
The north of Nigeria around Sokoto (pronounced SOE-koe-toe) was once the center of one of the most successful of the Islamic sultanates Africa has produced. The wisdom and fairness with which it was ruled is legendary, and the heroism of its defenders against the onslaught of the British colonialists in the face of overwhelming odds would make a great Hollywood epic. And before Islam, before even Christianity, the Nok culture of northwestern Plateau state had established a university whose scholarship was the envy of the European states of the time. Scholars once traveled from all over the world to study in what is now one of the poorest and most disadvantaged places on earth.
With all these rich cultural and economic resources, why is Nigeria so poor today? The answer is a complex one. But there are a few factors that stand out as the main reasons that this situation not only exists, but continues to grow worse with every passing year.
What every Nigerian will privately admit to you is that corruption, both public and private, is the most significant single problem that every African nation, not just Nigeria faces. And with few exceptions, nowhere in the world is it as bad as in Nigeria. The CBS television programme "60 minutes" recently did a piece on the corruption which flourishes on a scale that is incomprehensible to anyone who hasn't experienced it.
There are other reasons, too, of course. Distance from international markets, poor communications and energy infrastructure, difficulty in attracting foreign investment, meddling by foreign powers (especially the United States), and an almost total disregard for the fate of the nation by its people are all reasons. Not to mention a harsh military dictatorship that in the three decades since independence has never once voluntarily submitted to an elected civilian government. But when you examine the problems, and why they continue to exist, the one overriding theme keeps coming back like a serial horror movie: corruption.
Corruption is a constant thread that has woven its way through the warp and weave of all Nigerian life. From the poorest rural village council chief or local market trader, right to the occupant of the presidential palace in Abuja, there is a pervasive materialism that puts getting and having above all else, no matter how ill gotten. Every Sunday, millions of Nigerian Christians attend Sunday services wearing gold jewelry obtained by dishonest and usually illegal means, and they think not a thing of it. A well-connected Nigerian once told me that there is no such thing as an honest Nigerian. I asked him if that included himself. "No, not me!" he said. "I'm honest. But there aren't any others who are!" I since found out that this man had embezzled about ten million Naira (at the time worth about U.S. $ 1 million) from his employer.
The corruption has become so pervasive that the whole economy has become organized around it. It begins at the highest level, where President Ibrahim Babangida, in power while I was there, was rumored to be worth about U.S.$ 5 billion, nearly all of which he accumulated while in office. And that on a general's salary.
It trickles down like an acid, seeping through the bureaucracy, eating its way into the state and local governments, where the governors and local government council chiefs nearly always take bribes from contractors who get awarded contracts on the basis of how generous they are with their "dashes" or local people needing favors. Every bureaucrat with any power, his secretary and even his driver have their hands out. The desirability of jobs in the government have nothing to do with salaries or prestige; all that matters is the opportunities for dash. The most desirable jobs are with Customs and Immigration, where large bribes can be routinely extracted from foreigners, or as managers in service businesses, such as the Nigeria Electric Power Authority or the Nigeria Telecommunications Company, where someone wanting electrical service or telephone service will have to pay big bribes, often in the thousands of dollars, to get reasonably prompt service. Even the technicians are on the take, expecting a bribe before they will do the actual install, or to overlook an illegal attachment to a power line or telephone extension.
The choking effect on the economy is overwhelming. The company I was working for sold its television facilities for three times what the equipment and labour to install it cost, yet it still had a hard time making a consistent profit. There is no way that anything but the most wildly profitable business plans can survive in such a business climate. The few large enterprises that do succeed there often involve the oil industry or are engaged in illegal or unethical enterprises, such as the arms trade or the drug trade or smuggling.
The obvious question, then, is how such a pervasive acceptance, and even encouragement of corruption came to exist in a group of cultures most of which unquestionably once valued honesty and civility above all else.
My observations are that there were numerous factors involved, some of which are continent-wide, some of which are peculiar to Nigeria, but all of which have conspired uniquely in Nigeria to create one of the most corrupt societies on earth.
To begin with, there was the slave trade. Portuguese navigators showed up on Nigerian shores nearly a half-century before Columbus traveled to America. And even before Columbus first arrived in the West Indies, European traders were taking slaves from the African coast.
What made this possible, of course, were the economic realities of 15th century Europe, combined with the Christian ethnocentrism that justified the enslavement of "heathens." The bigotry of European ethnocentrism encouraged by the newly introduced concept of materialism (in payment for the slaves), caused bigotry and the materialism it justified to sweep like a wildfire through coastal Africa.
This new materialism had an enormous impact. It quickly undermined the sense of egalitarianism, charity, and neighborly support that were hallmarks of many of the indigenous coastal cultures. Bigotry justified the enslavement of your fellow man, and if you could get rich in the process, that just proves that God is on your side.
This is not to suggest that slavery did not exist in Africa prior to the arrival of Europeans along the coast. It certainly did. Indeed, many of Nigeria's northern cities today were established in the slave trade, Keffi, Bauchi and Sokoto among them. But there were very strong cultural taboos regarding the treatment of slaves that made their lives much more tolerable than the lives of slaves taken by the Europeans. The bigotry and materialism brought to Africa by the Europeans undermined those taboos, however. And it wasn't long before the treatment of slaves, both by European and African traders, became one of history's most shameful episodes.
By the time of the final British conquest of Nigeria by the British general Lugard and suppression of the Sultanate of Sokoto in 1904, materialism and the trend of undermining of local value systems that it caused, was well established. The end of the slave trade a half-century earlier did not end the trend towards materialism; by then it was too well entrenched. Once Africans had had a taste of European wealth, they wanted more, and many no longer had reason to care what they had to do to get it.
Add to this mix the influence of European missionaries. With not always the best of motives, missionaries came to Africa to convert the Africans, and many got rich in the process, having seen and seized the many obvious economic opportunities. This only furthered the spread of materialism, because they systematically undermined the African sense of religious values, and replaced it with what all-too-often was nothing more than a cynical materialistic hypocrisy. Believe in the white man's god, they were told, and he will make you rich, too. Seeing that the white men were rich, many Africans naively believed, having a magical worldview. This is an approach that is still to this day being used by many foreign religions, the Mormons and many Christian evangelical denominations among them. The appeal still works. Africans are still being converted in large numbers. The spiritual rape of Africa continues.
The end of the colonial era in Nigeria in 1960 set the stage for the conversion of materialism into corruption. Not long after independence, one of the first in what would become a long line of Nigerian military dictators was asked by a journalist friend why he was systematically looting the country's treasury. He replied, "The elephant has been killed, and now there's meat for the whole village!"
It was the attitude that the country was an elephant carcass to be butchered that allowed the hatred of colonial rulers to be transformed into a wholesale greed. The Africans felt that they had been deliberately kept poor by their European masters so that their riches could be plundered (which all too often was true), and now all they had to do was take what was rightfully theirs. There was no real sense of nationhood, because Africans had never experienced it, and patriotism was a totally foreign concept. There was no longer any religious proscriptions against robbing the community in which you live, because there was no real sense of community. So why not loot the treasury?
With independence came a horde of foreign businessmen and bankers, and cynical foreign bureaucrats who saw opportunity in the newly independent nations of Africa and were determined to cash in. The newly independent nations had no understanding at all as to how to go about governing themselves, and banking and commercial law was primitive or non-existent.
Corrupt businessmen and corrupt military dictators are a bad combination. If they see opportunity in each other, they will get together and set in motion a truly evil process. And in Nigeria, the seeds of corruption sown by that evil cartel fell on very fertile ground indeed.
It was oil in Nigeria that fertilized those seeds.
It has been said that the closer you get to the Niger river delta, the source of the oil, the more corrupt the society becomes. There's a lot of truth in that saying. Oil money and the opportunities for graft, bribery and extortion that it has made possible have caused the materialism to blossom into a form of corruption that has become legendary, even by African standards. The money has given the African materialism a basis for optimism that it can succeed in making the African rich, if he can bribe the right guy, organize the right scam, or shake down the right victim. And all too often, it succeeds.
Free enterprise runs rampant in Nigeria. There are few if any restraints on the free exercise of the pursuit of wealth. And where money rules, it makes the rules. If the average Nigerian were to try to pursue wealth through the creation of wealth, he'd find more roadblocks in his way than faced by ambitious people in tradition-bound societies such as China or Britain. The reason is simple -- the money that corrupt politicians and businessmen have accumulated bring with it the power to keep that wealth and accumulate more. And that means that the actual producers of wealth in Nigeria live with what the owners of that wealth decide to allow them to have.
In addition to the problems created by rampant, unregulated free enterprise, add the problems created by the economic imperialism of such organizations as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. These organizations, along with the various UN charities and the Peace Corps, seek to impose upon African nations an economic system that simply isn't workable in the local conditions. This system has taken the form of what throughout West Africa is euphemistically called a "Structural Adjustment Programme." The reality is that it is a collection of idiotic economic theories imposed by often cynical and nearly always hopelessly ignorant foreign bureaucrats, who have no idea of why free enterprise can't and doesn't work in Africa.
Even worse is the evidence that it is part of a deliberate policy by the rich nations of the north to keep these nations poor and prevent them from becoming competitors for limited world resources. The extreme misery that such policies cause is apparently a deliberate tactic to suppress population growth and thereby stifle attempts by these nations to improve their economic and political status. The authors of these policies care not a whit about the moral crime these policies represent.
My favorite example is the bottled natural gas problem. Nigeria is awash in natural gas reserves. It has so much it has often been called the "Saudi Arabia of natural gas." Oil producers flare natural gas to get rid of it, even though doing so is illegal - but they can't avoid it, because there's just too much.
Yet the housewives of Nigeria don't use natural gas for cooking anymore.
They used to, but not anymore.
Instead, they cut down increasingly scarce fuelwood, much of which was planted by foreign charities in a vain attempt to halt the southward spread of the Sahara Desert. Use of fuelwood chokes their kitchens with smoke, causes much respiratory illness and takes hours each week to gather. But they don't use gas, even though there is plentiful supplies in the markets.
The reason is the International Monetary Fund. Loudly proclaiming the doctrine that 'Subsidies Are Always Evil,' the IMF came into Nigeria (and much of the rest of West Africa as well), and told the Nigerian government that in order to obtain financing for their external debts, they would have to end internal subsidies. So they did.
Women who once spent a few minutes and a few naira each week getting natural gas bottles filled, found they could no longer afford as much as 50 Naira for a refill, when their husband may be bringing home only 300 Naira in a month. So the only option for getting the food cooked and the water heated was to cut firewood. A time consuming process that is rapidly and relentlessly denuding the savanna woodlands that once graced this beautiful country. The natural gas subsidy didn't cost the Nigerian government anywhere near as much as deforestation is costing it. But it was a subsidy, so it had to go.
And this is but one of many, many examples that could be cited. The Africans are very much aware of this nonsense. The rhetoric used by the IMF and the World Bank to defend such policies is so illogical that they are forced to conclude that the West is colluding to subvert and control their economies. In the face of such idiocy, what other conclusion could they possibly draw? Their education may be limited, but they are not stupid. They see what is holding them back.
There are virtually no enforced labour laws in Nigeria. Sure, there are good laws are on the books, but they are unenforceable when a wealthy businessman can bribe a judge or policeman to have the law ignored. The result is that a tiny minority live in fabulous luxury, and the vast majority (especially the children) live in grinding poverty, well below what the minimum wage laws in Nigeria require. This suits the oligarchy and the foreign interests just fine; they're able to have access to vast amounts of cheap, docile labour and be accountable to no one for how it is repressed.
This brings up the last reason why Nigeria is so terribly poor. It is for a very simple, obvious reason.
You can't sell something to someone who has no money.
If you can't sell it, you aren't going to make it. And if you aren't going to make it, you're not going to hire someone to make it, and so you're not going to pay wages to someone to make it. You keep your money or spend it on cheap imported goods, rather than invest it in the local economy. Imported goods are cheap because the "Structural Adjustment Programme" has largely abolished All Those Terrible Tariffs so local entrepreneurs can't compete and don't try.
This is why the unrestrained, libertarian ideal of totally free enterprise simply doesn't work. Ultimately the accumulation of power that accompanies the accumulation of wealth causes the disenfranchisement of those who actually create that wealth. And with that disenfranchisement, invariably comes poverty, child labour, oppression and political corruption. That fact is painfully obvious to anyone who has ever lived in a place like Nigeria.
I've written elsewhere of how I think these enormously difficult problems can be solved. There are answers, but they are complex and difficult, and it will require enormous sacrifices and self discipline on the part of all Africans, rich and poor, powerful and disenfranchised alike, but I believe it can be done.
In brief, the answers have to come from the people, working at the local level to solve their own problems, and not relying on government to do it for them. A remarkable example of how this can be done, both from a technological and social point of view, is the experience of Gaviotas, Columbia. Taking the vision of a wealthy member of the oligarchy, a disparate group of farmers, campesinos, engineers, local Indians, college students and social dreamers have constructed a working community that is ecologically, socially and economically sustainable in any tropical environment, including Nigeria. Experiments such as Gaviotas are beginning to spring up in Africa, and if encouraged, offer real hope for places such as Nigeria.
There are some very serious lessons in all this for the developed nations to consider.
Much has been written by various authors about sub-Saharan Africa's plight, and one of the best is a controversial article that appeared in the February, 1994 issue of The Atlantic Monthly. Entitled The Coming Anarchy, it discusses the results of this decay of civility, not just in Nigeria, but in all of West Africa. Robert D. Kaplan, the author, claims that what is happening in West Africa today is a portent of what will happen everywhere that overpopulation, increasingly scarce and squandered resources, tribalism, corruption and economic injustice are allowed to flourish.
He claims, with considerable experience to back him up, that conservatism in politics and a growing trend towards unregulated capitalism in America is planting the seeds that will cause the same disease which has led to such misery in sub-Saharan Africa, to spread in North America, particularly in the United States.
I'm not entirely convinced by his analysis that we will see the same extent of the destruction of society here within the next two or three decades he envisions. But I certainly believe, and have even before I read his article, that it will happen sooner or later. The end of our relatively egalitarian society, I believe, is inevitable unless we take some drastic steps, including some serious "social engineering."
Social engineering, in spite of the conservative aversion to it, is not only necessary, but vital. Canada, Australia, and Europe have all shown that it can and does work if applied properly; we need to get over our nervousness about it in the United States.
Whether one agrees with Kaplan or not, there are certain lessons that are nevertheless quite clear.
The first lesson, particularly for the United States, is that the model of the western, developed nation state doesn't necessarily translate across cultures. What works for America doesn't necessarily work for other cultures, where other value systems are operating. If western nations wish to help Africans help themselves, they had best get input from those Africans who know their situation far better than ignorant foreign theorists, many of whom have never really experienced the problems firsthand. America must get over its obsession with exporting its value system, which simply won't work in many other places.
Second is the vital importance of maintaining a strong cultural bias against corruption. Corruption feeds on itself, and, in the absence of cultural taboos, undermines economic development and technical progress, and encourages social decay that seems to have no end. It is absolutely imperative that we do this. Nothing less than the survival of our civilization is at stake.
Third, unrestrained free enterprise not only feeds corruption, it is counter-productive to economic progress. It encourages cultural decay and promotes social inequities. Would that every 'libertarian' could see what unrestrained free enterprise has done in Nigeria; then no-one would continue to harbour the illusion that unrestrained free enterprise is the best of economic models.
The fourth lesson is of the importance of civic education. Not blind nationalism or patriotism; that has caused much death and misery in this century, including a terrible civil war in Nigeria, but an understanding of what it means to be a responsible citizen of a functioning liberal democracy. Such teaching should begin in the earliest grades and continue throughout the period of education. It is obvious to everyone who has ever lived in a third-world country that democratic institutions simply cannot survive in an atmosphere of ignorance.
Finally, the fifth lesson is that the citizens of a democracy should not naively trust what their government says it is doing on their behalf in other parts of the world. If Americans understood what is being done by their government in Nigeria and elsewhere, they would be shocked. And if their government deceives them regarding foreign affairs, are they to be trusted when it comes to domestic affairs?
I'm gravely concerned that we are losing a sense of the importance of teaching civics in our public schools, not just in America, but in the developed world in general.
Combined with an aversion to social engineering and an increasing disregard for the problems of the poor and dispossessed, ignorance of the principles of democratic government do not auger well for the future of western society.
I've lived in that future.
It isn't very pretty.
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