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Africa is
NOT our problem
by John Tyndall
Perhaps it is the summer season that brings with it outbreaks
of universal silliness beyond the customary norm, but the last month
has been especially trying for those of us who endeavour to keep our
feet on the ground of reality. We refer here to the latest outburst of
hysteria – voiced in chorus by all the mainstream political parties and
mass media – over the fate of the poor in Africa and the presumed
obligation of the advanced nations to do something about it. "Make
poverty history" is the new (though in terms of meaning very old)
slogan dripping from the mouths of Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Bob
Geldolf et al. But do these folk really believe they have some
special touch of genius enabling them to alter one of the most basic
facts of the universe we live in which is that the people of the
continent of Africa, and most of the so called 'Third World' besides,
have always suffered and will always suffer the most degradingly poor
conditions of living by comparison with ourselves? They do so not
because of either white capitalist exploitation, or the corruption of
their own myriad dictators, but because of something that is deep and
probably ineradicable in themselves. Our ancestors understood this and,
while they and other Europeans ruled large portions of Africa and other
backward regions, they attempted to alleviate the poverty as far as was
humanly possible by sound and mostly incorrupt administration and
observance of sensible economic laws. With these responsible hands
taken from African affairs, the descent into present chaos and misery
was always certain. So why the universal shock and surprise?
Dictators just a symptom
One of the feeblest responses to what is now happening in
Africa is the claim that everything would be all right were it not for
the greedy and corrupt dictators who have emerged in the countries of
that continent and are hogging for themselves so much of the little
wealth that is to be found there. But just how and why do these tyrants
perpetually come to the top – except by processes that are endemic to
African politics and almost certainly products of the African psyche?
We just do not seem to have learned the lesson that to Africans, as to
Arabs, western style democracy is a strange and alien implant – utterly
unable to thrive on the local soil. Get rid of one gang of corrupt
tyrants, such as Robert Mugabe, and in no time another will take its
place.
And even if it is accepted that the tyrants are hogging much
more than their share of the wealth of the land (or of such aid as we
may be sending them), just what difference would it make if they were
not? Just supposing that the wealth Africans are capable of creating
were shared more equitably, how much better off would that make them?
They would still be living in the most grinding squalor by comparison
with Europeans.
And by just what reasoning is it our obligation to lift them
out of this squalor anyway? The old saying that God helps those who
help themselves was never more applicable than here. Just why should
Europeans – or for that matter the East Asians who have built
prosperous societies by their own efforts – apply their brains and
industry, seemingly for ever, so as to make over a portion of their
earnings to rescue Africans from the consequences of their own
ineptitude?
Aid needed at home
If liberals and leftists are so desperate to dispense help to
those in need, there are plenty of deserving causes here in Britain
crying out for their attention. It is estimated that there are five
million in the UK still living below the poverty line. There are
pensioners who face a bleak future as a result of their funds being
raided by this very Government. There are parts of the national
infrastructure that urgently call for new investment: roads, railways,
hospitals, schools, the armed forces and much more. Why must there be
some special moral virtue attached to raising money to feed the hungry
in distant climes rather than those in our own back yard? Blairs and
Geldofs of this world take note!
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