I think it would be wise for us to first look into the following
words that will today dominate this entire presentation - globalization,
development and independent media. It is not necessary go into a dictionary
definition of what these words mean because we are all familiar with their
literary meaning. What should interest us at this stage of global conflict
is what they mean to our brothers in Africa, who have only recently been
trying to understand what these words means to them. To have a better
presentation for the purpose of this paper, I will be using Nigeria as
a case study, but with some few references to other parts of Africa.
Globalization to an average African is simply
neo-colonialism-a system that completely took
effect with no consultation with Africa people, a second kind of colonialism
that completely neglects people's welfare and promotes corporate business
and profit alone. A local African man sees no different between economic
globalization, neo-colonialism and globalization in it entirety. He believes
that the word globalization is a fraud and that the only word that exit
genuinely is "economic globalization," which is the very foundation
of the new world colonialism (neo-colonialism). He is always faced with
a re-echoing question-if globalization is true, real and developed for
even global development, why should people's welfare, health, education,
technology etc be promoted and subsidized in the North (Europe and America),
while at same time in the same globe, where globalization is believed
to be bridging gaps, others like Africans are being made to suffer from
debt, poverty, environmental degradation, famine, corruption etc. induced
on them by trans-national corporations and their economic globalization
propellers. The growth of Africa we know is in the hands of Africans,
but wouldn't it be wise to allow Africa an opportunity to grow?
Development in Africa means sustainability
and even distribution of proceeds. Most development in Africa that forms
the historic achievement of the continent is localized and not influenced
by foreign bodies. It is development that stood the test of time worldwide.
The Binis in Nigeria are known for their wonderful works of arts, which
have sold globally to date because of their uniqueness in the market.
Egypt still lives on its past glory as one of the countries where civilization
started.
Traditional Africa believes that the media
(journalists) are messengers of truth. But this has been eroded over time
by the birth of economic globalization-a system that utilizes the media
as a tool to sell its deceitful policies and activities. In recorded history,
no journalist has been killed in any traditional Africa community since
they are special people who only tell the truth and bring home enough
respect for doing so. Neo-colonialism (globalization) is believed to have
instituted a corrupt foundation upon which African leaders and rulers
corrupt our local media and in turn utilize them for the attainment of
the policies and objectives in favor of their profit-driven interests.
Violation of human rights, killing of journalists and other media corruption
practices have recently been traced to the triumphant entry of globalization-propelling
multinational institutions and their government allies into Africa.
Africa can be said to have been on the right course of development before
the advent of globalization. We believed in our own structured development
and had a direction. It is presently noted that African development has
been completely distorted by the strong fist of economic globalization.
It is most difficult to say that globalization exists in abstract because
present studies and events have completely unmasked the faces behind globalization.
Globalization and its retarding effect on African development cannot be
discussed in the present-day world without mentioning names like the World
Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Trade Organization
(WTO). They have most recently been identified as the major propellers
of neo-colonialism for their initiators through money lending, development
initiatives and free trade propaganda.
For most African countries who had made the long and tortuous journey
to independence, the euphoria that political freedom automatically leads
to economic prosperity is increasingly giving way to a grim reality, as
western powers contrive diabolical means to hold the African continent
down. The IMF is particularly implementing this imperialist agenda under
many guises, including foreign debt burden and spurious reform programs
anchored on the removal of subsidies from essential sectors of human life.
The debt burden particularly has become a vicious circle structured to
perpetuate economic misery despite the caliber of experts that implement
government policies.
Across the African continent, the impact of the IMF and World Bank is
having a hard impact on the continuous existence of the region. Their
policies have completely destroyed our economy, health system, water supply,
and other basic essentials for living.
According to Ann-Louise Colgan, Research Associate of Africa Action, "
Health is a fundamental human right, recognized in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights (1948), and the Constitution of the World Health Organization
(1946). Health is also an essential component of development, vital to
a nation's growth and internal stability."
Over the past two decades, the World Bank and IMF have undermined Africa's
health through the policies they have imposed. The dependence of poor
and highly indebted African countries on World Bank and IMF loans has
given these institutions leverage to control economic policymaking in
these countries. The policies mandated by the World Bank and IMF has forced
African governments to orient their economies towards greater integration
in international markets at the expense of social services and long-term
development priorities. They have reduced the role of the state and cut
back government expenditure.
While many African countries succeeded in improving their healthcare systems
in the first decades after independence, the intervention of the World
Bank and IMF reversed this progress. Investments in health care by African
governments in the 1970s achieved improvements in key health indicators.
In Kenya, for example, child mortality was reduced by almost 50 per cent
in the first two decades after independence in 1963. Across sub-Saharan
Africa, the first decades after independence saw significant increases
in life expectancy, from an average of 44 years to more than 50 years.
In the 1980s and 1990s, however, African governments had to cede control
over their economic decision-making in order to qualify for World Bank
and IMF loans. The conditions attached to these loans undid much of the
progress achieved in public health. The policies dictated by the World
Bank and IMF exacerbated poverty, providing fertile ground for the spread
of HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases. Cutbacks in health budgets
and privatization of health services eroded previous advances in health
care and weakened the capacity of African governments to cope with the
growing health crisis. Consequently, during the past two decades the life
expectancy of Africans has dropped by 15 years.
The story the IMF, WB etc present in Africa is no longer new in international
discussions. We all know how the World Bank and IMF were created at the
Breton Woods Conference in New Hampshire, U.S.A. in 1944. They were designed
as pillars of the postwar global economic order. The World Bank's focus
is the provision of long-term loans to support development projects and
programs. The IMF concentrates on providing loans to stabilize countries
with short-term financial crises.
The World Bank and IMF became increasingly powerful in Africa with the
economic crisis of the early 1980s. In the late 1970s, rising oil prices,
rising interest rates, and falling prices for other primary commodities
left many poor African countries unable to repay mounting foreign debts.
In the early 1980s, Africa's debt crisis worsened. The ratio of its foreign
debt to its export income grew to 500 per cent.
African countries needed increasing amounts of "hard currency"
to repay their external debts (i.e. convertible foreign currencies such
as dollars and deutschmarks). But their share of world trade was decreasing
and their export earnings dropped as global prices for primary commodities
fell. The reliance of many African countries on imports of manufactured
goods, which they themselves did not produce, left them importing more
while they exported less. Their balance of payments problems worsened
and their foreign debt burdens became unsustainable.
African governments needed new loans to pay their outstanding debts and
to meet critical domestic needs. The World Bank and IMF became key providers
of loans to countries that were unable to borrow elsewhere. They took
over from wealthy governments and private banks as the main source of
loans for poor countries. These institutions provided "hard currency"
loans to African countries to insure repayment of their external debts
and to restore economic stability. Not surprisingly, the governments of
the world's richest countries direct the World Bank and IMF. Combined,
the "Group of 7" (U.S., Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy
and Japan) hold more than 40 per cent of the votes on the Boards of Directors
of these institutions. The U.S. alone accounts for almost 20 per cent.
The impact of the IMF and the World Bank on African development is currently
an impediment to most Africa countries' development, even those that finally
made it to democracy. Nigeria is one such country whose development and
good governance are currently being retarded. The most industrialized
countries in the world have actually developed under conditions opposite
to those imposed by the World Bank and IMF on African governments. The
U.S. and the countries of Western Europe accorded a central role to the
state in economic activity, and practiced strong protectionism, with subsidies
for domestic industries. Under World Bank and IMF programs, African countries
have been forced to cut back or abandon the very provisions that helped
rich countries grow and prosper in the past.
According to a Newswatch publication in Global
Policy of May 8, 2002, Nigeria's Minister of Finance Adamu Ciroma released
a statement on the amount of Nigeria's debt. Among other things, he said:
In 1984 our indebtedness to the IMF was only US$5.5 billion.
From that time to date we paid US$17.5 billion as interest. If you fail
to pay such interest, you will be surcharged; so much of the payments
we make go for interest payment; not the principal. But up till now,
the outstanding debt stock remains at US$28 billion.
This crooked system of compound interest is indeed a fraud being perpetrated
on the toiling masses. Those who think otherwise should hear the minister:
"The IMF adopted this strategy so that no third
world nation would be out of debt. Their plan is that all countries should
have a permanent debt, which is unfair."
Such outcry has also been sounded by other notable voices. At the just-concluded
international conference on financing for development held in Monterrey,
Mexico, President Olusegun Obasanjo gave vent to his frustration over
Nigeria's debt problem. He lamented that in the past three years, Nigeria
has had to spend US$5 billion in servicing its foreign debts, even though
the same debts had been repaid two times over.
It is indeed heartbreaking to hear that after repaying a debt two times
over, the record still shows an amount three times more than the principal.
There is nothing more dishonest than saying that one times two is equal
to minus three. Whatever arrangement produces such a state of affairs
is unconscionable, cruel and unjust. The debt burden may be legal but,
in light of the increasing gap between law and justice, morality should
step into the picture.
The fact that we have repaid the debt two times over could provide moral
high ground and a rallying point to build an international coalition against
this modern slavery. When one compares the favorable terms availed to
other regions, the shackles of foreign debt, this sword of Damocles hanging
over Africa, becomes shocking and shamefully racist. The world of international
finance stinks to high heavens, replete with a double standard and accentuated
by racism.
African countries require essential investments in health, education and
infrastructure before they can compete internationally. The World Bank
and IMF instead required countries to reduce state support and protection
for social and economic sectors. They insisted on pushing weak African
economies into markets where they were unable to compete with the might
of the international private sector. These policies further undermined
the economic development of African countries.
It goes without saying that given the same or relatively better credit
terms, African countries will surely do well in fighting the ravages of
poverty, illiteracy and diseases. But do the international mothers and
fathers wish Africa well? For this reason African economies increasingly
regress and nobody really comprehends. The more Africa plays according
to the global rules to uplift itself, the more some invisible forces seem
to negate everything. Africa deserves a breathing space. It does not serve
the interest of humanity to suppress Africa to the status of a scavenger
feeding on the rancid crumbs of the global economy. Africa deserves a
seat at the table of prosperity. The continuation of the present unfair
treatment means Africa will forever remain in the doldrums with little
prospect of becoming a partner in global affairs. To abandon all claims
to these spurious debts is the least developed countries can and should
do. They cannot continue to unleash forces that promote poverty while
at the same time preaching democracy and human rights.
Those not yet convinced about the reality of the double standard and its
evil effect should study the history of IMF policies in Africa. To understand
how the removal of subsidies can emasculate an economy, please embark
on a brief historical excursion to what happened in Ghana in the recent
past. Not so long ago, Ghana had a splendid National Health Service. Then
came the IMF with a new-fangled "full-cost-recovery-plan" demanding
that government remove subsidies and make the people pay for everything
from education, health, water and other utilities.
This ushered in a cash-and-carry syndrome for public services. Patients
pay for every visit and everything-surgery, drugs, blood, cotton wool,
needle, scalpel, you name it. There are recorded cases of people held
prisoner in hospitals because they could not pay their medical bills,
and of corpses not released until relatives found cash to pay. In the
meantime, the Ghanaian currency, Cedi, was in a free fall. At the moment,
it has crashed beyond redemption. All the while, the IMF kept telling
the world that Ghana, "a star pupil," was doing well. This deliberate
deception continued until Ghana progressed to a stigmatized "highly
indebted poor country." To make a long story short, Ghana embraced
the IMF and its mean conditionality, faithfully implementing first a structural
adjustment program, SAP, then an economic recovery program, ERP, and finally
an enhanced structural adjustment program, ESAP.
Seventeen years down the road, Ghana is not only being encouraged to declare
itself bankrupt but is now classified among the 24 poorest nations in
the world. This is not to mention a colossal debt of US$5.8 billion, a
pathetic legacy of IMF reform with a destructive obligation to service
it to the tune of 27 per cent of export earnings. Everyone knows that
those who advocate the free market jargon do not practice what they preach.
At this junction it would be wise to bring to your attention the fact
that the African press has not been straightforward in reporting issues
surrounding the operations of the IMF, World Bank and World Trade Organization.
Debt issues often never made it into the pages of the papers or reached
the desk of mainstream media. This is because the African press has been
bought, and those that refuse collecting their proceeds from the sales
either get killed or imprisoned for as long as they refuse.
The African media could be said to be in chains and under the control
of world powers and their collaborators (the Africa leaders and multinationals
corporations). At different times they have served as an instrument readily
available to influence decisions and pass false information to civil society,
though they have also been useful in the enthronement of democracy in
Africa. They could be said to have been retarding the pace of African
development, since they have always put profit, greed and self-enrichment
before the mandate and trust they owe to the masses. The African press
could be regarded as the cheapest and most favorably priced press in the
world. They plug and unplug who and what they want.
Plugging and unplugging business in the media world is also not free
of hazard. For instance, the Nigerian press, which is over 137 years old
and one of the most outspoken in Africa, was nurtured within a political
culture that tolerated dissent. However, the flourishing of the media
in the two decades following independence in 1960 was slowly inhibited
by successive military regimes. The presidential elections of June 12,
1993 proved to be a key turning point in the regime's relations with the
media. Even though the civilian candidate, Moshood Abiola, had by all
accounts won, the military rulers cancelled the results. Widespread demonstrations
and revolts erupted throughout Nigeria, along with a crackdown on the
media.
Since that time, many independent journalists have had to work underground
and circulate newspapers surreptitiously, all the while trying to evade
the seemingly omnipresent police. Statistics on press freedom violations
in 1993 in Nigeria bear witness to this state of affairs: roughly 300,000
copies of publications were seized, 17 titles were banned, 54 journalists
were arrested, and another 20 summoned to appear in court.
Indeed, the current regime headed by General Sani Abacha, who seized power
in a bloodless coup in November 1993, has several ways of ensuring dissenting
voices in the media are muzzled. State Security Service agents are routinely
dispatched to obstruct the distribution of newspapers by either raiding
the newspapers' offices or confiscating them directly at newsstands. In
addition, street vendors have been threatened, arrested, and taken to
court for selling the offending publications. More subtly, the regime
has resorted to putting counterfeit editions of opposition newspapers
into circulation. Identical in appearance at first glance, the papers
actually sing the praises of the regime and are meant to confuse readers.
A more traditional method of subduing the media is through arrests and
detentions. Countless journalists have suffered this fate and many have
been imprisoned for months on end. For those who succeed in going into
hiding, authorities do not hesitate to imprison their spouses-who often
are raising families-so that the journalist is compelled to resurface.
The most egregious recent incident against the media occurred when four
journalists were each given life sentences in 1995, later commuted to
15 years, for allegedly plotting to overthrow General Abacha. The four-George
Mbah, deputy editor of Tell; Ben Charles Obi, editor of Weekend Classique;
Kunle Ajibade, editor of The News; and Christine Anyanwu, editor of The
Sunday Magazine-were tried in camera in a military court before dozens
of Nigerian army officers, and were convicted on extremely dubious charges.
In addition to such blatant attacks, the regime has lately attempted to
legislate its harassment and censorship of the media. In January 1997,
the information minister announced plans to set up a press court that
would try journalists who "report untruths" and which would
enforce Decree 43. Issued in 1993, the decree sets down stringent requirements
for newspapers wishing to apply for publishing licenses, including that
of forcing newspapers to renew their license annually. Failure to abide
by the regulations could result in heavy fines or imprisonment for up
to seven years.
It is apparent that General Abacha considers the media to be an enemy
of the state. But as pessimistic as the situation may be, human rights
advocate and media lawyer Chief Gani Fawehinmi points to the fact that
there are independent journalists who risk their lives to tell the truth,
and that "if there are still newspapers in this country, it is not
because the press is free but because it is courageous." But over
the years things have started assuming a new shape. With the introduction
of information technology into the media and its current presence in Nigeria
and other parts of Africa, media works are not getting tougher and better.
Independent media are now seeking alternatives to the usual age-old method
of getting news out via paper prints. They now use Internet as a tool
to reach out.
According to James Oatway, with "Nigeria's history of press freedom
violations and oppression, the advent of the Internet has provided a medium
that can't be censored, banned or confiscated. This means that the press
can use the Internet to publish news and editorials relatively safe from
government interference. This is probably one of the most important functions
of the Internet in Africa at the moment." At the moment Nigeria has
one of the most advanced Internet frameworks in Africa. The Internet in
Nigeria first started to be discussed publicly in 1995. Workshops and
other gatherings were set up by what is known today as the Nigerian Internet
Group (NIG).
Another issue that's worth going into about Africa media is that despite
the introduction of the Internet into African media, there is still no
real flow of unguarded news - freedom of expression. Most independent
media that could afford having a space on the Internet are still within
the hammers of the government. Their Internet news reports are always
copies of what they have in their normal daily print which is a complete
expression of their usual news but with opportunity to reach wider audience
via the net. This issue currently calls for an alternative media where
people can have access to express their mind, views and beliefs without
been censored by editors and media owners who earn their living by registering
as an independent media pretending to be concerned about the people but
working for the government in disguise. There are millions of cases in
which accurate news and people's complaints/opinions never made it to
the pages and desks of mainstream media. Hence, the birth of an alternative
independent media-The Nigeria Independent Media Centre www.nigeria.indymedia.org.
Nigeria IMC is a part of the global Independent Media www.indymedia.org
started in the last quarters of 2001 to bridge the gap left by independent
and government media. It utilizes the power of the Internet, radio and
print. The project completely empowers the local Nigerian and African
people by giving them opportunities to publish their news without been
edited, delayed or passed through the bottleneck policies of mainstream
media. It operates according to non-hierarchal management and collective
consensus decision-making processes which completely break with all forms
and manners of bureaucratic structures that hinder a free press. The indymedia
project currently exists in three Africa countries with more still in
the process of being approved.
At this point, it is very evident that Africa needs nothing more than
a better and more democratic media system for it growth and development.
The current structure of independent and government-owned media cannot
usher in a well-informed African continent ready to take the lead in the
world of developed countries.
It is also clear, though, that African media have contributed to the
development of the region, but have also done much harm to the dilapidated
condition of the region by selling the peoples rights for plate of meal.
Their negligence and outright compromise in reporting news related to
development, governance, debt and human right violations have kept Africa
in the dark. Only an African press genuinely committed to the freedom
of the media, respect for human rights, respect for people's welfare and
development can bridge the gap and sail Africa to the much desired promise
land. A Better Media. A Better Africa.
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