Economic Development Key to Stopping Boko Haram in Nigeria

 Boko haram destroy Muslim buldings in Nigeria

Boko haram destroy Muslim buldings in Nigeria

Economic development in Nigeria is the key into stopping the Boko Haram which has in the 12 years led to scores of people in the West Africa.Founded by Mohammed Yusuf in 2002, the Boko Haram seeks to establish a “pure” Islamic state ruled by sharia law,11 putting a stop to what it deems “Westernization.”The group is known for attacking Christians and government targets, bombing churches, attacking schools and police stations,kidnapping western tourists, but has also assassinated members of the Islamic establishment. Violence linked to the Boko Haram insurgency has resulted in an estimated 10,000 deaths between 2002 and 2013
In the North of the Nigeria, according to reports 72% of the people live abject poverty, compared with 27% in the south of the country. Poverty and lack of opportunity makes it easy for Boko Haram to attract recruits and sympathisers. The only way the government could stop this fight is to provide better services for local people so as to deprive the militant group the opportunity to use the Nigerians to kill each other. Insurgencies strive when they are able to step in as service providers, which is what Boko Haram is doing.

The militant  boko haram group in Nigeria

The militant boko haram group in Nigeria

Development will not be a quick fix, but it is vital that Nigeria starts now to try and boost services in the North so as to stop the book haram. A successful counter insurgency must create favourable political dividing lines between government forces and the insurgents. In theory Boko haram does not have to make it difficult to do this. They primarily kill Muslim civilians and are responsible for disorder and violence. The government has the opportunity to potray itself as a champion of security and development. But as long as troops continue to be ineffective and commit human rights violations, and as long as the poverty rate remains high this will be difficult.Nigeria can win this war, but they need to start turning it around now. The North needs economic development on a massive scale, it needs well trained troops working with reliable local volunteers, and a visible security presence even in the remote areas. All of this need to be packaged in a narrative that can deliver that political victory. Without economic development in the North, Nigeria is for a ride with the militant Boko haram.

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EU Summit: To who is Mugabe accountable to?

EU SUMMIT

EU SUMMIT

President Robert Mugabe ‘s boycott to the European Union Summit on Tuesday in Brussels is alleged to have cost the country an economic boost  at a time when it needs it the most. While the president saw it fit to snub the EU for its refusal to grant his wife a visa, summit delegates across the world have viewed Mugabe ‘s decision emotionally and not serving the best interest of Zimbabweans. Elliot Pfebve the newly appointed MDC-T chief representative to the EU who was in Brussels attending a two day EU/AU business forum at the beginning of the week said: “Zimbabwe could have benefitted substantially, due to the presence of high level investors. Since Zimbabwe is struggling to attract foreign investors, this was an opportunity for Mugabe to meet would be investors and discuss ways of trying to co-exist in the harsh economic environment in the country,” Pfebve said. He added: “That is abuse of power. Mugabe is not President and husband to Grace Mugabe but President and leader of all Zimbabweans.” EU Ambassador to Zimbabwe Aldo Dell’Ariccia said Mugabe ‘miscalculated’ his influence, saying the move to boycott the summit was a “diplomatic hiccup”. “This comes as a major diplomatic setback for Zimbabwe. But for us, the process of re-engagement continues and we hope that we are going to have our relations normalized soon,” Dell’Ariccia was quoted by the NewsDay newspaper as saying. While different officials have bemoaned Mugabe ‘s boycott to EU comments on social media prove that some people are supporting his move. Mthulisi said: “The boycott is good news it will serve the country millions of dollars in allowances  and spending money  for his excellency and entourage.”

President Mugabe and his wife Grace Mugabe

President Mugabe and his wife Grace Mugabe

Another source identified as sober said: “ If the first lady is not relevant  in the equation why did the EU deny her the visa. In this EU is wrong  because it is taking the  role of dictating  on who should go or not.” Rayne Mpofu said :The media is misleading people into believing Mugabe  refused to attend the meeting only because  Grace was not invited when in fact he is refusing because african countries like  Eritrea  and Saharwi were not invited, such reporters should be sued for taking people for a ride. As much as perspectives will differ on the issue the question is to who is the President accountable to the people or African countries? Zimbabwe needs economic boost and this couldn’t be a greater opportunity to sway investors in the country.

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ZUMA must stop delay tactics!!!

Being voted into power does not mean one has to abuse public funds but it means if trusted with public funds you have to act in ways that improve the lives of the people. It is therefore; necessary for a country to have a public body which ensures that the government is held accountable and answer to the public how they use public funds. The failure by the South African President Jacob Zuma to answer to the parliament on the Nkandla report, where he is being accused of using public funds to develop his rural home can be seen as undermining the constitution. South Africa will be holding elections on the 7th of May and before they vote Zuma owes it to them to answer on the Nkandla report.  Given this circumstance, Mtsholozi is hiding something and by delaying to answer he is trying to avoid responsibility of his actions. According to the Democratic Alliance parliamentary leader Lindiwe Mazibuko,

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President Jacob Zuma and his rural Nkandla

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Democratic Alliance ‘s parliamentary speaker, Lindiwe Mazibuko

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FF’s speaker Comer Mulder

“the reality is that President Zuma  is trying to run away from accountability and delay having to explain his actions to South Africa until after the elections on 7 May.”

Making the president more guilty is the change of the SIU ‘s Nkandla report on their website from completed to ongoing, and that it will be completed end of may.Arguably a clear confirmation that Zuma is using delay tactics aimed at delaying accountability until after the elections.

For, the FF Zuma has showed contempt of the public prosecutor‘s office and undermined what transparency and accountability as required by the Constitution.

Dr Come Mulder says: “If Zuma is so innocent and ignorant about the Nkandla issue as he alleges, he now had the ideal opportunity to prove his innocence in Parliament, he choose not to do it. He added: “It is unthinkable that South Africans will be going to the ballot boxes on 7 May with this cloud hanging over the head of the president and the number one candidate of the ANC.”

In respect of the above it is time Zuma became accountable for his actions and give answers on the Nkandla report and stop playing his delay tactics. What worth is it for the electorate to vote a corrupt president who subverts accountability and transparency. South  Africans need answers and Mtsholozi must answer to enable the electorate to make a thoughtful decision during the election.

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Pre-election, South Africa shows off its brighter side – By Richard Dowden

Today we scrutinise South Africa in the lenses of Dowden who spent last week touring South Africa  looking at the projects the

Blogger : Richard Dowden

Blogger : Richard Dowden

country has taken so far. This is first of his reports  and it provides insight on what the electorate might need to take a glimpse on as they make their informed decisions on the 7th of May.

Dowden says:

In South Africa last week I saw a mobile robot being programmed, a magical film studio, a radio telescope system that explores galaxies and dark matter, polluted mine water being purified. And I went down a coal mine.

Meanwhile, South Africa’s newspapers ran reams on the Pistorius murder trial and the row over the 200 Million Rand (£11.3 million) ‘renovation’ of President Jacob Zuma’s private residence at Nkandla.

Everyone knows what news is but no one can define it. In my experience humans are drawn mostly to the bad stuff. The coverage of success is often limited to lives of celebrities that we identify with but envy. So the headlines are full of human dramas, scandals and celebs that feed that human need – plus a bit of politics. But if you treat ‘the news’ as a first draft of this week’s human progress, you will be misled – it does not give a comprehensive picture of where a country, or the entire human race, is headed.

Africa – including South Africa – has suffered from this. It has been a source of ‘bad’ news stories because its day to day life and politics do not affect western countries or interest western media. Until recently only the disasters, the wars, the suffering got covered and that has accumulated into a picture of perpetual – and continent-wide – African misery.

SOUTH AFRICA ' S MAP

SOUTH AFRICA ‘ S MAP

South Africa’s fundamental reality is that the vast majority are much better off than they were 20 years ago when Nelson Mandela was elected president. Real per capita incomes are 27% higher. The economy has grown by more than 60% since he was let out of jail. Yet there is a widespread feeling that the country is not where it could be or should be. The gap between rich and poor has widened and many South Africans are worse off than they were then.

When the government set up Brand South Africa to promote a better global perception image of the country I wrote an article saying this was nonsense. Improve the reality, I said, and the image will take care of itself. Branding also seemed a commercial concept which should not be applied to nation states. The word should be ‘reputation’.

But because journalism tends to deal with bad news or single issues, these became The Narrative in places like Africa and other parts of the world whose progress has little global impact on America or Europe. The story of Columbia is drugs, the story of Brazil is the rainforest, and the story of Australia is bush fires (and cricket). Africa’s story is war, poverty and elephants.

And the story becomes the one-dimensional image – usually created by outsiders. And the image affects investment decisions. So I now concede that African countries do need to try to manage how they are viewed by the rest of the world. And that means bringing in journalists to write about progress and improvements as well as disasters, war and hunger. So last week I accepted an invitation to visit South Africa to look at some of the better things it is doing in the lead-up to the May 7th election.

We were a small but diverse group – two young Chinese workaholic women journalists, a tall, quiet American, a British Turkish woman who writes for an Africa magazine, the editor of AllAfrica.com who is Nigerian-American and a South African journalist. With our black South African guides we were hard to label. The first destination was not good; a trip to a poor part of Soweto, a reception area where people newly-arrived from rural areas stay while they look for somewhere to live. It felt like a visit to the zoo with the ‘local’ guides as the keepers. We were assured that what we were seeing was real and told not to hand out money, but any encounter between poor people and tourists is very uncomfortable and unreal. They know the patter to feed the visitors and I sensed they had learned their lines.

Then we drove through Diepkloof, the posh part of Soweto, where I noticed that the smart two or three story freestanding houses, unlike houses of the same size in the richer parts of the northern (formerly whites only) suburbs, had little protection. And their very smart Mercedes, BMWs and some even flashier cars were parked in the street – unthinkable in the northern suburbs. No one steals here I am told. “If you steal a car from here people will see it and find the thief. But if you steal a car in the northern suburbs, the owner will not dare to look for it here,” says my guide.

We then drove to the Soweto museum near the Hector Pietersen memorial which marks the death of the 14 year-old demonstrating student, shot by police in the 1976 student uprising. The picture of his body being carried away is one of the iconic images of that era, as powerful as the picture of the burning Vietnamese girl fleeing her napalmed village. The museum gives the squalid history of Soweto’s beginnings in the 1930s and the fight-back in pictures and film on loops.

The biggest transformation I saw was around the Regina Mundi Catholic church where so many meetings were held, demonstrations began and people were shot or clubbed by police. I remember the church in the late 1970s as a bleak, barren ground covered in broken things, stones and rubbish. Nearby was a tiny shack, the clinic where the great Albertina Sisulu worked as a nurse. She was banned from organising meetings so could only meet one person at a time. I went to see her and, once she had completed her work in the clinic and was able to meet me alone, she made me tea and told me about life, misery and hope in Soweto. Then on her fingers she counted her close family. All were either in prison or exile except one who was at university: “I don’t know where I went wrong with that one,’ she said lightly.

Now the clinic is gone and the whole area is grassed over and a tree-lined avenue leads to the front of the church. Groups of coolly dressed kids hang out, laughing and chatting. And the thick yellow Soweto smog from the power station and a million small coal fires has gone, replaced by electricity. The endless rows of tiny brick houses without water or electricity have mostly been rebuilt, except for Mandela’s old house in Orlando which is now a museum and tourist venue surrounded by stands selling merchandise. I found it hard to feel what it was really like. However, I was shocked to see that many of the notorious hostels are still being used. Built to cram in migrant workers from all over southern Africa, some still do not have running water.

Richard Dowden is Director of the Royal African Society and author of Africa; altered states, ordinary miracles. Follow Richard on twitter@DowdenAfrica

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