Tuesday 2 March 2010

The state and African choices

Last week marked the 125th anniversary of the conclusion of the infamous 1884-1885 European leaders’ Berlin conference on Africa to formalise the pan-European seizure, planned occupation, and exploitation of the legendary riches of the African World. It is arguably germane that this anniversary slipped by with scarce notice but some of the enduring consequences of the curse of Berlin on Africa cannot be ignored. The prevailing grave politics and socioeconomics in particularly Nigeria, the Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Kenya attest to this.

These states of conquest (as well as the rest on the continent) have largely remained what they were since their 1885 terms of reference albeit with some doubtful African configuration since January 1956, beginning in the Sudan. Pointedly, two-thirds of the 15 million Africans murdered by African regimes in genocide and other conflicts on the continent since May 1966 are in Nigeria, the Sudan, DRC and Kenya. Why and How does a state exist to dominate, exploit, and, in such cases as in Nigeria and the Sudan, attempt to destroy some of its constituent nations?

As everyone knows, the states that Europe created in Africa in the aftermath of Berlin cannot lead Africans to the reconstructive changes they deeply yearn for after the tragic history of centuries of occupation. Such change was and never is the mission of these states but instruments to expropriate and despoil Africa by the conquest.

As in Berlin, states are not a gift from the gods but relationships painstakingly formulated and constructed by groups of human beings on planet Earth to pursue aspirations and interests envisioned by these same human beings. The flourishing age of organically articulated African-own states to radically transform depressing African fortunes in the contemporary world has already begun.

3 comments:

  1. It makes sense that Africa and its people reinvent themselves rather than holding on to unworkable entanglements. This is not too hard except that those who put Africa in this quandary will not allow it happen. We need to plan more and have a well articulated position before setting out.

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  2. Africa and Africans cannot hope to be free until the educated African takes the bull by the horns and and gets prepared to make sacrifices to achieve true independence. This can only come by the constant creation of awreness as is currently being vigorously pursued by Professor Herbert Ekwekwe. It does not come easy or cheap. It does not come safe either. But nothing worth struggling for ever comes cheap or easy. The pioneers of the freedom which America enjoys today said it all: Live free, or die! ...Dr Oliver Akamnonu

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  3. Prof, thanks so much for highlighting this crucial issue. What a disastrous outcome the Berlin Conference produced! Africans are of age to redefine themselves. It's about time!

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