All Rock, No
Action (Live8, G8 and Africa)
LIVE 8, that extraordinary media event that some
people of good intentions in the West just
orchestrated, would have left us Africans
indifferent if we hadn't realized that it was an
insult both to us and to common sense. We have
nothing against those who this month, in a
stadium, a street, a park,in Berlin, London,
Moscow, Philadelphia, gathered crowds and played
guitar and talked about global poverty and aid for
Africa. But we are troubled to think that they are
so misguided about what Africa's real problem is,
and dismayed by their willingness to propose
solutions on our behalf. We Africans know what the
problem is, and no one else should speak in our
name Africa has men of letters and science, great
thinkers and stifled geniuses who at the risk of
torture rise up to declare the truth and demand
liberty. Don't insult Africa, this continent so
rich yet so badly led. Instead, insult its
leaders, who have ruined everything.
Our anger is all the greater because despite all
the presidents for life, despite all the evidence
of genocide, we didn't hear anyone at Live 8 raise
a cry for democracy in Africa. Don't the
organizers of the concerts realize that Africa
lives under the oppression of rulers like Yoweri
Museveni (who just eliminated term limits in
Uganda so he can be president indefinitely) and
Omar Bongo (who has become immensely
rich in his three decades of running Gabon)?
Don't they know what is happening in Cameroon,
Chad, Togo and the Central African Republic? Don't
they understand that fighting poverty is fruitless
if dictatorships remain in place? Even more
puzzling is why Youssou N'Dour and other Africans
participated in this charade. Like us, they can't
help but know that Africa's real problem is the
lack of freedom of expression, the usurpation of
power, the brutal oppression.
Neither debt relief nor huge amounts of food aid
nor an invasion of experts will change anything.
Those will merely prop up the continent's
dictators. It's up to each nation to liberate
itself and to help itself.
When there is a problem in the United States, in
Britain, in France, the citizens vote to change
their leaders. And those times when it wasn't
possible to freely vote to change those
leaders,
the people revolted. In Africa, our leaders have
led us into misery, and we need to rid
ourselves of these cancers. We would have
preferred for the musicians in Philadelphia and
London to have marched and sung for political
revolution. Instead, they mourned a corpse while
forgetting to denounce the murderer.
What is at issue is an Africa where dictators
kill, steal and usurp power yet are treated like
heroes at meetings of the African Union. What is
at issue is rulers like François Bozizé, the
coup leader running the Central Africa Republic,
and Faure Gnassingbé, who just succeeded his
father as president of Togo, free to trample
universal suffrage and muzzle their people with no
danger that they'll lose their seats at the United
Nations. Who here wants a concert against poverty
when an African is born, lives and dies without
ever being able to vote freely? But the truth is
that it was not for us, for Africa, that the
musicians at Live 8 were singing; it was to amuse
the crowds and to clear their own consciences, and
whether they realized it or not, to reinforce
dictatorships.They still believe us to be like
children that they must save, as if we don't
realize ourselves what the source of our problems
is.
Jean-Claude Shanda Tonme is a consultant on
international law and a columnistfor Le Messager,
a Cameroonian daily, where a version of this
article first
appeared. This article was translated by The Times
from the French.
Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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