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AfricaPundit's Regional Briefing: 2004-10-29

| 2 Comments

Winds of Change.NET Regional Briefings run on Tuesdays & Wednesdays, and sometimes Fridays too. This Regional Briefing focuses on Africa, courtesy of AfricaPundit.

TOP TOPICS

  • Kenyan ecologist Wangari Maathai has become the first African woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Coverage and commentary on this award winner (and others) inside.

Other Topics Today Include: Africa's Nobel Peace Prize winner; the Anti-Slavery Award; Sudan news roundup; A small step for Somaliland; Cameroonian "elections"; anti-Semitism in SA; Ghanaian talk radio; A $3 African refrigerator; African solar; Internet boosting African agriculture; Teaching entrepreneurship; Digital bookmobiles.

Africa's Prize Winners

Sudan

  • Based on the death toll in Darfur refugee camps, the situation still looks grim.
  • Black Star Journal has further comments on the ongoing genocide in the Sudan here and here.
  • Despite the ongoing war in Darfur, at least one person thinks that southern Sudan is now peaceful enough to be a good investment opportunity.

Around the Continent

  • The nascent state of Somaliland has taken one small step toward international recognition. Ethiopia has extradited a prisoner to Somaliland, implicitly acknowledging the legitimacy of the Somaliland government.
  • "President" Paul Biya of Cameroon has been reelected in a questionably free and fair poll.
  • Ethan Zuckerman discusses the importance of political talk radio... in Ghana.

Economic Glimmerings

  • A $3 African refigerator? Yup. It's called a zeer, it keeps 12 kg of vegetables for 5-10x longer than normal, and it's even being used to excellent effect these days in Darfur.
  • John Atkinson's latest New Energy Currents briefing mentions the use of low-cost photovoltaics in rural Africa, as well as the usefulness of do it yourself solar projects for disater relief.
  • Timbuktu Chronicles covers the use of computers and the Internet to improve the ways that African farming communities plant (like the Farmwise Project in Malawi) and trade their goods via mini commodity exchanges in Mali, East Africa, and Senegal.
  • Timbuktu Chronicles also notes that "... All across South Africa - in every elementary and middle school - kids are crafting business plans, doing market research, balancing budgets, and hawking everything from hot dogs at 50 cents a pop to car washes for $7 each.In a dramatic bid to tackle this country's persistent unemployment rate of at least 35 percent, entrepreneurship has become a key part of the evolving post-apartheid curriculum."
  • If they're looking for an entrepreneurial opportunity to hook into their curriculum, Anywhere Books digital bookmobiles in Uganda might be an interesting (and very complimentary) model.

2 Comments

While the efforts at grass roots entrepeneurship are laudible, they're probably doomed to failure. People do that sort of thing naturally, it takes a government to prevent it and most of the worlds government do so very effectively. But fixing the real problem would involved "deregulation" which, as we know, is an unmitigated evil.

But fixing the real problem would involved "deregulation" which, as we know, is an unmitigated evil.

What? Do you think there's some kind of enormous regulatory apparatus holding down growth in Africa?

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