Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Africa: An economic giant that’s ready to wake up by Geoffrey York

Africa’s newest architectural miracle is a gigantic stadium in the earthy colours and shape of a calabash, the traditional cooking pot that symbolizes African village life. At night, on the Soweto horizon, it glows like the embers of a slumbering fire, waiting to be stirred into life.

On June 11, the embers will awaken. Nearly 90,000 people will crowd into Africa’s biggest stadium, known as Soccer City, for the opening ceremonies of the World Cup, the most popular sporting event on the planet, held on African soil for the first time ever.

History will approve.

The stadium was built in the apartheid era as a soccer venue, mostly for South Africa’s black population, and it was here that Nelson Mandela spoke to 100,000 adoring supporters in his first Soweto rally after his release from prison. With apartheid long dead, the stadium has sat empty for three years as workers overhauled it for Africa’s new day in the sun.

The renaissance of Soccer City marks an auspicious beginning for an era when another sleeping giant, Africa itself, is being reborn. After a year hobbled by the global slowdown, Africa is quietly preparing for a growth trajectory that could astonish the world.



Its popular image is still the same: hunger; corruption; war; poverty. But take another look. Beyond the stereotypes, Africa’s potential is explosive. Its human talents, its vast natural resources, its rising democracies and new technologies – all are reaching a tipping point that could send it surging dramatically upward.

The economy of sub-Saharan Africa is projected to grow by 4.75 per cent this year, faster than the world average, and will accelerate to an impressive 6 per cent in 2011, according to the International Monetary Fund. It will be the strongest recovery that Africa has ever managed to achieve after a global downturn, and it is testament to its greater resilience, smarter policies and growing popularity among foreign investors.

Little noticed by the world, the African economy had grown at 6 per cent annually for five years before the global slowdown. Its inflation rates and budget deficits have declined, its foreign exchange reserves have grown 30 per cent since the 1990s, and its external debt has sharply decreased. And so, when the global economy contracted last year, Africa succeeded in avoiding a decline, maintaining 2-per-cent growth even at the depths of the slowdown.

Africa’s rebirth has often been touted in the past, only to falter. Magazine covers in the late 1990s touted “Africa Rising” and “Emerging Africa.” Leaders such as U.S. president Bill Clinton toured the continent, and South African president Thabo Mbeki made passionate speeches about the “African Renaissance.” But soon the optimism was fading, and a disillusioned cover story in The Economist a decade ago dismissed Africa as “The Hopeless Continent.”

But this time is different. For the first time, Africa is becoming a bigger lure for investors than for aid donors. Africa’s poverty rate has been declining by 1 per cent annually since the 1990s, and investment is growing dramatically. A decade ago, Africa was receiving less than $5-billion (U.S.) in foreign investment annually. By 2008, it was attracting nearly $40-billion in direct foreign investment – more than it received in foreign aid. One survey found that 40 per cent of emerging-market equity investors are putting money into Africa today, compared with 4 per cent in 2006.

“I think there are great opportunities in Africa,” says Richard Maponya, one of South Africa’s most well-known black entrepreneurs, who capped a 60-year business career by building a massive $90-million shopping mall in Soweto three years ago.

“We’re growing every day,” he said in an interview. “Ever since we put up the mall, property prices have gone up, and the lifestyle of people has become much better. There are a lot of wealthy black people in Soweto, and there’s a big growth in the middle class. They call Soweto home, and they’re not excited about moving to the white suburbs.”

Under apartheid, Soweto was notorious as a place of rebellion and violence. The sprawling black township was the site of the 1976 uprising that ignited the final battle against the apartheid system. But many of its two million inhabitants today are middle-class consumers, and savvy entrepreneurs are recognizing it as a place to make money.

On the township’s famed Vilakazi Street, where Nelson Mandela once lived in a small brick house, two businessmen have created popular restaurants that lure thousands of tourists and local customers. Both are rapidly expanding their businesses in time for the World Cup.

Mr. Mandela, in fact, has signalled the business revolution in Soweto by giving strong support to its entrepreneurs. Seventeen years after his speech at the soccer stadium, he returned to Soweto to cut the ribbon to open the Maponya Mall. Since then, the mall’s 200 shops have been surprisingly successful. Even in the depths of the 2009 downturn, its revenue grew by 5 per cent. Among the mall’s luxury tenants are an Audi dealership, a sushi bar, a boutique selling Prada and Versace sunglasses, four jewellery shops, and a cigar store where customers buy $30 Cubans.

Across Africa, pro-business policies are much more common. A survey by the World Bank found that 28 African countries had adopted 58 business-friendly measures last year – more than in any previous year. African stock exchanges are bustling, from Johannesburg to Nairobi to Accra. The continent has more than 1,000 banks and other financial institutions, including the hugely successful Ecobank, based in Togo, which has been consistently profitable and has 11,000 employees in more than 750 branches across 29 African countries.

Some of Africa’s economic advantages are obvious. It contains 30 per cent of the world’s mineral reserves, including 40 per cent of the world’s gold, and is one of the biggest sources of the oil that fuels the U.S. and Chinese economies. Lured by these resources, many foreign investors are abandoning their hesitations about the region. Canadian mining companies, which had invested less than $1-billion (U.S.) in Africa in the 1990s, have now poured $21-billion into the continent.

China is the most ardent of the new suitors. By 2008 its official investment in Africa had reached almost $8-billion (U.S.), but some estimates say its investment is closer to $50-billion if loans and other contributions are included. Its annual trade with Africa has soared from a mere $2-billion in 1999 to a stunning $107-billion by 2008, putting it in close competition with the United States as Africa’s biggest trading partner, and offering a strong alternative to the usual sources of funds for African business.

Vijay Mahajan, a marketing professor and business consultant who published a book on Africa last year, argues that Africa is following the same economic path as China and India and will offer the same business opportunities. Many of its countries already have a higher per-capita income than China and India, he notes. “Africa is richer than you think,” he tells readers in Africa Rising.

Even the continent’s fast-growing population may be an advantage, rather than a burden. Africa’s population has recently surpassed one billion. By 2050, it could reach two billion people, a fifth of humanity, thanks to a rapid decline in mortality rates. But its birth rates are also dropping fast, so its working-age population over the next two decades will have fewer dependants for which to care. This is the kind of “demographic dividend” that helped fuel the economic miracle in the Asian Tigers of the past 20 years.

What’s equally significant about Africa’s renaissance is the growing importance of new technologies, including cellphones, Internet businesses and mobile banking. Since 2003, Africa’s use of cellphones and the Internet has been growing at twice the global average. A decade ago, there were only 3 million Internet users and 11 million cellphone subscriptions in the whole continent. By 2009, the number of Internet users had increased to 86 million, and there were 400 million cellphone subscriptions. By 2012, there are expected to be more than 500 million cellphone subscriptions – more than half of Africa’s entire population, compared with 2 per cent a decade ago.

Businesses are seeing the profit potential in Africa’s telecommunications sector. In one of the most spectacular of recent deals, Indian company Bharti Airtel spent $9-billion (U.S.) this year to acquire Zain’s cellphone operations in 15 African countries. The company said the deal was justified by the continued likelihood of high growth in Africa.

The lure of Africa is boosted by new African-based technologies that are beating the world. Mobile banking, for example, is increasingly popular in many African countries, even as the technology has yet to arrive in Canada in any significant way. By using their cellphones to transfer money and pay bills, Africans are making a big dent in their transportation costs, a major cost savings for rural people and the urban poor.

In Kenya, for example, more than 9 million people – about 40 per cent of the adult population – use their cellphones to make financial transactions through SMS text messages, thanks to a service called M-Pesa (its name based on the Swahili word for money). The service was created just three years ago by Safaricom, the country’s leading cellphone company, and already is providing an average of $320-million (U.S.) in monthly transactions.

A similar service, called Wizzit, has signed up more than 300,000 customers in South Africa, providing a virtual bank account for poor and rural people who feel excluded from regular banks. Its slogan is “My bank in my pocket.” The company is so successful that it is expanding into several other African countries, including Zambia and Tanzania, and even into European countries such as Romania.

Another of Africa’s technological innovations is Ushahidi (a Swahili word meaning “testimony”), an Internet mapping tool with global applications, created in Kenya in 2008 in the aftermath of election violence there. Its crowd-sourcing technology allows people to report anonymously on any phenomenon, creating instantaneous maps that are invaluable to the search for solutions. Ushahidi has helped create maps of election fraud in Sudan, medical shortages in several African countries, and the location of trapped earthquake victims in Haiti and Chile, allowing a faster response by rescue workers.

If Africa’s business opportunities are rapidly expanding, what about its stereotypical problems of poverty, disease and corruption? Those challenges haven’t disappeared, but there is much more progress than most outsiders realize.

Corrupt leaders and autocratic regimes are still commonplace in Africa. Yet multiparty elections are increasingly frequent. By some measurements, there are nearly 30 democracies in Africa today, compared with five at the end of the Cold War, and the number of civil wars has sharply declined. One index of African governance – measuring everything from transparency and human rights to wealth creation and education – found that 38 countries had improved their score over the past decade, while only 10 had declined.

Some of the most dramatic gains are in health and education. Africa’s child-mortality rate is declining by 1.8 per cent annually – twice the rate of decline in the 1990s – due to expanded vaccination campaigns, improved nutrition and greater access to clean water. Malaria rates are sharply falling as millions of insecticide-treated bed nets are distributed across Africa. Adult death rates have improved steadily since 2005, partly because of much better access to AIDS medicine.

Literacy has expanded enormously in Africa since the 1970s. A decade ago, only 58 per cent of African children went to primary school; today it’s nearly 75 per cent. Many African countries have eliminated school fees and other barriers, allowing an extra 42 million children to go to school.

High-school graduation rates have been tougher to improve, but look again to Soweto for an inspiring example. Mduduzi Mathe is the son of poor teachers who earned a few dollars a month in the apartheid era. He remembers how Soweto’s schools were neglected back then. “You’d see students without shoes, sitting on buckets,” he says. “You’d see a classroom without window panes or a proper door.”

When he became principal of Bhukulani Secondary School in 1997, the school was on the verge of collapse, with dilapidated classrooms, broken windows, drug dealers in control of the building, and only 21 per cent of students passing their matriculation exams. But Mr. Mathe, a science and mathematics teacher who had moved into a house within a short walk of the school, worked hard to instill a new sense of discipline and leadership.

He announced a verbal contract with the staff and students, insisting on explanations from anyone who was even a few minutes late. He found more resources for textbooks and equipment. He spent weekends with students at the school, painting the walls and fixing the broken windows. And by 2009, an astonishing 94 per cent of his 1,200 students were passing their exams. Every year on opening day, hundreds of parents gather at his school gate to clamour for admission for their children – although he has to turn most of them away because of a space shortage.

On a typical recent day, Mr. Mathe was giving a stern lecture to a teacher who was seven minutes late. “If there’s a lack of discipline among the staff, it spills over to the students,” he said in an interview. “We pride ourselves on being here on time. I’m devoted to seeing our learners getting better every day.”

But it’s not just a matter of discipline. He also conveys a sense of the joy of education. On a wall board in a school corridor, he has scrawled an explanation of the laws of probabilities – and how they can be applied to the South African team’s chances of winning the World Cup this year. He, too, is waiting for Soccer City to come alive.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Patricia Wakaimba of Bahati Wear

Patricia Wakaimba is a charming young Kenyan lady who is adding the much needed spice to the Kenyan fashion scene. With refreshing, vibrant and practical designs, we were thrilled to have a few moments with Patricia on Bahati Wear.



Patricia has been mentioned by Capital FM Kenya, Haiya, Jamati.com, Rafiki Kenya, Fashiontribes.com, Ciaafrique and Spain's Efecto Moda

Seven Africans in Time Magazine's World's Most Influential People for 2010

Time Magazine has recently released their list of the world's most influential people for 2010. Among the laureates are seven Africans who stand alongside the likes of Barack Obama and Steve Jobs as global change-makers. From activists to sports stars, from inventors to big-business leaders, African born heroes and heroines are leaving their mark on the world.

Didier Drogba



In the run up to the FIFA World Cup in South Africa much of the world's attention is focused on football, and particularly African football. Therefore it's not surprising that Ivorian striker Didier Drogba, 32, not only made the Time 100 list, but also the cover of the magazine.

Drogba, who grew up in the Ivory Coast and France, is featured in the "Heroes" category and is the only footballer mentioned on the list.

The magazine states that, as striker for England's Chelsea Football Club and captain of the Côte d'Ivoire team, Drogba "has shown the world what's possible when power and grace fuse on the soccer pitch". Drogba is the all-time top scorer of the Ivory Coast national team.

Eben Harrell writes for Time that, when the World Cup kicks off in South Africa in June, Drogba will carry the hopes of a continent as Africa's best-known soccer star. In fact, according to the magazine, West Africans will be toasting him with a beer glass called the Drogba - a glass nearly twice the size of a normal mug.

But Drogba is also known as a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), focusing on Africa. He is currently working with the UNDP on a worldwide advocacy campaign to support free and fair elections, and to encourage citizens to vote. He also supports UNDP's work in conflict prevention and recovery.

According to Time, after 22 Ivorians were killed in a crush to see their national team play in 2009, Drogba resolved to donate all his endorsement earnings to a charity he set up to build new hospitals in his home country.

Elon Musk


Internet wizard, rocket scientist and green pioneer Elon Musk was born and raised in South Africa with a South African father and a Canadian mother. Musk moved to Canada aged 17 after matriculating from Pretoria Boys High School in South Africa. He is now based in the United States and his influence is felt across different spheres of business and industry.

Musk first rose to prominence as co-founder of PayPal, a safe and simple method of online payment. PayPal was eventually bought by eBay for US$1.5 billion. One of his current companies, SpaceX, develops and manufactures space launch vehicles. According to Time Magazine Musk designed the Falcon 9 booster that may serve as NASA's next vehicle to transport cargo and humans into space. He also helped to create Solar City, the largest provider of solar-power systems in the United States and he designed the Tesla, one of the first electric cars of the modern era.

John Favreau, director of the Iron Man movies, writes for Time magazine that Musk was also the inspiration for Robert Downey Jr's interpretation of genius billionaire Tony Stark in the blockbuster movies.

Valentin Abe
If we give a man a fish, we feed him for a day. If we teach him to fish, we feed him for a lifetime. But Dr. Valentine Abe has gone a step beyond; he teaches people to feed the fish, so that many generations can be fed and prosper.

Hailing from Côte d'Ivoire, Abe is a Fulbright scholar and received his Masters and PhD degrees from Auburn University in the US. After Abe married a Haitian national he moved to the country, and became devoted to restoring Haiti to its rightful place as a commercial fish producer in the Caribbean.

When Abe arrived in Haiti, he was startled that fishing that wasn't a large part of the island nation's economy. Abe had a simple vision: fish farming could be the solution for poor Haitian communities, providing jobs and lean proteins for malnourished people. He powers his entire operation with solar energy, and he involves fish farmers, whose incomes he's multiplied two or three times or more.

Bill Clinton, the 42nd U.S. President and the founder of the William J. Clinton Foundation, spoke highly of Abe in the Time magazine article. "I met one man with eight children who said that because of his partnership with Valentin, he had been able to send his children to school for the first time. There are people like this all over the world. They don't get noticed very much, but they have a profound influence on the people whose lives they touch."

Neill Blomkamp


South African born director Neill Blomkamp makes the list on account of the unexpected and widespread success of his first feature film, District 9. Well known director Ridley Scott writes that "from time to time, there are people in the film industry who appear on the horizon with a unique vision. South African director Neill Blomkamp is one of those rare people."

The alien-apartheid allegory received, among others, a Golden Globe nomination, two BAFTA Award nominations and an Academy Award nomination. According to Scott, this is more acclaim than most directors will ever achieve.

"Neill's extraordinary talent is a force to be reckoned with, and I know that we all look forward to seeing what lies ahead for this game-changing filmmaker," says Ridley Scott.

Matt Berg


32-year-old Matthew Berg was born in a small village in Cameroon and grew up in Dakar, Senegal, in West Africa. After graduating from Thunderbird School of Global Management, in the US, Berg became the ICT Coordinator for the Millennium Villages Project (MVP) based out of the Earth Institute at Columbia University. He was responsible for overseeing the design and implementation of ICT activities across the fourteen Millennium Villages sites in Africa. Prior to joining MVP, Berg was the Director of the Geekcorps' Mali Program, a USAID funded project aimed at improving access to information to rural areas of Mali.

In Partnership with the MVP, Berg is currently leading the push to track disease in Africa with SMS. As technology director for ChildCount+, he helps oversee a network of community-health workers who regularly examine local children, whom they treat and then text back the status of the child. This allows for improved health monitoring, faster interventions and better immunisation and treatment campaigns.

ChildCount+ has been in existence for only nine months and has already reported more than 20,000 nutrition screenings, 500 cases of malnutrition and 2,000 of malaria. Berg and his colleagues are now scaling up to monitor more than 100,000 children under 5.

"Remarkable as Berg's work is, its greatest achievement will come when he's no longer the one doing it," wrote Katrin Verclas, co-founder of MobileActive.org.

Graca Machel


Graca Machel is perhaps most famous for being the wife of South African icon Nelson Mandela and the widow of former Mozambican President Samora Machel. But according to Time magazine she is one of the world's most effective – and joyful – advocates for the rights of children, women and refugees, and a potent voice for justice that is always listened to.

Machel started her political career as a member of the Mozambican Liberation Front (FRELIMO) while working as a schoolteacher. When Mozambique gained independence in 1975 she was appointed Minister for Education and Culture, and married Samora Machel, who would become Mozambique's first President, in the same year. He died in a plane crash 11 years later and she became Nelson Mandela's third wife in 1998.

Time calls her a "sturdy shoulder that the South African leans on" for her campaigns against pediatric AIDS and the abuse of children and refugees. She was re-elected as chancellor of the University of Cape Town this week, and has won many humanitarian awards, including the 1995 Nansen Medal from the United Nations in recognition of her longstanding humanitarian work for refugees and children, and the 2009 World's Children's Prize for the Rights of the Child from the Swedish Children's World Association.

Tidjane Thiam


The FTSE 100 is a share index of the 100 most highly capitalised UK companies listed on the London Stock Exchange

Tidjane Thiam, who had previously been the Ivory Coast's Minister of Planning and Development, joined Prudential, the largest UK insurer by market value, in 2007 as the finance director at the firm. In October of 2009, Thiam took on the role of chief executive. After the announcement of Thiam's appointment, Prudential shares were trading up 5.6% on the news.

Aside from his running of Prudential, Thiam has also been involved in the Commission for Africa and currently sits on the Africa Progress Panel.

Michael Eboda, the founder of Powerful Media, who puts together the most influential black Briton list, in an interview with the BBC said, "It is very significant because it sets a wider precedent... he has an incredibly impressive curriculum vitae." In 2008 Thaim was named the second most influential black Briton, behind the Sudanese-born founder of mobile operator Celtel, Dr Mo Ibrahim.

Ethnic minorities have little representation in Britain's boardrooms, and Thiam's appointment was described as a "watershed" moment by Sandra Kerr, director of Race for Opportunity which campaigns for equality in the workplace.

Bob Geldof, musician and a activist, wrote "He is a brilliant, elegant, media-adept family man... His insight and analysis are always impressive, his opinions invaluable."

African inspiration
African change-makers are no stranger to the Time 100 list, with five African laureates included in the 2009 list. For a continent that is forging into a new era of development and growth, it is important for Africa to know her heroes and heroines; for children to grow up with effective role models, people who show them that anything is possible. As Richard Stengel, the Editor of Time Magazine, wrote: "The TIME 100 is not about the influence of power but the power of influence."

For the full Time 100 list for 2010, please visit Time Magazine's website.

By Linda Krige and Matthew Choate

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

R.I.P Former Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua 16th August 1951-5th May 2010

Cocktail Wednesdays at Carnivore, Nairobi, Kenya


Carnivore Kenya invites you to sing (how you will sound is up to you...) at Cocktail Wednesdays with Karaoke hosted by Kui Koinange, Dj-Edgar Burn and Cloud 9 Entertainment from 7 p.m this and every Wednesday. Entry is free! Tequila Shots for singers (as stocks last...)

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Uganda's Fred Mutebi, A Seasoned Artist



Fred Mutebi is a Multi-color woodcut artist who uses his art to celebrate the natural beauty of Uganda, his homeland.


Actor Forest Whitaker enjoys the woodcut art pieces given to him by Michael Kirkpatrick, participant of the Let Art Talk organization in Uganda. One of the two art pieces was made by a student from the Hope North school whom Whitaker met during a visit there.

Using a vibrant array of colors, Fred Mutebi creates woodcut prints that depict stories about critical social events in Uganda or that portray images indigenous to the Ugandan environment. The works are made even more authentic by his use of a special technique called the “progressive reduction method”, which prevents the production of more than ten woodcut prints of the same composition.

Uganda: Fred Mutebi Catalog of Artwork



His development as an artist and as a teacher has grown to a level where he believes that it is paramount that art should be used to inform people about global challenges. He strongly feels that it is extremely important to reach as many ordinary people as possible with art that relates with their issues, especially the youth of Uganda.



He graduated from the School of Industrial and Fine Arts at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda in 1993.

As a Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence at Christian Brothers University in Memphis, Fred Mutebi played an integral role in imparting an appreciation for this particular art form and a passion for the country called “the pearl of Africa”. From lecturing on the history of art in Uganda and the history of printmaking, to conducting woodcut printmaking workshops for art students, Mutebi captivates his audiences.



In addition to Christian Brothers University, Mutebi has also conducted workshops and lectures at the University of Colorado, Vanderbilt University, Fisk University, Memphis College of Art, Indiana University - Purdue University of Fort Wayne, Manatee Community College, Marian College, Dallas Baptist University, and the University of North Texas. He has also been the featured artist at the World Bank gallery in Washington DC.



Fred Mutebi created an innovative and unique way to address important issues facing Uganda and the global community by launching Let Art Talk in 2007. The objective of the organization is to educate the diverse segments of Ugandan society by using common terms and creative techniques in order to encourage constructive change for a positive future. The mission is to use art as an educational tool to empower people and communities at the grassroots level. The goal is to transform lives by strengthening leadership, advocating reconciliation, and imparting problem solving skills

Uganda: Let Art Talk Brochure

Fred has developed a method of communicating to communities in Uganda called Talking murals™. Important topics are discussed in a public forum and then translated into the words of the local language with corresponding themed pictures. Community members participate in the creation of the mural with their ideas, words, and artistic contributions. Talking murals™ have been created to commemorate many special events like The Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, World Population Day, Ugandan Independence Day, and World AIDS Day.



Fred Mutebi has been mentioned is several publications, for example, US Embassy in Uganda The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State, The Independent, UNAA Times Online, All Africa and African Greetings