
If the way to unlocking massive development in the heart of
Africa is through asserting itself as a self-sustaining continent, then
the key could be in the hands of technocrats seeking home-grown ways of
generating the wealth of Africa from within.
This was
one of the key themes emphasised in a conference dubbed “Atlantic
Dialogues” – now in its seventh edition — that strives to tap the latent
potential of mainly the southern Atlantic rim and Africa into tangible
wealth and an ability to assert itself in the world geopolitical map.
The
conference held under the theme, “Overcoming the Choke Points,” ended
in Marrakesh, Morocco, on December 15 where it has been hosted for the
past seven years.
The conference is a convergence of
technocrats, think tanks, experienced international leaders in various
fields and select young leaders in various fields.
Though it is held in North Africa, the meting does not confine its interest to the Atlantic sea board.
It
sends out feelers of inclusion to East and Southern Africa, with a
message that the continent can only maximise potential from all its
spheres.
Invited this year from beyond the southern
Atlantic region were experts in private and public sectors from East and
Southern African countries that were variously called upon to present
innovations that can be replicated on the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean
rim nations.
From Kenya, two young delegates invited
had been noted for leadership roles in the public and private sector —
Raphael Obonyo and Jacob Ouma respectively. Other young delegates had
been selected from over 30 African countries and other continents.
Three
of the prime plenary sessions were moderated separately by Kenyan
television personalities, Jeff Koinange and Uduak Amimo, each who
pointed out to the panelists that the Atlantic initiative should be
flagged an all-Africa initiative to empower the continent.
Regional interests
Even
as emphasis was obviously on interests that the Atlantic dialogues
conference has for the West and North Africa, the issues may as well be
copy-pasted for East and Southern Africa.
A Moroccan
think tank, Policy Centre for the New South (formerly OCP Policy
Centre), which organises the conference, has its main mission as
promotion of knowledge-sharing on economic issues and international
relations among Atlantic States, especially those in the South including
South America that share challenges of developing countries.
The
think tank seeks to rally nations to contribute to strategic
decision-making through four research programmes that matter most for
Africa: Agriculture, environment and food security; economic and social
development; finance, conservation of raw materials and manufacturing;
and geopolitics and international relations.
Key issues
that excited debate among delegates included; the effects of
globalisation on Africa; how the continent can benefit from its
demographic advantage; coping against the surge of protectionism by the
developed nations and the WTO; the human dimension of the migration
crisis affecting Africans; the effects of the declining power of the
United States and other issues that touch every nation.
Panelists
at the plenary-style conference were mainly dignitaries who had been at
the top level of handling global issues in their nations or
internationally, especially those that have interacted with Africa.
Former
American secretary of state Madeleine Albright was the highlight of the
plenaries as she examined the backlash against globalisation, alongside
former president of Cape Verde Pedro Pires.
Ms Albright, 81, and just coming from launching her book — Fascism; A Warning
— acknowledged globalisation had been tilted against Africa, even as
she encouraged the continent to take advantage of its emerging status
and powerful potential to chart its own course.
“Africa
was always seen as the loser in globalisation, but increasingly now the
continent is on the path to becoming a winner despite the negative
effects that held it back for so long.
“And this is not
just for this region (Atlantic side), but also for the North, East and
Southern Africa. The continent has the chance, it must embrace it,” Ms
Albright said in an interview on the sidelines of the conference.
She
told African leaders not to be discouraged by those who still show a
tendency to sideline the continent, making a thinly-veiled attack on US
President Donald Trump for his policy to assert American power at the
expense of the exclusion of former allies. She said at the plenary:
“When
someone goes to the United Nations and talks about national power, it
undermines the spirit of the UN. When the US is not represented in such a
conference of like-minded allies such as this, we are pulling away from
the world and into ourselves.
“Africa should surge
ahead and focus on where it matters, like its young population that is
the largest in the world. If systems that work can be built for them to
earn a living at home, many would not even want to migrate.”
She
commended students from Morocco, Kenya and Nigeria who had earlier sat
in a session with her at the King Mohammed VI Technical University in
Rabat, noting they had given her the main point to address at the
conference — that young Africans just need empowerment through
education, and the continent will change forever.
Other leaders from the South American delegations encouraged Africa to embrace self-belief and chart its course.
Former
president of Argentina Federico Ramon Puerta, former Equador president
Luis Osvaldo Hurtado Larrea and the Governor of Sao Paulo Geraldo
Alckmin all dwelt at large on the topic, “learning from experience for
new joint development.”
Migration crisis
Handling
the topics of Mediterranean and North African Dimensions and the Human
Dimension of the Migration Crisis, most delegates drawn to contribute on
issues of injustices meted out to the continent by the rich nations
spoke strongly against the historic oppression of Africa by the North.
Former
secretary general of the Arab League Amre Moussa, prompted by Kenyan
moderator Jeff Koinange to comment on the role of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organisation (NATO) in regime change in some North Africa
nations, reacted that NATO should forever bear the blame for
“destroying” some nations like Libya and Tunisia.
“NATO
calls itself North Atlantic and it is only for the countries of the
North, yet they allot themselves the role of intervening in Africa where
they have no members. This should never happen again,” said Mr Moussa,
drawing emotive comments by other delegates in support.
Migration
of African seeking a better lives in Europe or escaping dire
conditions, who risk their lives sailing on inflatable rubber boats from
the beaches of North Africa to Italy and Spain, drew heated debate,
with most delegates blaming the North for calling on itself the
immigrants by oppressing the development of Africa nations and inciting
and supporting conflict.
For East Africa, as most
delegates interviewed on the sidelines and speaking in the plenaries
said, the region should create its own forum to formulate common action
on issues that pose bottlenecks to development and give guidance on the
way to the future on issues identified as priorities for growth..
- The EastAfrican
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