Indeed! It was a deliberate effort to succeed. Instead of reading the Mzungu conclusions and bolting, they decided to address each hardship. It is the process India used to get nuclear technology and has seen China record massive growth in virtually every sphere.
The problem with African leadership (and this from observing many of them closely over a long time) is the greed for money. They just want to have money. They believe their security is dependent on having lots of money. It does not matter how they get it but they need to hit 40 having lots of it. Sadly the frenzy continues even after 40.
Lets look at bad leadership. Look at Mudavadi - the one man I think represents the worst sort of leadership in Africa:
He has been in virtually every ministry since he walked in to the cabinet from Tysons Limited - Marketing and Supplies, Agriculture, Finance, Information, Transport and Communication, Local Government, among others. Yet he cannot name one major or minor achievement during his tenure in any ministry. Instead we have a litany of mishaps, scandals, heists and mismanagement. His presence in some of those ministries has resulted not just in stagnation but a reversal of progress already made. Some examples would help:
He was the minister for Transport and Communication at a time when the World was undergoing a revolution in communication and Transport. He presided over the denial of licences for FM radios, FM Phones (Mobile) and Mobile phones. He restricted the Internet and instituted draconian measures requiring persons wishing to connect to the internet to have their computers inspected at their own cost. The internet and mobile phone failed to take off at a time when Tanzania was recording a massive expansion and growth. Yet this is one of the people considered a "leader"! There is no scandal without his name in it! Goldenberg, Anglo Leasing, Tax Evasion! He even sold a graveyard and shared out the proceeds with his co-conspirators!
As minister for local government, he grabbed and sold Kenya Railways land in Kisumu.
Omollo, Its so interesting what you say about Asians deliberately investing in those areas of weakness like education, and bringing back their brains home to propel their local industries. Brain drain is something baafrika suffers from i think more than anyone because we are more desperately in need of all our brains than other places. I agree with Pundit that the government should patronize sometimes, for the good of the people and development. Which is why I did not agree with the move to shelve senator keg, something that was intended as a public safety mechanism and not for profit.