So he was like Kagame in some ways.
Far from it. Kagame has done a good job of milking international guilt over the 1994 genocide, but that's about it. The dependency on foreign aid is incredible. Even the laptops-for-toddlers that gave Uhuru his misplaced idea ... Rwanda got theirs for free.
It looks like a lot of these countries don't necessarily have enviable records in terms of human rights, or even corruption to some extent.
I lived in Asia for many years, and I would caution comparisons on corruption. In Singapore, I observed first hand Lee Kwan Yew's hard first: he decided from the very beginning that corruption, however small, would be dealt with swiftly and very harshly. That's how it's been done, and it works.
In South Korea, there is much more corruption than in Singapore, but it's not of the debilitating nature that you have in places like Kenya or Nigeria. A typical example is the Samsung Group making illegal soft loans to its affiliates or bribing a politician to allow it to build a factory where it shouldn't (which factory, of course, adds to employment and GDP), or a politician illegally accepting campaign donations from some industrial type. Otherwise, the kind of corruption we generally think of is almost non-existent.
To get an idea of the attitude towards Kenyan-style corruption, consider this: Roh Moo-Hyun, South Korea's president from 2003-2008 committed suicide in 2009 because some of his family members had been accused of corruption. His suicide note said that he was "deeply ashamed". The corruption charges? I think they included things like borrowed---not stolen!---money to pay for somebody's studies in the USA. And it was his relatives, not him, that did whatever. But he was just the most high-profile one: even in the last 10 years, quite a few major politicians in SK have done "the honourable" thing when accused of corruption. Hard to imagine that happening on The Beloved Continent?
Is the African culturally defective to be industrialized?
An interesting question. Many years ago, I attended a public talk by Lee Kwan Yew, and as the only African present, I wished ... His comments included a few anecdotes that I think he later included in his autobiography. One of them involved his efforts to work with African governments:
Incredible as it might seem, there is a video of Tough-Man Lee weeping in public. The occasion was when Singapore got kicked out of the Malay Federation. Lee thought his tiny country couldn't survive on its own, which is why it had ganged up with Malaysia in the first place. Anyways ... having been kicked out, he thought his best partners might be the "newly free" African countries. So he jumped into a plane and did a little African tour. To cut it short, he thought too many countries were being run by jokers. His exact words were that they were "parodies of countries".
So, what exactly ails
Mwafrika? It's certainly not a lack of intelligent people or anything of the like. Nor is it a failure to dream big. But even when people are not finishing each other in "routine tribal clashes" that end up as civil wars---what is S. Sudan all about and does it have to happen?---the results can be seen in Peaceful Kenya (
Economic Powerhouse Of East Africa, Growing at 6+%): Vision 2030 is largely a joke. It's as though people think that as long as they set lofty goals and keep repeating them, then all will happen. Not!
To my mind---as I have stated elsewhere---one of the first things African countries need to focus on is real and serious
human development. And they should also learn from the history of others ... move beyond East or West always "helping" and start to do for themselves. Look beyond dining out on digging stuff out of the ground to sell to strangers. Try something other than borrowing 1% of GDP and then saying "this will increase our GDP by at least 1%". And, above all, stop blaming others for their situation or expecting others to "develop" them.
Africa actually has all it needs, whether it's stuff in the ground, or land, or the cheap labour that others have used to propel themselves forward. What is lacking are (a) a real vision, not some Vision
3020 2030, and real leadership, not criminal jokers.
To be continued ...