To be fair, the West also prolly contributed to
some of our stability that we've had (generally) on the continent starting in the 2,000s with their political interventions and their aid towards people (health, food aid etc); I shouldn't just focus on what they DIDN'T do. I just think if they truly lived up to their stated ideals, they would've invested their capital accordingly. They didn't even need to be saints to do that. An Africa that provides a huge market is great for them too, even if a totally poor Africa that gives away its resources for almost nothing is better for their pockets.
So for me - it simple cut trees first - grow your food - transition into factory jobs - and then re-plant trees.
If the world was more invested in long-term sustainability without neglecting any segment of the human population, we wouldn't even need to go as far as Europe did. I'm thinking like the problem, for example, of land, conservation and human development in places like Kwinya. If we could reclaim the drier areas and conserve the forested areas, move our people out, we could both develop and protect our nature/wildlife at the same time. But we can't, because we lack capital (wealth, as you put it), and because the world still thinks in a selfish-individualist way, each country and region has to operate as if they cannot rely on anyone else, so here we are, with only one model that is rather destructive.
The problem we have had is laying the basis for development. I.e. Political stability, a population that can provide suitable labor (healthy, fed, and well-educated/trained), and infrastructure that connects resources, manufacturing, and markets both
within countries and regions as well as globally i.e. NON-colonial infrastructure that serves the growth of the local economies and not simply extraction of resources FROM them. All that 'laying-the-foundation' work, unfortunately, is capital-intensive, and the ONE thing poor, ex-colonies have never had is capital.
But if those with capital (rich countries and their financial corporations) refuse to invest it for that foundational work, we don't get to the next layer of industrial investors and others. No one is using his money to invest in a place without stability, adequate infrastructure, or suitable labor, or that makes ANYTHING other than resource-extraction (through dubious means) too expensive/cumbersome.
Not only have we had to spend
decades finding basic stability within the colonial experiments we call our modern states since independence, the West also saddled us with horrendous debts during that time that were utterly NOT geared in any way towards development but maximizing profits for Western financial institutions with the approval/aid of our local corrupt despots. They were basically loan-sharking us while saying we were too risky for those other more helpful capital-intensive investments (besides basic needs). So while the West has done some good for us, and it is good to be fair to them, it has kept us from developing due to selfishness and because the world will not co-operate, poor countries will follow the 'destroy-first/build-later' model which in the modern age is entirely unnecessary and so destructive. But what else do we do in this uncooperative world? I value both the earth and human development, and I don't see any other way and that makes me truly sad because I know it's not necessary.
Btw, Africa needs to force some kind of international action against Japan and the U.S. to save our elephants. (Edit! I need to check if Biden maintained Trump's policy re ivory before I add the U.S. to Japan on the dock as the second defendant
)