Corruption Is Destroying Africa: The Case of Liberia
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A similar question would suffice for Liberia, which became independent since 1847, has been a sovereign nation for over 170 years but is ranked as one of the poorest countries in the world. This is irrespective of the fact that the country is endowed with abundant natural resources. Accordingly, I herewith submit that Africa or Liberia is not poor but poorly managed, and that corruption is a major source of bad governance, widespread poverty and instability on the continent.
There can be no question that corruption is like a cancer eating at the vitals of Africa, my beloved country Liberia being one of the worst affected on the continent. This is why this book is titled, Corruption is Destroying Africa: The Case of Liberia. Because of corruption, critical public services such as health and education have remained in a state of dysfunction.
Gabriel I.H. Williams
Gabriel I.H. Williams Gabriel I.H. Williams is a diplomat and former deputy minister of information in the government of Liberia. A career journalist, he has worked with several news organs in Liberia and the United States as a reporter and editor, including serving as Managing Editor of The Inquirer independent newspaper in Liberia, and Staff Writer of The Sacramento Observer Newspapers in Sacramento, California. He was acting President of the Press Union of Liberia, the national journalists’ organization, during the early years of the Liberian civil war before fleeing to the United States due to death threats for his role as a journalist. Mr. Williams is the author of the book, Liberia: The Heart of Darkness – Accounts of Liberia’s Civil War and its Destabilizing Effects in West Africa, which was published in 2002 in the United States. The book, which features nearly 75 photographs of the death and destruction of Liberia’s senseless civil war, also provides first-hand and compelling accounts of one of the most brutal and barbaric civil wars in Africa and the world, during which more than 250,000 people were killed. It is unfortunate that the evils of the past that brought about the mindless bloodshed and destruction in Liberia, such as corruption and other manifestations of bad governance, have continued in the post-war country. Liberia’s peace and progress would be undermined until Liberians change their mindset, and the interest of the country and the people are placed above self-aggrandizement.
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Corruption Is Destroying Africa - Gabriel I.H. Williams
Copyright 2019 Gabriel I.H. Williams.
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CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
Chapter 1 The Founding of Liberia
Chapter 2 Answering the Call to Service
Chapter 3 Confronting the Taylor Fear Factor
Chapter 4 The Struggle to Change a Dysfunctional System of Governance
Chapter 5 Confronting the Reality of a Broken Country
Chapter 6 Tackling Challenges in the Rebuilding Process
Chapter 7 Growing Demand for Accountability to End Culture of Impunity
Chapter 8 The Urgency to Restore Liberia’s Broken Educational and Health Systems
Chapter 9 Ebola Outbreak Exposed Health Care Crises in Liberia, Other Parts of Africa
Chapter 10 Global Ebola Hysteria and Stigma
Chapter 11 Ebola Exposed Extreme Poverty and Corruption in Liberia
Chapter 12 Liberia’s Role in Modern Africa
Chapter 13 Misrepresentation and Distortion of Historical Facts
Chapter 14 Negative Image Undermines Liberia’s and Africa’s Progress
Chapter 15 Liberians and Africans Don’t Have to Continue Being Object of Pity
Chapter 16 Entrenched Corruption Is a Threat to Liberia’s Stability
The Caption of the Photo on the Cover:
A glowing evening sunset on the Atlantic Ocean in Liberia, endowed with natural resources and beauty but empoverished. (Courtesy, Nee Allison and Alvin Allison)
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Let me begin by declaring, praise God from whom all blessings flow, for it is for His mercy and grace that I am alive and have a purpose in life.
I am grateful to all those who have supported me in whatever way possible, especially during the course of this publication. Deserving notable mention among the many wonderful people are the following:
I am grateful to my wife, Neiko Irene Williams, who bore with my shortcomings and material disadvantage for the benefit our family. As now late Archbishop George D. Browne of the Episcopal Church of Liberia acknowledged in his autobiography, a good wife is hard to find, and I thank God for her.
I am grateful to the Reverend Emmanuel Z. Bowier, a former Liberian minister of Information and diplomat, whose mentorship was very critical during my respective tenure as assistant minister and deputy minister at the Ministry of Information, Cultural Affairs, and Tourism at the beginning of the Sirleaf administration. There are accounts related to the Reverend Bowier in this book.
I am also grateful to Dr. D. Elwood Dunn—a retired political science professor, eminent international scholar, and author—for his mentorship during the course of this book project. Dr. Dunn was particularly instrumental in the availability of materials regarding Liberia’s role in Africa, as you will read in the book.
I owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. William Ponder, an economist and prolific writer, who edited the original manuscript for this book before the focus was changed. I thank the Lord for his contributions.
Much gratitude is also in order for Mr. Joe S. Kappia, a journalist and teacher, who edited most of the manuscript for this book. A senior media colleague, I am grateful to Joe for his friendship and strong professional support. Joe’s professional relationship with me started from my days as a reporter in training at the Daily Observer newspaper in Monrovia, where he was the features editor, as also reflected in the book.
During my tenure as a diplomat at the Embassy of Liberia in the United States, I have been blessed to work with many amazing people, past and present, who have positively contributed to the success of my diplomatic service. I am grateful for their friendship and moral support.
Among those for notable mention are the following: Ambassador Jeremiah C. Sulunteh, former deputy chief of mission and now ambassador Jeff G. Dowana, Mrs. Cecelia Harmon-Rogers, Mrs. Nancy Stewart Nwabunnia, Ms. Decontee Clements, Ms. Haibatu Pussah, Ms. Vickie Ward, Mrs. Sophia T. Mawlue, Mr. Edmond K. Neblett, Mrs. Kathleen Demmah, Mr. Elmore Hanky Delaney, Mrs. Nyanda Finda Davis, Mr. Josiah Domah, Mrs. Muna Wallace-Wah, Ms. Maryann Perry, Mr. Ernest Bowier, Mr. Dolaikeh Quoimie, Ms. Nimalka Joseph, Mr. Upul Jagoda, and Mr. Rohan Abeysinghe.
I wish to also acknowledge various individuals who have provided moral support to my family over the years. These include Dr. Donald S. E. Taylor and Mrs. Esther Taylor for the many years of goodwill toward my family. Dr. Taylor is professor emeritus of communication studies and former assistant vice president for Academic Affairs at California State University, Sacramento (CSUS). Dr. Taylor and his wife are prominent members of the African community in Sacramento. Meanwhile, Mr. Quilly Boyoue, commonly known as Cousin Quilly, and Mother Cecelia Tor have been strong supporters of my family.
Also worthy of commendation are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. B. and Roberta Cooper for their contributions toward humanitarian causes in Liberia; immigration attorney Patricia Minikon of the Minikon Law Office in Maryland, United States of America, for supporting humanitarian causes; engineer James J. Johnson, for leaving his promising career in California and returning to Liberia to help develop the country’s modern infrastructure, including the newly constructed ELWA Hospital in Monrovia; Dr. Paul Kim, an optometrist in Sacramento, California, for about twenty years of professional service to my family and for his friendship; Flomo B. Washington, a former Liberian government official and senior citizen of the Liberian community in Sacramento, who has been like a father figure to many in the Liberian community; Mr. Charles W.S. Russell, Sr., for his support during my high school days; Ms. Nee Allison, former president of the Liberian Community Association in the Washington DC, Maryland and Virginia metro area; and immigration attorney Varney Taylor of the Taylor Law Firm in Washington DC for his support in legal matters.
I pay homage to the Reverend Joseph Richards-Dedegah, who has been a teacher for more than forty years, molding minds in rural Liberia. Among his contributions to education, cousin Richards-Dedegah served as the principal of Pillar of Fire Mission, a Christian boarding school in Rivercess County operated by the Pillar of Fire Church in the United States. He also served for several years as principal of the Neegbah Public Junior High School in Neegbah, Rivercess, our home village, where I was born. He rose through the ranks to become bishop of the Pillar of Fire Church in Liberia, a position he held for two years. When I was in junior high or middle school, cousin Joseph and his wife, Mrs. Nancy Richards-Dedegah, agreed to have me live with them so that I could continue my education at Pillar of Fire Mission. However, I did not attend Pillar of Fire Mission.
I pay tribute to the late Augustine Nyepan Wolo, commonly known as Gus Wolo, a well-known and beloved Liberian member of the African community in the Sacramento, California area. He was a unifier, bringing people together through social activities. Gus, who passed suddenly in 2018, will always be missed for his care and compassion for others. I also pay tribute to the late Doeba P. Bropleh, former president of the Association of Citizens and Friends of Liberia (ACFLi), the Liberian community association in Sacramento, who is similarly remembered for his invaluable services to the community and humanity. I also celebrate the memory of my late first cousin, Colonel Mark B. Saulwah, who died suddenly in Monrovia in May 2019. A retired member of the disbanded Armed Forces of Liberia following the end of Liberia’s civil war, Mark was a colonel actively serving in the Liberia Immigration Service (LIS) during his sudden death from an apparent heat condition. He contributed to Liberia’s post-war security sector reforms and also served as a lead investigator with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) during the TRC’s war-related investigations and hearings in Liberia. He will be always missed for his love and care for family and others.
Before concluding, it is with a sense of deep gratitude to the State of California and the City of Sacramento for affording my family and me a beautiful place of refuge, since we resettled there in the 1990s during the civil war in Liberia. Thank God for His Blessings, because there have been meaningful and fulfilling relationships the Lord has enabled us to establish along the way in the Golden State. I am grateful for our Church Family at Trinity Cathedral in Sacramento, the head church for the Episcopal Church of Northern California. My three children were baptized and confirmed at Trinity by now retired Bishop Jerry Lamb during the tenure of the dynamic Dean Donald Brown, also retired, who embraced my young family and supported us so much during the period of readjustment in a new society. While there have been clergy changes at Trinity over the years, we bless the Lord for the continued presence of the Reverend Canon Lynell Walker, who has remained engaged with my family. Canon Lynell is an amazing priest, who has been actively involved in the lives of my children.
I am well appreciative of the Liberian community in Sacramento, for the strong spirit of togetherness, especially during times of crisis. The University of California, Davis (UC Davis) also deserves a special commendation, as it was the UC Davis Immigration Legal Aid Clinic that provided free immigration legal service to my wife and me when I fled Liberia during the civil war. My daughter Yarvoh was an infant when we used to visit UC Davis campus for our immigration appointments. How notable that in June 2019, Yarvoh received the degree of Bachelor of Science with a major in Psychology with an Emphasis in Biology from UC Davis, a world-class university.
It is also fitting to acknowledge a few other individuals for the friendship and love that they share with my family. These include the following: Mr. Richard and Mrs. Maimah Barclay Cunningham, Mr. Willie and Mrs. Blessing Iyasarie, Mr. Agabus and Mrs. Leanette Adorkor Dahn, Mr. David and Mrs. Elizabeth Moore, Mr. Dickson and Mrs. Kormassah Kollie George, Ms. Evelyn Vongon, Mr. Trokon and Mrs. Elizabeth Richards, Mr. Kolleh and Mrs. Wohma King, Ms. Jennifer Thompson, Mr. Mwah Polson, Apostle MacDonald Jaa, Minister Tim and Mrs. Minor Tor Wulah, Ms. Evelyn Mende, Mr. Silvest Morris, Ms. Christina Bindu Hunter, Mr. Ben Nmah, and one of my favorite friends, Alex Dee.
Finally, bless the Lord for spiritual leaders who have provided spiritual guidance for me to be grounded in the things of God. Those include the Reverend Canon John T. W. Harmon, rector and pastor of Trinity Episcopal Church in Washington DC (my church home away from home), as well as Apostle Seth Baah and his wife, Minister Priscilla Baah, of Dominion Chapel, Full Gospel Ministries in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Apostle Baah is a famous Ghanaian gospel musician. The impact of his gospel music is felt across Africa, Europe, United States, and other parts of the world.
Words are inadequate to express gratitude for what the Lord has done and continues to do for me and my family. When God is with us, who can be against us?
A NOTE TO READERS
In 2009, British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) world affairs correspondent Mark Doyle took a journey across Africa to ask people the question Why is Africa poor?
for a BBC radio documentary series. During his journey, which took him to South Sudan, Liberia, Nigeria, and Kenya, people explored the impact that both non-Africans and Africans had had on why Africa is poor.
In a report regarding his journey, Doyle said, I was asked to investigate why it is that the vast majority of African countries are clustered at or near the bottom of the United Nations Development Index—in other words they have a pretty appalling standard of living
(Why Is the African Continent Poor?,
BBC News, August 24, 2009, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8215083.stm).
The effects of colonialism and civil wars were among some of the major problems identified by those from diverse backgrounds who were interviewed on the question why Africa is poor. Nevertheless, there was one notable answer that was pretty much a chorus as to why Africa is poor, and that was corruption.
Every African I met, who was not actually in government, blamed corrupt African leaders for their plight,
Doyle stated in his report. He quoted a fisherman on the shores of Lake Victoria who complained that the gap between the rich and the poor in Africa is still growing.
He added, Our leaders, they just want to keep on being rich. And they don’t want to pay taxes.
Also interviewed for the documentary series was President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who was then Liberia’s and Africa’s first democratically elected female president. In January 2018, following two successive terms of office covering a period of twelve years, President Sirleaf was succeeded by George Manneh Weah, a retired global soccer icon.
In her interview for the documentary series, President Sirleaf said she had underestimated the level of corruption in Liberia when she took office. Maybe I should have sacked the whole government when I came to power,
she said.
Africa is not poor,
President Sirleaf added, it is poorly managed.
The BBC survey and the interview with President Sirleaf, as reported, are instructive and informative relative to how corruption is a major source of bad governance, widespread poverty, and instability in Africa. It is in view of the foregoing that this book is titled Corruption Is Destroying Africa: The Case of Liberia. This is part of my quest to understand in a larger scheme of things why Liberia or Africa continues to be poor in the midst of abundant natural resources.
This book is intended to contribute to the ongoing discourse about Liberia or Africa that has often left people perplexed. According to a 2013 World Bank report, Africa has 30 percent of the world’s minerals and proven oil reserves equivalent to 10 percent of global stock. How is it that Africa, which has such enormous mineral and oil wealth, is the poorest continent in the world?
A similar question would suffice for Liberia, which became independent since 1847 and has been a sovereign nation for over 170 years, but it is ranked as one of the poorest countries in the world. This is irrespective of the fact that the country is endowed with abundant natural resources. Accordingly, I herewith submit that Africa or Liberia is not poor but poorly managed and that corruption is a major source of bad governance, widespread poverty, and instability on the continent.
While spending the 2017 Christmas holidays with my family in Sacramento, California, during which I also worked on this book, it was interesting, as always, to get the perspectives of my wife, Neiko Irene Williams, and children on global issues, especially relating to Liberia and Africa or people of color.
My son, whom I would not name because he serves in the US military, was born in Liberia before the start of that country’s civil war in 1989, which was why he was brought to the United States as a juvenile. A sergeant in the US military as of this publication, his early upbringing in Liberia, where he has revisited, has helped to shape his perspectives regarding Liberia, Africa, and people of color.
Yarvoh Williams, my daughter, was born in California in the 1990s, after Neiko and I were blessed by the grace of God to resettle and get married in one of the most beautiful and developed parts of the world when we fled from the state of terror in our homeland. Yarvoh, who has visited Liberia and is also being nurtured with African values, graduated on June 15, 2019 from the University of California at Davis (UC Davis), where she earned the degree of Bachelor of Science with a major in Psychology with an Emphasis in Biology, commonly called psychobiology or biopsychology. As of this publication, she is preparing for enrollment in medical school.
It was during one of those family discussions, while we were trying to wrap our minds around some of the challenges confronting Africa, that Yarvoh recommended to me and later assisted me to access online a copy and reviews of the book Why Nations Fail: The Origin of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty. She thought that I would find the book insightful in my quest to understanding why Liberia and Africa as a whole have continued to lag behind the rest of the world in progress.
Indeed, the book is an eye-opener on why some nations fail and why others succeed, which also explains why some countries are poor and other are prosperous. Why Nations Fail was first published in 2012 by Turkish American economist Daron Acemoglu from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and British political scientist James A. Robinson from the University of Chicago.
The book applies insights from institutional economics, development economics, and economic history to understand why nations develop differently, with some succeeding in the accumulation of power and prosperity and others failing. The authors also try to examine which factors are responsible for the political and economic success or failure of states.
The authors use as an example the Korean Peninsula, which is divided into two countries: the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) (commonly known as North Korea) and South Korea. Since they were divided in 1953, both countries’ economies have diverged completely, with South Korea becoming one of the richest countries in Asia, while North Korea remains among the poorest.
To illustrate their point as to which part of the Korean Peninsula is rich or poor, the authors encourage readers to look at the peninsula at night, and the answer would be obvious: South Korea has a lot of light or electricity, while North Korea is mostly dark. A plausible explanation for North Korea being in darkness is because North Koreans do not have access to the types of technologies like electricity and power that the South Koreans do, and that enormously restricts their economic potential.
It is the considered opinion of the authors that the difference between rich countries and poor countries is that poor countries like North Korea tend to have much worse technology than rich countries. They also note that poor countries have much less educated people, much less healthy people who live shorter lives, and have much worse public services and infrastructure.
I would like to further illustrate the above point from an African context by interjecting my personal experience with a comparison of the Ghanaian capital, Accra, and the Liberian capital, Monrovia. In 2011, I boarded a flight from the United States to Liberia via Brussels, Belgium, and Accra, which was the last stop before Monrovia. The flight out of Accra to Monrovia was during the night.
When the plane took off and flew over Accra, passengers could see lights across the city below—a spectacular view, which was a reflection of Ghana’s progress in modernization. About two hours later, the plane landed in Monrovia, which was mostly dark. As the pilot announced that we had landed in Monrovia, which was recovering from a destructive civil war, one of the two passengers seated in front of me looked through the window and said to the other, The place is so dark you can hardly see anything. I can’t believe this is Monrovia. It’s like a village.
Since the end of Liberia’s civil war up to this publication, many Liberians who can afford the cost often travel to Ghana for advanced medical treatment, while Liberia’s health care system has remained in a state of dysfunction. The rate of hypertension among Liberians appears to be at a crisis level. Because of the lack of adequate medical care, many able-bodied men and women, young and old, are being struck down by stroke and heart attack at alarming proportions. The impact of the deadly Ebola Virus Disease epidemic, which spread to several West African countries with Liberia the worst affected, reflects the terribly poor state of Liberia’s health system.
In Why Nations Fail, the authors argue that most of the resources in poor countries that could be used for infrastructural development and improvement in the living conditions of the people are wasted.
They also argue that poor countries and rich countries are organized in different ways. The organization in rich countries creates incentives and opportunities for people, while most poor countries are organized in ways that block incentives and opportunities, and that creates poverty.
Authors Acemoglu and Robinson support their thesis by comparing country case studies. They identify many of the countries that are similar in the above-mentioned factors but become more or less prosperous because of different political and institutional choices. These examples include the United States, which is more prosperous than its neighbor Mexico to the south, as well as several African countries like Zimbabwe and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), which are among the poorest countries in the world, although they are highly endowed with natural resources.
For example, among a wealth of other metals, the DRC is known to have more than half of the world’s cobalt, an essential ingredient in the batteries that power mobile phones and electric cars. According to Reuters News Agency, the DRC is Africa’s top copper producer and mines more than 60 percent of the world’s cobalt. The DRC, which is also regarded to be one of the world’s richest countries in natural resources, has continued to languish as one of the poorest countries in Africa and the world.
Thus, Acemoglu and Robinson’s major thesis is that economic prosperity depends above all on the inclusiveness of political and economic institutions. They note that institutions are inclusive
when many people have a say in political decision-making, as opposed to cases where a small group of people control political institutions and are unwilling to change. The authors argue that inclusive institutions promote economic prosperity because they provide an incentive structure that allows talents and creative ideas to be rewarded.
In contrast, the authors describe extractive
institutions as ones that permit the elite to rule over and exploit others, extracting wealth from those who are not in the elite. Nations with a history of extractive institutions have not prospered, they argue, because entrepreneurs and citizens have fewer incentives to invest and innovate.
Like many other African countries, Liberia, which is recovering as a failed state following nearly fifteen years of brutal and devastating civil wars, has continued to exhibit the symptoms that are responsible for why a country is poor.
The Story of the Foolish and Wise Builders
In Matthew 7:24 of the Holy Bible, our Lord Jesus Christ tells an interesting parable of the wise and foolish builders. In that account, there was a wise man who built his house on a rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock.
On the hand, the foolish man built his house on sand. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.
The biblical tale of the house built on sand that fell with a great crash is akin to what happened to Liberia. The country was built on a faulty foundation, where an elite minority discriminated against and exploited the vast majority the population for over 130 years. Even though the constitution and system of government of Africa’s oldest independent republic was modeled on the US system of government to ensure checks and balances, the rule of law, and accountability, these were nothing more than mere concepts on paper and in name. In real life, while the constitution and laws of the land gathered dust on bookshelves, the rule of men prevailed over the rule of law and democratic governance. State institutions like the national legislature and the judiciary, which are supposed to serve as checks and balances with the executive branch of the government, were weak at best and dysfunctional at worst.
Successive Liberian leaders failed to fully utilize the opportunities that have existed, including the period of economic boom, to ensure infrastructural development and economic growth. Besides the capital, Monrovia, and a few other cities, most parts of Liberia lack electricity and pipe-borne water. Health and educational facilities are limited or inaccessible to people in many rural parts even though the people were forced and sometimes abused to pay taxes to their government that failed to provide basic services for them.
Across the continent, many African leaders have flagrantly violated the laws and constitutions of their respective countries by hanging on to power for decades amid widespread corruption to the detriment of those countries and their peoples. Forcing despots out of power have often led to violence, bloodshed, destruction, and economic hardship for the defenseless masses.
For Liberia or Africa to ensure sustainable growth and development, there is a need for leaders with broad-minded wisdom, courage, and vision to bring about the much-desired transformation.
PREFACE
In August 2006, about seven months after the government of Liberia and Africa’s first democratically elected president—Madam Ellen Johnson Sirleaf—assumed power in Liberia, I represented the government at a two-week program, which was the Third Seminar for African Press Officials, sponsored by the State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China. The seminar brought together government press officials from various African countries and China in order to develop strong media partnership and coordination in information exchange and dissemination. The program was aimed at how China and Africa could better work together to counter some of the many negative reports in the Western media regarding the People’s Republic of China and African countries.
The seminar took place about three months following my relocation to Liberia from the United States, where I had lived in exile for a decade after fleeing Liberia’s brutal and barbaric civil war due to death threats. I was fortunate to be among a small group of Liberians of diverse professional backgrounds recruited from abroad by the new president to serve in various capacities in the government, which hit the ground running in terms of instituting aggressive reforms to rebuild the war-torn country.
As the Assistant Minister for Information Services at the Ministry of Information, Culture Affairs, and Tourism (MICAT), my responsibilities included devising communication strategies and providing leadership in the planning and execution of public information dissemination and also serving as a prominent government spokesman. MICAT is the official state agency responsible to regulate the media and disseminate government information to the general public, as well as provide oversight for tourism and cultural activities in Liberia.
The program—which enabled the African press officials to travel to several parts of that beautiful, vast, and most populated country in the world (including its capital, Beijing)—was attended by ministers, deputy and assistant ministers, as well as directors of information or communications from more than a dozen African countries, which included Cape Verde, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Mozambique, Namibia, Kenya, Botswana, Lesotho, Libya, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
The program began in the city of Shenzhen, one of the most industrialized areas in the world, which is separated from Hong Kong by the Shenzhen River. As we shuttled from one part to the other of that beautiful, awe-inspiring city, we learned that Shenzhen was an underdeveloped market town with not more than thirty thousand inhabitants until the city was designated as China’s first special economic zone (SEZ) around 1979 or 1980.
Since then, Shenzhen has become one of the leading financial centers in China, home to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange and headquarters of several Chinese multinational high-tech companies. According to the 2017 World Population Review, the town that was once home to just thirty thousand residents has grown to a metropolis that boasts an urban population of over ten million in 2016. During our visit, we learned that the city was inhabited by a predominately young population, attracted by the high-tech industry.
As we toured world-class industrial facilities and other places of interest around the city, the conversations among us, the African delegates, became increasingly focused on how Africa continues to lag behind the rest of the world, like the continent of Asia or China as a country, due to lack of strong visionary leadership that would focus on reforms and infrastructural development that are geared toward improvement in the conditions of the people.
It was clear to us that China, which until the 1970s was similarly as poor and underdeveloped as many parts of Africa, was able to attain the level of progress that marveled us because the country’s leadership was able to successfully tap into the country’s natural and human resources. From the briefings that we attended at various places, we learned a bit about policies and programs, including economic programs, instituted by the Chinese leadership that have generated major trickle-down effects in terms of the empowerment and improvement of the lives of ordinary Chinese citizens.
While we talked and discussed about the economic and technological power that Africa could become, considering the continent’s abundant natural resources, one African colleague made a sad comment that struck me and has remained vividly in my memory, especially whenever reflecting on the seemingly endless problems that have hindered Liberia’s and Africa’s progress. With a look of disappointment, he shook his head and said, My heart bleeds for Africa!
There was a momentary silence on the bus in the wake of his comment.
In their book Why Nations Fail, authors Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson argue that even though the People’s Republic of China has a centralized political system under the Chinese Communist Party, the country’s economic growth was jump-started with the introduction in the 1980s of inclusive economic institutions in the rural economy that spread to the industrial sector. This was intended to create incentives and opportunities.
According to the authors, in the 1970s, China was an incredibly poor and technologically backward economy, which started moving economic institutions in the more inclusive direction during the leadership of Chairman Deng Xiaoping. The authors note that moving toward a more inclusive economy spurred the very rapid economic growth and technological advancement of China.
Africa needs leaders who will think and act like Deng Xiaoping in terms of creating the enabling environment to develop inclusive economic institutions that would have trickle-down effects on the vast mass of the population, empower the people, and lead to economic growth.
Africa Yearns for Visionary Leaders
The level of development or progress in any country is measured by the vision of its leaders and the productivity of its people. This is true, for example, of countries like Ghana and Rwanda, which are attaining appreciable progress due to visionary leadership, and countries like Liberia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), which have struggled through conflicts and are among the poorest countries in the world largely because of corrupt leadership.
In the Holy Bible, Proverbs 29:18 (KJV) states, Where there is no vision the people perish …
Africa cannot move forward without leaders with the vision to empower the people to bring out their innovation and entrepreneurship. The need to focus on entrepreneurship and capital investment as the engine for sustainable growth and development in Africa cannot be overemphasized. The Chinese understand this principle that sustainable development comes through empowerment of the people by instituting visionary policies and programs to yield benefits that will percolate or trickle down to the people.
According to the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, as of 2014, thirty-four out of fifty countries classified as least developed countries
are in Africa. The nagging question surrounding this puzzling state of affairs is, why is it that many African countries, even though endowed with abundant natural resources, continue to be so poor? Simple answers to the question include corruption and other manifestations of poor governance.
Given these challenges, it goes without saying that Africa has been faced with a crisis of governance. And this is why the poverty rate on the continent has continued to remain very high. Install systems of good governance—such as proper management of public resources, adherence to the rule of law, and adequate provision of basic services—and the livelihood of the masses would improve. Empower the people through education, skills training, and job opportunities; and you will find people being lifted out of power because of the trickle-down effects of the economic benefits. You can also be assured of a continent with high prospects for accelerated economic growth when there is value added to Africa’s abundant natural resources through the establishment of local industries. Similarly, hunger would be eliminated in Africa when African countries institute robust agricultural programs to boost food production.
What separates the African people from people in North America, Europe, or Asia is not necessarily race or religion, but opportunity and the lack thereof.
In order for Africa to measure up and equally compete with the rest of the developed world, science and technological innovations are critical to the continent’s growth. Hence, the need to build Africa’s capacity through science and technology cannot be overemphasized.
Let me, however, hasten to indicate that this publication by no means seeks to create an impression that it is all gloom and doom in Africa. It is pleasing to note that despite the challenges, progress has been steady in several African countries, such as Namibia, Ghana, and Rwanda, where there have been encouraging leadership efforts to strengthen democracy and the rule of law, create economic opportunities, build capacity through education, skills training, employment, and other incentives to empower the people.
As then US president Barack Obama declared while attending the Global Entrepreneurship Summit during his historic visit to Kenya on July 25, 2015, Africa is on the move, Africa is one of the fastest growing regions in the world
(Obama Says ‘Africa is on the move,’
AFP, July 25, 2015).
Indeed, Africa is on the move. President Obama was on point when he said that people are being lifted out of poverty, incomes are up, the middle class is growing, and young people are harnessing technology to change the way Africa is doing business.
Nevertheless, while the continent is on the move and many are being lifted out of poverty, majority of Africans have been feeing left behind, stuck in the mud of limited opportunity and poverty, so to speak. The benefits of the economic gains have yet to trickle down fast enough to the masses, who are mostly the less fortunate. It is that feeling of hopelessness and destitution that have in recent years driven tens of thousands of Africans, mostly young people, including unaccompanied minors, from various parts of the continent to risk their lives attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea into Europe in rickety boats. Feeling dispossessed and desperate for a better future, thousands of unfortunate migrants and refugees have perished in the Sahara and drowned at sea trying to make the treacherous journey to Europe.
The Need to Involve Diaspora Africans in Africa’s Development
With the reported rise of nationalism and right-wing extremist political activities based on racism and other acts of discrimination in Europe, the United States, and other parts of the world, Africans and people of color and African descent have come under attack in these places. Reports abound of how African families have been uprooted, shattered, humiliated, and reduced to poverty due to challenges related to immigration policies being instituted in recent years. If the enabling environment existed in African countries where Africans in the diaspora could return home and live with the quality of life they enjoy abroad, many of them may not choose to remain abroad and continue to suffer humiliation.
Many accomplished or prosperous Africans in the diaspora usually express how they yearn to return home with their knowledge and resources to give back to their people, but they are hindered or discouraged by the systems of bad governance at home. At a time Africa has been faced with a crisis of unemployment among young people, the hundreds of millions of dollars in remittances from Africans in the diaspora to families and other causes back home have helped to sustain the economies of those countries. Thanks to the remittances, millions of families in various parts of Africa, among them the poorest, are able to keep a roof over their heads and provide food, medical care, and education to their children, among others.
It is also about time African countries adopt liberal immigration policies and programs to create the enabling environment that would encourage more African Americans and people of African descent in Europe and other parts of the world to easily immigrate to Africa and settle in any country as they wish. African Americans are the most advanced and prosperous among the people of African descent in the world. The transfer of knowledge and resources to Africa by people of African descent in the diaspora would be mutually beneficial in terms of empowerment of the people as well as connectivity of people, better understanding, and expansion of African American businesses in the African markets. We must seek to overcome the ignorance and break the artificial barriers that divide us as a people.
This is why there can be no question that Africa will truly rise when there is adherence to good governance and the rule of law, combined with economic benefits that would percolate or trickle down to the ordinary people. Africa will surely rise when young Africans have access to quality education with a focus on science and technological innovations that would enable them to compete globally, aspire to the best of their possibilities, and enjoy the benefits of a decent modern living condition.
An Urgent Need for African Empowerment
As then president Obama indicated in his 2010 State of the Union address, In the twenty-first century, the best anti-poverty program around is a world-class education.
There is a need for educational programs that would also focus on entrepreneurship as well as apprenticeship training for the less educated. These programs, alongside robust agricultural ventures to boost food production, would be in the right direction to lift Africans out of poverty. That is what would help empower the people and create the momentum for Africa to move faster or leap ahead in development.
Africa does not necessarily need aid and handouts from the outside world. What Africans need most is the opportunity to aspire to the best of their human potentials and capabilities so as to enable them to be lifted from the valley of despair toward the mountain of hope and opportunity, where they would be empowered to fully compete globally.
Mr. James E. Cooper, a forward-thinking dear friend of mine who is an entrepreneur in the rubber business in Liberia, shared with me on social media a quote attributed to President Paul Kagame of Rwanda, who has emerged to be regarded as one of Africa’s farsighted and innovative leaders. President Kagame is quoting as saying, I would rather argue, that we need to mobilize the right mind-set, rather than more funding. After all, in Africa, we have everything we need, in real terms. Whatever is lacking, we have the means to acquire. And yet we remain mentally married to the idea that nothing can get moving, without external finance …
Speaking at the 2018 Oxford Africa Conference at Oxford University, England, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo of Ghana, who is also emerging as one of Africa’s farsighted and eloquent leaders, articulated a similar thought regarding Africa. According to President Akufo-Addo, Africa is endowed with immense natural resources—every mineral mankind requires to run a modern economy—and that the continent is in possession of 30 percent of the earth’s remaining mineral resources. Unfortunately, he noted, Africans are poor amid huge infrastructural deficit because of the economic structure based on the exportation of Africa’s natural resources, importation of manufactured products from abroad, and dependence on foreign aid. He emphasized the need to create the enabling economic environment in Africa to add value to the continent’s natural resources, which would generate more employment and economic prosperity for the African people.
President Akufo-Addo intoned that Africa must be developed and become known for prosperity and opportunities rather than poverty and despair. He added that Africa cannot afford a slow period of growth because so much time has been lost; and the continent’s dynamic, restless young population, who demand and deserve the best in the world, are not in the mood to wait for the dividends from a slow progress, as their trek across the Sahara Desert has vividly illustrated.
Indeed, it is about time that Africa, one of the world’s most endowed continents with natural resources, concentrates more on the establishment of light and heavy manufacturing industries to add value to the natural resources so as to generate more employment and revenue and empower the people. This is the only way the economic benefits will have trickle-down effects on the entire population, including the less fortunate living in conditions of poverty. The traditional focus on the exportation of natural resources out of Africa has seriously undermined the progress of the continent and reduced African countries to nothing more than recipients of foreign aid.
As an example of what Africa needs to consolidate economic gains, Mr. Cooper, who is chief executive officer (CEO) of the Cooper Rubber Farm Processing Plant in Bomi County, Liberia, has been struggling to establish the first rubber manufacturing industry in the country, with a focus on manufacturing vehicle tires, gloves, and other latex products for sanitary and medical purposes and others. As the company expands its operations, more people, who are mostly based in that rural part of Liberia, have opportunity for skills development and employment.
It may be interesting to note that since Firestone Natural Rubber Company (headquartered in Akron, Ohio, United States) began operation in Liberia in 1926 and was once the world’s largest rubber plantation, Liberia has not been able to boast of a single rubber processing plant to produce even gloves. The raw material, like virtually all natural resources of the country, is exported abroad.
To ensure sustainable peace and progress, efforts must be directed at adding value to Africa’s natural resources and containing the cancer of corruption and other vestiges of bad governance that have long kept African countries and the African people from reaching their full potentials.
Since my China trip, I have served in other capacities over the past twelve years of the Sirleaf administration, such as the Deputy Minister for Public Affairs at the Ministry of Information and finally assuming a diplomatic post at the Embassy of the Republic of Liberia in the United States. During this period of public service, I have experienced what is achievable in terms of progress under a leadership that has a vision and subscribes to the tenets of good governance and the rule of law. I have also sadly experienced how bad governance, as manifested by corruption and other vices, has interrupted or stalled progress.
There can be no contradiction that bad governance and a lack of visionary leadership are a major source of poverty and underdevelopment in Liberia and Africa in general. There can also be no question that visionary leadership is critical for Africa’s development.
While using Liberia as the context for this publication, I hasten to note that it is also an attempt to delve into issues that are crosscutting in African countries, such as common problems related to inadequate or poor infrastructure and public services, high unemployment, corruption, and mismanagement of public resources, among others, which have negatively impacted the quality of life of the people across the continent.
From the Liberian experience, I hope those familiar with the African reality would see some of the common threads of how poor governance, as exemplified by corruption, is the main culprit for the underdevelopment, instability, bloodshed, destruction, and poverty in Africa. There can be no question that the last major hurdle to Africa’s breakthrough is corruption.
As Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, legendary Pan-Africanist and first president of Ghana, once said, Africa is rich and not poor. It is Africans who are poor, not Africa.
As indicated earlier, over the past twelve years in public service, I have experienced a country that showed significant progress during a period when the resources were being properly managed; and I have also experienced progress being stalled in the national rebuilding process due to the mismanagement of public resources.
Because of Madam President’s effective leadership during her first term and thanks to the very strong support from international partners, war-torn Liberia achieved impressive growth and development and became one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies. For example, in 2010, Liberia was one of the twelve fastest-growing economies in the world, with a projected growth rate of 7.53 percent, according to the Economy Watch news outlet.
This notable achievement, as you will read in this book, was because of the implementation of policies and programs in keeping with the principles of good governance. Under the guidance of the international community, accountability in the management of public resources was put in place. As a result, corruption was under control, and the country achieved surplus in its foreign reserves.
On the other hand, as Liberians assumed full control of the administration of financial matters when the direct involvement of international partners ended, the country began to stray away from adherence to the principles of good governance. Even though the president, a proven competent leader, was backed by a leadership team comprising some of the brightest minds and highly experienced administrators, failure to adhere to the requirements of good governance undermined Liberia’s progress. Accordingly, corruption became the order of the day as the president basically acknowledged losing the war on corruption in the twilight of her administration.
Reporting on the state of the nation in her last annual message to the Joint Session of the National Legislature on January 23, 2017, President Sirleaf said, We have not fully met the anti-corruption pledge that we made in 2006. It is not because of the lack of political will to do so, but because of the intractability of dependency and dishonesty cultivated from years of depravation and poor governance.
During her inauguration in 2006, President Sirleaf had declared war on corruption as public enemy number one, which must be contained in order to accelerate national progress.
While Liberia was grappling with a serious economic crisis blamed largely on corruption and a decline in global commodity prices that negatively affected the country, President Sirleaf turned over the affairs of Liberia to newly elected president George Manneh Weah, a global soccer legend. The inauguration, which took place on January 22, 2018, was a historic moment in Liberia because it was the first time in more than seventy years for a peaceful transition from an incumbent administration to a newly elected government.
On January 29, 2018, in his first state of the nation address to the Joint Session of the National Legislature upon assuming office, President Weah announced that his government inherited a country that was broke. President Weah said, Our economy is broken, our government is broke, our currency is in freefall, inflation is rising, unemployment is at an unprecedented high, and our foreign reserves are at an all-time low.
In the absence of proper utilization of the country’s resources, Liberia’s progress has been gravely hindered, and the government’s efforts to ensure poverty reduction have yet to achieve the desired results.
Nevertheless, one of the positive things for which Madam President will be remembered is for ensuring twelve years of uninterrupted peace and for the promotion of freedom of speech and of the press during her tenure. Underscoring efforts her government had made to maintain the peace in fragile Liberia in her last address to the Joint Session of the National Legislature on January 23, 2017, President Sirleaf said, We have young people who have never known war or civil conflict. We have young people who have not had to run, hide or cower in their homes. We have thousands of children back in school. We have farmers who have returned to their villages, refugees and professionals who are returning home. This peace is our greatest triumph.
This book project was undertaken for a period of six years, beginning in 2013, one year after the start of the second term of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberia’s and Africa’s first democratically elected female president. The initial focus of the book was to tell the success story of a country that was experiencing major reforms and commendable transformation since the international intervention under the auspices of the United Nations (UN) to end the bloody and destructive civil war that reduced Liberia to a failed and pariah state.
Despite some shortcomings, the first term of Madam President was mostly successful in getting war-torn Liberia back on the road to recovery. Liberia’s economy became one of the fastest growing in the world as the country regained its place as a respectable member of the international community, as well as a rare success story in international partnership under the auspices of the UN.
However, at the time she left office in 2018, the gains that had been made in postwar Liberia were threatened to be reversed because the country was literally consumed by corruption, which is the source of bad governance, poverty, and instability in Liberia and in Africa, as you will read throughout this book. The aftermath of the deadly Ebola pandemic, characterized by Liberia’s economic decline, compelled the need to reconsider the original focus of the book, which was to highlight Liberia as a postwar success, a country that was building upon the gains made in good governance and infrastructural development to lift its citizens out of poverty and empower them.
I first changed the focus of the book following the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) epidemic in several West African countries, of which Liberia was worst affected. I had determined that focusing on the Ebola pandemic would highlight the extreme poverty, limited or none existent health infrastructure, and weak governance, which intensified the deadly impact of the disease, especially in Liberia.
However, I decided against the use of the Ebola pandemic as the book’s main theme, thanks to the advice from my media colleague and friend for thirty years, Mr. Bill Berkeley, an American journalist with more than a decade reporting on African affairs for The Atlantic Monthly, The New Republic, the New York Times Magazine and The Washington Post. After a review of some of my manuscript, he advised that I shoud not focus only on the Ebola crisis because the world’s attention would be drawn to other developments and public interest would wane once the Ebola pandemic was contained in West Africa.
An investigative reporter with The New York Times, Berkeley is the author of the book, Liberia: A Promised Betrayed: A Report on Human Rights, published in 1986 by the U.S.-based Lawyers’ Committee for Human Rights. I was a young journalist becoming actively involved in the ongoing advocacy and struggle for free speech and democratic governance in Liberia when Bill came to the country to conduct investigation for the book, which provides extensive details of the widespread human rights abuses during the despotic regime of Samuel Doe. After the book was published, the Doe regime banned its distribution in Liberia, while General Charles Julu, a notorious perpetrator singled out for perpetrating some egregious acts of brutality, threatened that he could not guarantee Berkeley’s safety if he returned to Liberia. In the wake of threats from the regime because of the book, I wrote Bill a letter to alert him of these developments. He never returned to Liberia until 1992 during the civil war, following Doe’s death and the collapse of his brutal regime. Berkeley’s visit was part of another investigation for his most recent book, The Graves Are Not Yet Full: Race, Tribe and Power in the Heart of Africa, published in 2001. The book examines racial or ethnic conflicts in Africa, with a focus on Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo (previously known as Zaire), South Africa, Sudan, Uganda and Rwanda. Mr. Berkeley also teaches writing at Columbia University’s graduate school of International and Public Affairs.
Meanwhile, as corruption became