Do UK African diaspora have a role in achieving the MDGs?

 

 

On Thursday 29th September 2011 a reception was held at the UK Parliament. The theme of the reception was

Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the Role of  the UK African Diaspora

The reception was hosted by AFRICA -UK working in partnership with Comic Relief and the Royal African Society their objectives are to

  1. to increase the role of the Diaspora in Africa’s development
  2. to ensure that the Diaspora inform debates about development priorities for Africa
  3. and to foster greater dialogue and engagement between policy makers and UK-based Africans working in development

These were the opening remarks from the organisers

In 2000, 189 nations made a promise to free people from extreme poverty and multiple deprivations. This pledge became the eight Millennium Development Goals to be achieved by 2015. In September 2010, the world recommitted itself to accelerate progress towards these goals. ‘‘At the midway point between their adoption in 2000 and the 2015 target date for achieving the MDGs, Sub-Saharan Africa is not on track to achieve any of the Goals.”(United Nations, Africa, & the Millennium Development Goals, 2007)

What is the role of Africa’s Diaspora in helping Africa accelerate and attain the MDGs by the target date of 2015?

The speaker was  Amalia Navarro from the UN Millennium Campaign. She spoke passionately and frankly about the Goals, precisely that the goals will not be met and that the UN overlooked the diaspora in that conversation.

She also seemed to be saying “Yes we messed up but we need to look beyond2015″ and was keen to engage us on what I would like to call an “the After party”

 

She asked  the question WHAT CAN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA BRING TO THE CONVERSATION ABOUT MDGs in the same breath as she said WHERE ARE THE AFRICAN DIASPORA AND WHY AREN’T THEY JOINING IN ON THE CONVERSATION?

I did wonder where she was looking for the African diaspora or whom she was talking to.

 

What I found interesting was that at least 3 people in the room asked the speaker the following questions

  1. What does the UN want from the African Diaspora?
  2. How can the African Diaspora join the conversation?
  3. What is the UN doing to engage the diaspora

But she didn’t seem to have an answer to any of those questions and instead told us to join civil societies  in order to join the conversation on MDGs and even then she could name one such society that we could all join.

I made the assumption that she meant the large NGOs but like many in the room that evening  I am not aware of any large NGOs that seek out or engage the African diaspora, do you??

As it is we are ahead of the UN we got fed up being invited to the conversation and started our own  VILLAGES IN ACTION . We have also had a conversation about what the point of the UN is. We have a very good idea as to why the MDGs will not be achieved and this is not because we have picked up a book, No we have gone back to our villages and engaged with the folk we left behind. These are the people in the know, if you take time out they will tell you how you cannot solve poverty without sacrificing the environment in some way , they see and experience environmental degradation first hand.

The question for the UN is how to reach such  folk! But it isn’t that hard really- TALK TO THE AFRICAN DIASPORA

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Time to grow your own?

African countries like any other countries are constantly on the look out for investment opportunities. What caught my eye recently is the fact unlike the usual practice of seeking out major corporations as investors  Uganda is looking at this it diaspora for her would be investors.

This is the thrid year that Uganda is  holding a diaspora investment summit and are calling it  Home is the Best Summit -3

I think this makes a lot of sense as the diaspora often send money to relatives back home which is a form of AID and has been reported to be much higher than some countries get from donor agencies. If this money were to be invested in the country I wonder how much difference that would make?

The diaspora have a great deal to contribute, in terms of skills and knowledge transfer given our unique position “in the middle” of both the west and african cultures.

The question is how well prepared are the African leaders to tap into pool of knowldge, skills and investment capacity?

[Read more...]

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Branding Africa

A little over a week ago I became aware of an initiative by Africans in the diaspora called #BrandAfrica through a twitter conversation with TMS RUGE and today I was interviewed by him in relation to the African image in the western world.

A UK based journalist called Jon Snow once said Africans are terrible at telling their story, there are so many good things going on in Africa but the Africans are not shouting about them. He should know as he spent several years in Uganda for instance and even managed to get an interview with Idi Amin and it would appear he is right

The Brand Africa project sees African in the diaspora who have had enough of the the poor representation of the continent and are taking advantage of Social media especially to tell their stories.

In the interview with TMS RUGE we spoke about the typical images of Africa, the dying children with flies and what we can do to change that. Yes granted those starving children with flies on their faces do exist however we never get to see the “after pic”

I can remember a conversation I had with a woman earlier this year in April about our project in SW Uganda and wondered whether she would be up to volunteering at teh project.

She asked what the project has got to do with me, before she went on to tell me that Africa isn’t Britain, I asked what she meant and she said well it is a different culture isn’t it? She went on to say that before she agrees to volunteer she would need to know that the set up was the same as it is in Britain specifically that the buses arrive on time?

I must admit to being lost for words for a few minutes before saying to her that we were looking for people with a great sense of adventure and wondered if she felt she met this criteria because this is what you get in Africa.

First forward to May 2009 I was at Entebbe Airport and I got into a conversation with a British man for whom this was the first visit to Africa. I asked him if he had enjoyed his visit and he said he had. I asked him whether he had had any thoughts of whatt to expect before he arrived, I nearly fell off the chair when I heard his answer ” I thought there would be animals, lions that sort of thing as soon as I got off the plain but all I saw was a monkey somewhere in the countryside”

As the conversation went on it transpired that he was not aware that the source of the River Nile was in Uganda nor was he familiar with the great explorers like Speke and Stanley.

Why is it necessary to show a different side of Africa? In my mind this is important because only then can Africa start to shake off her image of poverty, disease and be treated like an equal.  Africa offers real opportunities to the rest of the world in terms of business, culture and heritage, but these are never reported because this type of story does not sale News!

Our central message here at Ethnic Supplies is that “African women are capable of lifting themselves out of poverty and just need access to a wider market and equitable trade terms. I am not alone as far as this view is concerned, my good friend and associate Neill Kelsall of RAISE TRADE is passionate about increasing the GDP of African countries through positive PR amongst other things.

So watch this space as Africans start telling their story and I live you some images of Africa

Oh and don’t forget to visit/join our forum http://rebrandingafrica.ning.com/

Lake Bunyonyi

Lake Bunyonyi Kabale SW Uganda

Mt Elgon North Eastern Uganda

Sipi River Mt Elgon North Eastern Uganda

Antisarabe Madagascar

Lovers lake Antisarabe Madagascar

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