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Edward
Steen, December, 2007
A conference in March aims to help nurture an African
scientific renaissance, writes Edward Steen.
The 'Chinindia factor' – growing Chinese and Indian
investment in Africa – has helped steer western aid
in a more productive direction, according to Abdoulie Janneh,
head of the UN Economic Commission for Africa.
Speaking
to European Voice last week, Janneh, a veteran development
expert, said that both emerging economic giants had poured
funds into neglected areas of infrastructure, such as railways
in Nigeria, roads in Ethiopia and energy projects in Ghana.
"They are creating an environment that is having a real
impact in Africa. I salute their engagement," he said.
Janneh
was in Brussels to launch Science with Africa, a conference
planned for March 2008.
Its ambition
is to transform relations between the developed world and
a continent which remains painfully poor and where, in the
sub-Sahara, scarcely half the population has access to clean
water.
"No
part of the world has developed significantly without science
and technology," he said. "In Africa neither has
yet reached the level that is needed." Science with Africa
was aimed at changing that. "It will not be 'just another
conference' of aid experts preaching to the converted,"
he said.
The five-day
event in Addis Ababa to promote and consolidate strategic
research collaboration and investment will bring together
stakeholders ranging from scientists to pharmaceutical companies
and private investors, and finance ministers and parliamentarians
from all over the world.
Building
on Janneh's call at the African Union summit last January
for "a major science and technology capacity-building
initiative", Science with Africais intended to make up
for lost time and attempt to catch up with Asia and South
America, both of which experienced substantial economic and
technological development in the last 20 years.
The 'with'
in the conference title signalled a deliberate inclusion of
Africans and what they actually needed and wanted, he said,
and marked a deliberate change from development aid which
had often been misspent or sometimes knowingly given to crooks,
as in General Mobutu's Zaire, contributing to 'Africa's lost
decade' of the 1980s.
"During
the Cold War aid was often politically motivated," said
Janneh, whose last job was directing the UN Development Programme
Regional Bureau for Africa, managing activities in 45 countries
in sub-Saharan Africa and the Indian Ocean.
Science
with Africa follows on from the Connect Africa
summit in Kigali, Rwanda, in October which brought together
500 of the world's movers and shakers in information technology
to promote partnerships and start closing the yawning gaps
in Africa's ICT infrastructure.
Science
with Africa will seek to agree a new consensus on priorities
and policy opinions in research and innovation, with emphasis
on new partnerships, especially with the private sector:
"A
lot of institutions want to do collaborative research but
don't know the landscape." Africa has been haemorrhaging
some 20,000 trained professionals every year since 1990. Janneh
is keen to include this African diaspora in his efforts. Many
were interested and engaged, and wanted to help, he said.
In Ghana there was already a "medical national service"
scheme for doctors with rare skills to return home to help
without pay for three months.
Janneh
is confident the EU-Africa summit opening on 8 December in
Lisbon will endorse a similarly practical and determined approach:
establishing "partnership at the highest level"
and "not just making deals" but rather allowing
Africa to articulate the challenges it faced. Along with transport
and infrastructure, health, life sciences, agriculture, Information
and Communications Technology, and water, energy is one of
the main themes of the Science with Africa initiative: "We
do after all have enough sun in Africa," he said.
In Janneh's
view, the continent was much better governed than it had been
in the past. In his view, good governance produced an average
growth rate of 5.5% and media liberalisation and pluralism
were helping to stem the tide of corruption. "Democracy
is really giving a voice to the people," he said. "Africa
is assuming ownership of its own agenda. Afro-pessimism is
over."
©
Copyright 2007 The Economist Newspaper Limited. All rights
reserved.
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ES
Welcome Address: Public Hearing on Science
with Africa
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Concept
Summary - Science with Africa Conference
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Topics
for Discussion
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