Browsing posts in "africa"
Aug
27

Bash1r’s Kenya Visit

By nate  //  africa, politics, sudan  //  No Comments

Today was Kenya’s big constitutional promulgation ceremony, which is being touted as the biggest day for this nation since independence. A potential headline stealer today (and rightly so) is becoming the arrival and involvement of al-Bash1r in the festivities. He not only came, and not only sat in the VIP section, but released white doves.

WSJ says:

“Kenya’s decision to invite Mr. Bash1r to Nairobi could strain the country’s relations with Western donors. The U.S. and European nations have said that Mr. Bash1r should appear before the International Criminal Court.

On Friday, the panel of three judges handling Mr. Bash1r’s case released a statement noting that Kenya “has a clear obligation to cooperate with the Court.” The judges said they would immediately inform the United Nations Security Council “in order for them to take any measure they may deem appropriate.” The court cannot force states to comply with its directives.”

There is a lot I could say about this, but probably shouldn’t in the venue. Hopefully, you can read between the lines and figure out why this should make America think about our current foreign policy and our involvement in the UN which spends billions making directives it has no power (or intention?) to enforce!

via Full article – WSJ.coml

Jul
28

Kenya votes!

By nate  //  africa, politics  //  Comments Off

Today, Kenya is voting on a new constitution. Please pray for peace and a good representation of the will of the people. The last country-wide election caused widespread violence. Please pray that peace would reign in this country, regardless of whether the “YES’s or “NO”s win.

Uchaguzi ::: compiled [sometimes unverified!] individual accounts of today’s events

BBC ::: Kenya’s constitution referendum.

Jul
13

Uganda bombing

By nate  //  africa, life  //  Comments Off

Sunday night, during the World Cup final, three apparent suicide bombings in two venues killed over 70 people in the Ugandan capital of Kampala. This attack hits close to home for a couple of reasons: It is the first follow-through on threats from certain Mus1im organizations to attack civilian interests in the capitals of those East African countries partnering with the AU (African Union). AIMAir also has a base in Entebbe, the sister city to Kampala, where I have spent many nights. The one American killed, Nate Henn, was a volunteer with the organization, Invisible Children, which raises awareness about child soldiers here in Africa.

Please pray for all the families of those killed and injured. Please also pray for those of the mindset of those who perpetrated this attack. Our struggle is not against flesh and blood. The blindness and hopelessness of a religious system that encourages this, is ultimately as horrifying for those involved in it as well as those affected by their actions. Please also pray for followers of Christ working in this part of Africa. We need supernatural protection, wisdom and courage.

Jun
4

the money spent

By nate  //  Does aid help?, africa  //  Comments Off

The world spends massive amounts of money in Africa on ‘aid’. Note: For the purpose of these posts, I am calling ‘aid’ the  voluntary (more or less) transfer of resources to countries with the said purpose of benefiting the receiving country.

Let’s begin by looking at the numbers as they add important context to this discussion. We will come back to the numbers again at the end. Finding even an approximate total for the amount spent on ‘aid’ is impossible because of the thousands of  different agencies, organizations and individuals spending money here. There are 4 main groups I see spending money here in Africa with the said purpose of benefiting Africans: the United Nations (UN), most countries’ aid arms, private grants/foundations and faith-based organizations. Collectively, they spend tens of billions of dollars annually on this continent. Here is a basic overview those four groups and the money spent on ‘aid’:

1) The UN is, by far, the biggest spender in Africa. The exact amount they spend annually is difficult to determine, as the UN budget is complex and money is spent by a web of interconnected programs and agencies. (Remember, the UN budget is paid for by contributing nations, determined by GDP. The US contributes 22% of the UN’s budget ($598 million in 2009), Japan contributes about 17% and from there contribution percentages drop off rapidly.)

Their website lists the annual UN budget at just over $4 billion. That, perhaps, seems reasonable until you find what is not included in that figure. That figure does not include the World Food Programme (WFP), International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, UN’s Children’s Fund (UNICEF) or ‘peacekeeping’ missions. Those exclusions render the ‘annual budget’ figure meaningless. The exclusion of ‘peacekeeping’ missions got my attention because of what these missions involve. Most of these operations are massive, having the equipment, personnel and logistical chain needed for all out war. Currently the UN has 15 ‘peacekeeping’ operations worldwide, 7 of them are in Africa. The budget estimate for the 7 African peacekeeping operations is over $5 billion a year (half of that is designated for Sudan). Suffice it to say that United Nations programs spend at least $10 billion annually in Africa. The actual figure may be well above that.

2)  In addition to the UN money, many countries’ aid arms also are pouring money into Africa. The goals of these agencies are inevitably also linked to that country’s foreign policy…not to suggest the UN is free of agendas. The US Agency for International Development (USAID) is the United States’ aid arm. This year, USAID is budgeted to spend just under $100 billion dollars in other countries; $54 billion on ‘International Affairs’ and $37 billion on ‘Foreign Operations’. As you see in those budget titles, the tie between the development of the receiving country and US State Department interests makes USAID, and any other government’s ‘aid’ arm, hard to take at face value. Nevertheless, that is another untold billions of dollars coming to African countries in the form of aid, this time with obvious, though unpublicized, strings attached.

The Peace Corp is another class of organization somewhere between government aid arm and private secular aid organization. The US spends $400 million/year to fund the peace corp, which is an ‘independent federal agency’. Many other countries have organizations such as the Peace Corp.

3)  There are also a large number of private, secular organizations and foundations. These organizations are funded primarily by private donors, though some do gather government and corporate contributions. This category includes a host of individual foundations, of which The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is the most well-known and the largest contributor in this group (spending around $2 billion/ year, in order to maintain its non-profit status). This category also includes the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, which spends over $1 billion dollars annually. There are also private humanitarian relief groups such as Doctors without Borders (MSF), a crisis-response medical organization that spends about $400 million year.

4)  Then, there are ‘faith-based’ organizations. The organizations under this heading could probably be further divided into three groups:  humanitarian/crisis response organizations, long-term “mission” organizations and direct contributions through ‘aid’-type programs of some large churches.

The Christian humanitarian relief organizations include World Vision (which spends $1.1 billion annually), Compassion International ($350 million), Samaritans Purse ($300 million)  and many others. I have also seen a growing number of  what I would call “new-generation” Christian aid organizations of the  Blood Water Mission ($2-3 million) variety, which seem to strive to stay smaller and more streamlined.

Denominational (i.e. Baptists (IMB), Methodists, Pentecostal, Catholic, etc) and non-denominational (SIM, AIM, Wycliffe/SIL etc) mission organizations  are harder to track from an ‘aid’-spending standpoint. While they typically don’t spend money on dedicated relief projects, the do put considerable resources  into hospitals, clinics and schools and increasingly into development programs such as agriculture and community health training.

Conclusion:

There are thousands of organizations that fall into these categories, all moving money and resources onto this continent. If I had to guess how much ‘aid’ money is spent in Africa annually, I would put it in the $50 billion/year range. Is that too much or not enough? That debate has been raging in development policy forums since the 50’s. My hunch: The money spent might be enough. The problem might be in the methods used.

{2: the methods used}  Coming soon.

Links:

USAID’s Strategic plan for 2007-2012

Charity Navigator-tracks donations/spending of charities

An experts price tag on fixing world poverty

Pictorial view of ‘aid’ per capita

May
28

flight log

By nate  //  africa, aviation  //  Comments Off

{wilson-loki-akot-tonj}
{tonj-akot-loki}
{loki-luai-wamba-wilson}

Notes: 2 day trip turned into 3 days by big rains in Tonj. Great folks and ministry there in Tonj! It was a pleasure to meet the Kuj’s, see what’s going on and be a part of the great work they are doing.

Apr
24

Interactive Afro-celeb map!

By nate  //  africa, grab bag  //  Comments Off

These two motherjones articles are interesting. First, a fancy map which gives you an overview of which celebs are doing what and then this timeline of how Africa became ‘cool’ to Hollywood.

Bottomline: they do help raise money and awareness, but change does not come by week-long trips, PR storms, photo ops or merchandise sales.

resolutebeing

photos

Qs first safari IMG_1742 IMG_1738 IMG_1733 IMG_1730 IMG_1728

videos

UA-3993581-1