The remarkable economic and political progress of Cape Verde is seen
as a blueprint for the rest of Africa, writes BBC Today programme
presenter Evan Davis after a visit to the tiny island state.
I have to admit, I couldn't have told you three interesting facts
about Cape Verde until I was asked to go there for the Today programme.
I didn't know where it was - 570km (354 miles) off the coast of West Africa. I didn't even know how to pronounce its name.
And
then I found myself sent there on a three-day mission to investigate a
startling story: That sub-Saharan Africa is not just a region of
starving children and warring dictators.
The assignment was at
the behest of guest editor Mo Ibrahim who strongly feels that the
Western media portrays Africa in a monotonously negative light. Could
that really be true?
Well, my ignorance of how to pronounce Cape
Verde's name is forgivable. (I'm still not sure and have heard it
pronounced with and without an "ee" at the end of Verde.)
But is
it forgivable that I didn't know it is one of only a handful of
countries ever to have been promoted out of the UN "least developed
nation" category (up to "middle income country" status)? And that it is a
well-functioning democracy with government alternating between
different political parties?
I should have known these things, and I'm glad to say that my three-day trip more or less confirmed them.
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Young Cape Verdeans can expect far better education than their parents
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Contrary to the impression you might have had of African nations,
here is one where democracy flourishes; where a president stepped down
after two terms in office because that is what the constitution required
(take note Mr Putin) and where the opposition freely criticises the
government.
It is a country where economic growth has been
strong, where literacy is almost universal and two-thirds of the
population have a phone.
It is also a country that beats many EU countries in the Transparency International Corruptions Perceptions Index.
Now on a three-day trip, you cannot verify all these assertions but you can get a clear impression.
I
went to a square in the capital, Praia, where I saw a dozen young
people poring over their laptops, taking advantage of the free wi-fi
available in that and other squares.
I saw a tourism training
college that had been paid for by Luxembourg's aid programme. It
functioned well, there were real students there and no money had gone
missing into a Swiss bank account.
I spoke to the founder of a
small e-business called Prime Consulting, who spoke highly of the ease
with which new business could be established in the country (it takes
ten minutes he said).
Property bubbles
These facts - and my lack of awareness of them - suggest there may be something in Mo Ibrahim's point. We know the bad news about Africa, but not the good.
These facts - and my lack of awareness of them - suggest there may be something in Mo Ibrahim's point. We know the bad news about Africa, but not the good.
And given the sheer volume of bad that emanates from countries
in sub-Saharan Africa, we make generalised assumptions about the entire
population of sub-Saharan Africa.
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Evan makes use of a free wi-fi hotspot in Praia
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Many
people live in slums. The country is covered in them. The national
income per head is about a tenth of that of the UK and I didn't even get
out of the towns to see the rural poor.
In addition, some of the
recent economic growth appears to have occurred on the back of a
ridiculous holiday-property bubble. Irish, British and other investors
got overexcited and the result is that many unfinished developments
litter the main tourist island of Sal.
But still Cape Verde has
come a long way over a short period of time. It is a country that had
famines killing tens of thousands of people in the first half of the
20th Century that now worries about property bubbles.
The most
telling conversation I had there was with Samira who told me that while
her mother had not been to high school (there weren't enough of them at
the time) but she, Samira, now goes to university.
It is true
that Cape Verde is an unusual off-shore example, but before dismissing
it as the exception that proves the rule that the rest of Africa is
beyond help or hope, it is worth taking a look at the statistics for per
capita national income growth of sub-Saharan African countries over the
last decade: Ghana 104% growth; Mozambique 103%; Rwanda 119%; Sierra
Leone 99%; Tanzania 95%; Uganda 81%, to name just a few.
I'm not sure these growth rates have made it through to the public at large.
We
wouldn't want reporters to act as cheer leaders for a continent and we
don't want them to always be seeing glasses as half full. That would
perhaps stop us trying fill them to the top.
But if we only ever
see half empty glasses, that can be demotivating too. It can nurture a
dull fatalism that assumes doing anything is a waste of effort.
So
whenever you feel the wearisome drag of compassion fatigue, you can at
least remind yourself that Cape Verde does suggest progress in that part
of the world is not impossible.
Source: BBC
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