Anyone who thinks that doing much of anything about or
for Africa â “ especially sending Canadian troops and do-gooders
armed with food baskets and toys â “ needs to consider that the (relatively) 'safe' and 'stable' parts of Africa re, also, social/political basket cases.
Consider this from the International Organization for Migration â “ a multinational do-gooder organization (see: http://www.iom.int/) of which Canada is a full member.
Ghana - Severe Toll On Mental and Physical Health of Trafficked Children
The high level of trauma suffered by children trafficked for forced labour into fishing communities in Yeji in Ghana, has resulted in major physical and mental health problems for the victims, according to IOM.
IOM has so far rescued 537 children who had been sold by their impoverished parents to fishermen in Yeji, on the northern shores of Lake Volta. In February 2005, a group of 107 children were rescued and have since spent time trying to recover from their ordeals in a rehabilitation centre in Accra before being reunited with their parents at the end of the month.
Although most of the children have now been declared medically fit to return home and attend school, they will all need a minimum of two years of constant medical evaluations and treatment to fully recover. The most severe illnesses affecting the children are bilharzia, malaria, amoebiasis and chronic eye, stomach and head ailments. In addition, there is evidence of post-traumatic stress disorders, reflecting the acute trauma the children suffered during their servitude. As a result, they will need extensive counselling.
Boys were often forced to dive into Lake Volta's muddy and dangerous waters to free tangled nets and worked extremely long hours to cast and retrieve nets. Some have died in the process and almost all were regularly beaten and poorly fed.
For the 430 children who have already been reintegrated into their communities, IOM will be running two mobile clinics to provide primary healthcare services. The trauma the children suffered is still having an impact on their physical and mental health and they will need counselling and medical assistance on a regular basis for some time to come.
IOM is preparing to rescue another group of children shortly, but there is no clear picture of the extent of child trafficking into fishing communities in Ghana. Upon IOM's request, UNICEF has committed to funding two baseline research studies on child trafficking in the Central and Volta regions, both of which begin in June.
This programme, which is carried out in cooperation with the Ghanaian authorities is funded by the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM) of the US State Department.
For further information, please contact
Joseph Rispoli
IOM Accra
Tel: +233 244 975250
E-mail: jrispoli@iom.int
From Accra to Zimbabwe, black Africa is a nightmare which is slipping, inexorably, into chaos. HIV/AIDS will deprive black Africa of one or two generations of workers, thinkers, leaders, etc. The consequences of this are too horrible to contemplate from the comfort of a quiet Canadian home on a warm Canadian spring morning. But, consider this, from the BBC, (at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/4424909.stm ):
DR Congo's atrocious secret
By Hilary Andersson
BBC Africa correspondent
Despite a peace deal signed two years ago to end the long-running civil war, violence is continuing in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo. And in the province of Ituri, Hilary Andersson finds evidence of cannibalism by some rebels.
There is a part of the world where atrocities go beyond all normal bounds, where evil seems to congregate.
Almost everyone who has ever worked there will know where I am talking of.
The area is not very large on the map of Africa.
But the region in and north of the forests of central Africa has hosted Rwanda's genocide, the massacres in Burundi, the devastation of southern Sudan, the mutilations in Uganda, and the atrocities of the north-eastern Congo.
And so I had the usual feeling of dread when we flew into the area on this trip.
We left the acacia-lined, sunswept plains of east Africa and, as we approached, the sky began to darken.
We began to descend through black clouds that hugged the huge forests below.
We landed in a ferocious rainstorm in the small town of Bunia in the north-east of the Congo.
'Hole in Africa's heart'
The Congo is a vast territory, the size of western Europe.
But it has been called the hole in the heart of Africa, because much of it is a giant power vacuum.
In the north-east, at least seven warlords are locked in brutal scramble for personal power and control.
Lots of the fighters are children.
Rape is more widespread than possibly anywhere else on Earth.
And the war is not about any principle at all, violence has just moved in where there is no authority.
Mutilation
We visited a refugee camp set in a small valley, a piece of land like a basin.
Around its rims the United Nations patrolled to keep the militia out.
In an afternoon every person we spoke to, without exception, had witnessed not just killing but horrific mutilation.
The children had sunken, troubled eyes. The women looked exhausted and the men were bursting with what they had to tell.
Their relatives had their hearts ripped out, their heads cut off, their sexual organs removed.
This, it seemed, was the standard way of killing here.
Why?
You want to know why?
Yes there is war, but this is different.
This is not just killing, or taking territory.
It is deliberate mutilation on a scale that makes you reel with horror.
It reminded me of the atrocities in Bosnia, where at a certain point individuals turned into human devils, bent on doing not just the worst they could but the most atrocious.
Militia attack
We met a woman whom I will call Kavuo, not her real name.
To talk to her about her story we had to travel to a remote location in the jungle, where we could not be seen or heard by others.
What she had to speak of is an atrocity shrouded in secrecy here, an atrocity. It is taboo to even speak of it.
The events she told me about happened two years ago and hers was one of the first public testimonies of its kind.
Kavuo was on the run with her husband, her four children and three other couples.
They had spent the night in a hut, and got up in the morning to keep moving.
But they had barely left the hut when six militia men accosted them.
Kavuo and the women were ordered to lie with their faces on the ground.
The militia ordered Kavuo's husband and the other men to collect firewood.
Then the women were told to say goodbye to their husbands.
They obeyed.
The militia then began to kill the men one by one.
Kavuo's husband was third.
Her testimony is that the militia men lit a fire and put an old oil drum, cut into two, on the flames.
I will omit other details. But Kavuo says the militia cooked her husband's parts in the drums and ate them.
Beliefs perverted
Those who have studied the region say cannibalism has a history there but as a specific animist ritual, carried out only in exceptional circumstances.
What has happened now is that the war has turned Congo's society upside-down.
Warlords are exploiting this, and perverting existing beliefs for their own ends.
Fighters told us that those who carry out such acts believe it makes them stronger.
Some believe they are literally taking spiritual power from their victims. That once they have eaten, they have the power of the enemy.
These atrocities are also designed to instil utter fear into the enemy.
Anarchy
It is estimated that four million people have died in the Congo as a result of the long running war.
That is truly staggering. It is more than those killed by Cambodia's Pol Pot and more than those killed in Rwanda.
Most people have died of hunger and disease that the violence has left in its wake.
Kavuo lost four of her children to illness and malnutrition even before her husband was killed.
Now she lives in a remote village in the forest, and cannot afford to look after her surviving children.
If this is her story, imagine how many others are like it and the numbers begin to make a horrifying sort of sense.
As we flew out of the Congo, I could see the vast forests below, thick with trees, infested with malaria, and barely accessible. A huge area that few outsiders venture into an area where evils happen that are rarely reported.
The blood red sunsets, the streaks of black clouds a weird sort of echo.
Anarchy is not just a word.
In the north-eastern Congo we saw its reality.
What is happening there is proof of the scale of devastation that chaos can invite, and of the terrifying human capacity for unleashing deliberate evil on the innocent.
From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on Thursday, 7 April, 2005 at 1100 BST on BBC Radio 4. Please check the programme schedules for World Service transmission times.
A little secret, well not really a secret, just something about which words are rarely spoken: In country after country, throughout black Africa, the 'answer' is always the same â “ â Å“just several hundred, maybe a few thousand, less than 10,000 professional soldiers could solve this, that and the other problem and rescue the country." That's probably true, but there are scores of countries so that means a few thousand times, say, 35 which means that the combined strengths of the Australian, British and Canadian armies would not come anywhere near 'solving' even half the problems. Worse, even after the immediate 'problem' is solved by foreign troops there needs to be long term, very long terms, several generations long term change â “ without a shadow of a doubt, in my mind,
imposed and
supervised change.
Despite protestations, it is not clear that the Belgians were all that much worse than the French or Italians who were not too much worse than the British. 19th century Europe, in other words, did not do too much to help Africa cope with the 21st century. There is no reason to believe that 21st entury Europe and America will do any better.
What to do? Troops to Darfur? Why? What will they accomplish? What can a few thousand under equipped, ill trained, undisciplined, miserably led African troops do? What possible 'help' can a couple of dozen Canadian staff officers and instructors do? Does anyone with an IQ higher than that given by the gods to green peppers really believe that our current commitment to Sudan is anything other than a cynical, pre-election, partisan political move designed to say: â Å“See? We kept our promise; we're helping Africa.â ? What immoral claptrap.
What to do?
Troops, certainly â “ let us, after we rebuild our own forces, work with a select few allies, totally
outside the United Nations, to send task forces, uninvited, using only
Pink Lloyd Axworthy's
duty to protect doctrine, to selected countries to settle their internal disturbances and leave behind an Indian administration, supported by American, Australian, British, Canadian, New Zealand and Singaporean dollars, which will stay in place for something in excess of 50 years. When three or four countries have been 'settled' then we can send task forces to others, leaving behind Pakistani administration, with more money from the
Anglosphere. By the time we have 'settled' about half of black Africa it is possible that more Asian and European money will be available and that a few other
suitable supervisory powers will be on the scene â “ perhaps Egypt, China and Malaysia. This is the work of decades, even centuries but I believe it is the
only hope for Africa.
There is an alternative: we, the whole world, can do nothing - which is to say that we can continue as now. Eventually we just wash our hands of the whole place and leave the Africans to their own devices. That: savagry, chaos and collapse - what Stephan Maninger (in the long, three part article, above) called letting conflicts burn themselves out, which means accepting what Hillary Andersson saw, magnified and multiplied, may be the easiest, even the 'best' route for Canada.