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Best Advice for Emerging Africa: Let Freedom Ring

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

Africa offers many possibilities. The summit aimed to change the narrative built up by such bad news as the West African Ebola outbreak and terror against schoolchildren in Nigeria by Boko Haram.

Most of the top 10 fastest growing economies are in Africa, the Obama administration points out. That's partly because their development started so low. But huge investments by China in trade and infrastructure also spurred development as it seeks to become the dominant power on the continent.

I get that and largely applaud it. After visiting close to a dozen African countries, I know the continent to be much more than the world's biggest charity case. Many of its governments are like Senegal, Botswana, Namibia or South Africa, encouragingly transparent with robust economic potential, despite poverty problems.

But it is important for all governments to understand that freedom of speech, press and the Internet are good for development as well as human rights.

George W. Bush astonished the world and became a hero in Africa for launching an emergency AIDS relief plan in 2003. It has since spent about $60 billion and saved countless lives. Obama's summit aims to build on that medical aid with economic trade.

Besides, African leaders need better examples than China for how freedom unleashes creative enterprise better than autocratic regimes do.

"American traditions of transparency, accountability, rule of law, (and) property rights are ingredients that are critical to unlocking Africa's future," Obama told The Economist.

 

The summit provides a historic stage on which to "announce" what already was widely known: close to $1 billion worth of new business deals and billions more in loan guarantees to U.S. companies. Much of that is directed at a signature Obama administration project, Power Africa, to electrify the continent.

But in the rush to develop African economies, the administration needs to avoid easing pressure of African governments to be accountable and defend human rights, including women's rights and gay rights.

To its credit, the Obama administration excluded Zimbabwe, Eritrea, Sudan and the Central African Republic from the summit for violations of human rights and accountability standards of the African Union. The administration also withdrew aid recently from Swaziland for rights abuses. Carrots and sticks matter. When we don't approve of what other countries do, we should stop helping them do it.

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E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@tribune.com.


(c) 2014 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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