Social Media to Monitor Elections in Zambia

Inter Press Service (IPS

Lusaka (Zambia) — When Zambians go the polls on Sep. 20 they will have the most effective team of observers monitoring the electoral process – themselves. Citizens, through social media, will be able to report offences and irregularities during and before the general elections.

An initiative called Bantu Watch was launched on Saturday by civil society to ensure that the Southern African nation has a higher level of citizen participation in monitoring the elections.

It is a simple system. People can text anonymous reports to a local number, 3018, using their mobile phones or they can log onto the website (www.bantuwatch.org) to report incidents online.

Formal election observers based in the areas where the reports originate will first verify electoral irregularities that require action from either electoral staff or police.

As voters go to the polls next week to elect a president, parliament and local government representatives, there have been fears of election violence. Opposition parties have accused President Rupiah Banda’s ruling Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) of intimidating those who oppose the president and the party.

Civil society and politicians have hailed the initiative and see it as a means of quickly addressing any incidents.

“It is a great electoral malpractice preventive mechanism as people can report, in real time, offences such as intimidation, hate speech, vote buying, polling clerk bias, voting misinformation and so on. Action can be taken right away,” Lee Habasonda, executive director of the Southern African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (SACCORD), told IPS. The project is run by Zambia’s civil society and social media representatives under SACCORD.

Even those running for office have welcomed the initiative. The presidential candidate for the opposition National Restoration Party, Elias Chipimo Jr., said any initiative that could help reduce election violence should be embraced.

“There is too much pre-election violence and intimidation and any effort to prevent this will not be wasted. One of our members is currently nursing a wound after being assaulted by a ruling party cadre and there are eyewitness accounts which can confirm this. So my party fully welcomes this initiative,” he said.

And voters are welcoming it too.

Reports are already flowing in to the Bantu Watch website from across the country. The unverified reports describe incidents of bribery, electoral fraud, and violation of the electoral code of conduct, among others.

One report from someone identified only as “MSimushi” from Senanga in western Zambia says: “Agents of ruling MMD party in Senanga are busy trying 2 bribe appointed poll staff with cash in return 4 favour @ vote count.”

Another says: “#Zambiaelections: Vehicle allegedly used in (the United Party for National Development) UPND campaigns identified as judiciary property.”

“We expect a great response to Bantu Watch because this is a simple enough thing to do, and it does not require complicated technical expertise. All a person needs is access to either a mobile phone or the internet, which are platforms many people already use every day.”

Habasonda said trained monitors in the country’s nine provinces would verify the citizen reports before forwarding them to the relevant authorities for action.

“We have trained system administrators to receive and verify reports, they will act like gatekeepers. Depending on how successful this is, the initiative will be institutionalised and become part of every election,” he said.

The opposition Patriotic Front’s Secretary General Wynter Kabimba was hopeful that Bantu Watch would allow electoral offences to be reported while something can still be done about them.

Kabimba, whose party has petitioned election results before, said many reports of irregularities had not been investigated further in the past and some only managed to reach the relevant authorities after they had already been overtaken by events. He said in some cases the people who the complaints were about had already taken office and intimidated the complainants. “This initiative is therefore a very welcome thing, as it will finally give people a chance to report cases while something can still be done about them,” he said.

Kabimba, however, urged the project administrators to be aware that sometimes people’s perceptions of an incident differed from what really happened and they tended to be alarmist.

The spokesperson for the ruling MMD, Dora Siliya, agreed.

“Zambians should continue to have faith in the Electoral Commission and trust them to do a competent job of delivering free and fair elections. Yes it is important to have such initiatives that allow citizens to monitor and report, but we also know that sometimes people do things out of malice and some of these reports may be motivated by this,” she said.

Media academic Dr. Elijah Mwewa Mutambanshiku Bwalya of the University of Zambia’s Department of Mass Communication said: “Ordinary voices have been missing from the public media, which have been monopolised by the ruling party. So this initiative is a great way of finally allowing citizens a voice in the electoral process.”

He added that he was concerned that those in rural areas would not be able to use Bantu Watch as many did not have mobile phones, let alone an internet connection.

The data compiled will become part of a report with recommendations for improving the electoral process.

Libya: Museveni and Zuma dump Gaddafi

The Monitor (Uganda)

Kampala (Uganda) – Ousted Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has finally lost the official support of the African Union which had stoutly stood by him throughout the seven months of armed conflict in his country.
Five African presidents sitting on the AU ad hoc committee on Libya, who were also known to be Col. Gaddafi’s friends, resolved on Wednesday to recognise the Libyan National Transitional Council if it formed an all-inclusive government.

President Museveni, his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma, and Congo’s Dennis Sassou Nguesso, recommended that the AU should help the NTC form a unity government.

Mauritania and Mali, the other members of the committee, were represented by their ambassadors to South Africa at the one-day meeting held in Pretoria even as the whereabouts of the former Libyan strongman, who has not been since Tripoli fell to the NTC in August, remain unknown.

The AU resolution to support the NTC is an indication that the continental body now recognises the futility of opposing the transitional council as the legitimate government in Libya.

Until Wednesday, the AU had swum against the tide of Western-led international opinion, taking a generally isolated and ambivalent view of events in Libya, with some member countries backing the new dispensation, while others remained undecided or openly regretful that Col. Gaddafi had been removed from power.

However, Uganda’s Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary, Ambassador James Mugume, said yesterday the AU position remains the same on having an all-inclusive government.

“There is no change of position as African Union. The condition by African Union is still the same,” he said.

Mr Museveni and Mr Zuma have been among the most vocal of African presidents against the Libyan war and tried to push for a negotiated settlement between Col. Gaddafi and the NTC throughout the period the Western military alliance, NATO, bombed Tripoli and provided air support to the rebels fighting to topple his 42-year tyranny.

The two leaders were mostly ignored by a Western coalition that was determined the world had seen enough of the authoritarian colonel, who at the beginning of the fighting declared an intention to commit widespread killings if that is what it would take to retain his grip on power.

The AU has so far been one of the few international organisations that have withheld recognition of the NTC – on the grounds that it was NATO which supported the overthrow of Col. Gaddafi, and in so doing interfered in Libya’s internal affairs. As a result, sharp divisions have emerged among African governments as some like Nigeria and Botswana quickly recognised the NTC as the legitimate government while Uganda, South Africa and others have not.

Uganda’s Foreign Affairs ministry had on August 24 issued a statement, saying they were not ready to deal with individuals within the NTC. The AU’s change in position followed a promise by the NTC to create a unity

Words That Make Me Pause

“We should, all of us, be filled with gratitude and humility for our present progress and prosperity. We should be filled with awe and joy at what lies over the horizon. And we should be filled with absolute determination to make the most of it.” Former President Bill Clinton

In the clutter of email, Facebook, twitter and the back and forth of the day, it’s easy to miss the opportunity to pause and ponder over the many blessings we enjoy and show gratitude. True modesty should keep us from thinking too highly or too spitefully of ourselves. It reminds us of how far we have come short of what we could be. This is possible only if we will pause and ponder. Continue reading “Words That Make Me Pause”

The President, God, and Progress

Comment/Ghana Developmen

Let’s go into the mind of President John Atta Mills, a PHD in law, and envision with him his infatuation with God.

In this imaginary Ghana, there are no ethnic problems, no sanitation plight and no vehicular accidents. Poverty is wiped out. God would be in such control that nobody would blame witchcraft, evil spirits or demons for their existential tribulations. Ghanaians would have enviable life expectancies.  There would be no infant or maternal mortalities. There is wonderful human security. Ghanaians are highly educated and all have the same income. There is perfect gender equality. Every Ghanaian eats well, drink and bath with very clean water. There will be no diseases to worry Ghanaians. All Ghanaians sleep well and have deep peace of mind.

Ghana would stop to be on the 130th position of the 169 countries ranked by the United Nation’s Human Development Index that measures human well-being globally. Ghana would have the highest development indicators in the world.

President of Ghana, John Atta Mills

On and on it goes. Dr. Atta Mills’ God-ruled Ghana would pile up dazzling development indicators for Ghanaians. All the earlier post-colonial African development impediments such as the state being in some sort of dystopian wasteland of Idi Amin’s barbarism or Jerry Rawlings’ incomprehensible moral disaster or Murmmar Gaddafi’s frightening utopian Green Book planet will be no more. Democracy, the rule of law, social justice, freedoms, equality, good governance, prosperity, liberty: all are closer reality.

The point in looking at Dr. Atta Mills God-possessed mind isn’t to poke fun at him. Or at least, it isn’t triviality. Aside from Dr. Atta Mills’s fascination with God, to the point of sometimes infuriating Ghana’s development game, there is not much that’s unusual in this vivid exercise in the Dr. Atta Mills God-mania futurology.

In his almost two-and-half years since becoming President, Dr. Atta Mills practically tops all Ghanaian Heads of State in his obsession with God. Behind this climate is Dr. Atta Mills mired in prophets of all stripes. The Ghanaian political chatting class is constantly abuzz with all kinds of gossip about Dr. Atta Mills and his dalliance with prophets in the seat of government, the Osu Castle.

The attention-seeking Nigeria prophet, Temitope Balogun (TB) Joshua, founder of the highly rated The Synagogue, Church of All Nations, appears to have entrapped Dr. Atta Mills spiritually. TB Joshua is alleged to have prophesized that Dr. Atta Mills would be President of Ghana during the 2008 presidential election. Superstitiously, Dr. Atta Mills visited TB Joshua before the 2008 presidential elections in Lagos, Nigeria. Prophet TB Joshua is a vastly noted man of God in Dr. Atta Mills’ God cosmos.

Like Grigori Rasputin, the Russian mystic who had immense influence on the Russian Emperor Nicholas 11, TB Joshua has comprehensively powerful sway over Dr. Atta Mills. No doubt, as democracy help Ghanaians to exercise their freedoms and thinking, Dr. Atta Mills’ fixations with God and prophets have become popular mass media and social media talks and jokes.

The general views from the commentators are that with his PHD in law, as long time professor of law at the University of Ghana, as an administrator with some academic publications, and with his lovingly mature age of 65, Dr. Atta Mills is expected to glow with soaring rationality within the context of the irrationalities hindering Ghanaians’ advancement. Some Ghanaians are convinced that Dr. Atta Mills is rationally fragile, has weak grasp of Ghana, is basically unrealistic, and have feeble sense of God’s place in Ghana’s progress.

In his campaigns for the presidency, Dr. Atta Mills not only borrowed from US President Barack Obama’s “change” mantra but also fixed his campaign pictures beside Obama’s. The end of story. And the beginning of the search for the actual Obama in Dr. Atta Mills.  Though far older than Obama (who just turned 50) and with Obama stuck in the dense development issues left by his predecessors that have let him grow gray hair in just two-and-half years as he struggles to solve the problems, critics of Dr. Atta Mills’ too-much-God-talks think he should talk very rationally, realistically, deeply and plausibly like Obama in the context of Ghana’s development struggles.

Obama is very religious but he doesn’t waste all his time exasperatingly and illogically on God when tackling thorny development matters in the difficult United States political climate. Obama’s God-given cerebral powers are constantly at display as he confronts the United States’ development challenges. Ghanaians are yet to see this broadly in Dr. Atta Mills.

Nevertheless, over time Dr. Atta Mills’ God-issues have become nauseating. His latest God-this-God-that was at Fetu Afahye festival in Cape Coast, the capital of Ghana’s Central Region, where traditional oracles, shrines, mosques and churches of all character compete for spiritual prominence in the atmosphere of fear of witchcraft, demons, evil spirits and malevolent forces. In Cape Coast, Dr. Atta Mills told superstitiously gullible Ghanaians “it was God who set up kings and therefore the next President for the country lay in the hands of the Almighty God.”

There is nothing wrong in Dr. Atta Mills saying this in a culture that has strong belief in God. After all, the basis of most progress begins with deep spiritual practices. The American thinker Francis Fukuyama indicates in The End of History and The Last Man that the root of Western progress cannot be fully discussed without its spiritual origin. But the spirituality has to be unambiguous and not entangled in false believes in prophets, juju-marabou mediums, witchcraft, demons, evil spirits, supernatural beings and malevolent forces.

Such traditional spiritually unhelpful entanglements have impacted unconstructively on Ghana’s real progress. The community in the northern part of Ghana that believes in God but also believes in witchcraft and left a baby named Mercy to die in a room simply because they believe (wrongly) that she is a witch, is in need of a Dr. Atta Mills who will simultaneously talk God and talk rationalization of believes in witchcraft within the Ghanaian culture so as to save the life and the human rights of baby Mercy and her community from such destructive thinking. In the Dr. Atta Mills’ presidency, the God talk hasn’t been equal to the rational talk in the Ghanaian development actuality.

In the authentic Ghana, as the impending 2012 general elections looms, there may be God in the affairs of Ghanaians but the next President, come 2012, will be elected based entirely on the exercises of Ghanaians’ God-given rational faculties that are expected to help them rationalize issues, policies and programmes of either President Atta Mills’ ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) or the main opposition National Patriotic Party (NPP) or the minority Convention People’s Party (CPP).

God surely will not physically get involved in the 2011 general elections: God will rather let Ghanaians weigh the contending personal merits, issues, policies and programmes presented by the political parties to vote the next President and Members of Parliament of Ghana.

The simple truth about Dr. Atta Mills in the past two-and-half years is that his awkward God-obsession has been met with a good number of Ghanaians increasingly pressurizing him to emit systematic reasoning in tackling the development challenges facing them. And not the quixotically God-will-solve-the-development-problems (some very dire) ways of thinking.

If you like this article, I’d recommend my book “If I Was Famous, I’d Have a Lot to Say”

Hazards of Cell Phone to Your Health

Since the 1980s when mobile phone otherwise known as cell phone, made an in-road into the market and became very popular in developed nations, its spread has been a blessing to all manners of people across gender, race and age. Even at the time, the number of cell phones in the world was a mere 11.2 million- just two phones per 1,000. According to the United Nations, as at 2010, mobile phone users hit 5 billion. Thus, by 2011 the 5 billion would have added one or two million when many people in remote and distant places owning cell phones, with over 1,000 customers added every minute, while the world population currently stands at 6.94 billion.

The late 1990s and early 2000s witnessed the upsurge in mobile phone ownership; and saw telecoms companies rushing to telecoms-virgin lands of Third World countries with their large populations, whereas global capitalism finds new markets. There is hardly any country, even in Third World nations where people are struggling to make ends meet; there are many competing telecoms companies doing the business of ‘connecting people to people, people to business, business to business; and one family member with the other, as well as friends. According to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the growth of telecommunications in the developing world is driven by the use of the phone for mobile banking, and health services. While many farmers use their mobile phone to sell the farm produce. Be that as it seem, more people in developing nations use their mobile for friendship and family contact than for business.

Moreover, the arrival of 3G technology fitted into smart-phones, Black Berry and i-phones have made the internet also available at a punch on consumers’ phone pad or screen. This is fast gaining currency among young and mobile population, and the working-class with higher preference for the much-talk-about popular social network sites such as Facebook, Twitters, Netlog, Tagged etc. Telecoms operation has open a wide array of opportunities!

Majority of the new users, about 59 percent, are in developing countries where cell phones are the first telecommunications technology in history to have more users there than in the developed world, according to the Washington Post. This exponential rise in cell phone users has simplify how businesses are conducted, reduce travel time/cost and improve the level contact among many persons.

All the same, while the spread of cell phone is commendable, especially for the aforementioned reasons and many more; cell phone has side –effects that users must be wary of besides enjoying the best opportunities and access it gives them. For instance, there is a debate (research-based), as to whether or not cell phone use has a strong relationship with cancer. Proponents of the argument like Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (an appendage of the National Institutes of Health), reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), that cell phone’s electromagnetic radiation can lead to certain changes in the brain activity, since then there has been apprehension that the oomph from the cell phone can cause cancer. Energy emitted from cell phone, called radio-frequency energy, is a form of non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation.

Some researchers from the International Agency for Cancer on Research (IACR) added its voice to support the JAMA‘s position in its separate publication, though they later debunked the claim, yet IACR has “classified cell-phone-radiation exposure to be ‘possibly carcinogenic to humans”. The research further asserted that even if there is no link, there is “…and increased risk of glioma and malignant types of brain cancer in association with wireless-phone use”. Glioma is a common type of brain tumour that is always linked with the ear. Other cancer researchers have opposed these findings as they posited that cell phone use has no relationship with cancer.

There is another strain of argument that is rife- the scratch card. A friend sent it to my mail box quoting a group of researchers, from the US had confirmed; that the silver coating covering recharge cards or refill voucher from telecommunications companies also causes cancer. The coating contains silver nitro oxide which causes skin cancer. Researchers have reservation for this revelation as well. This dimension is introduced because millions of phone users scratch the silver coating off with their nails. And the propensity that people who use their finger nails to scrape off the covering and do not wash their hands with soap afterwards is very high.

In addition, a more striking research finding on the effects of cell phone is the lowing of sperm-counts in male- which might lead to impotence in men. A report in the Journal of Andrology entitled ‘Cellular phone and male infertility” says using a cell phone can decrease the quality and quantity of a man’s sperm if men stay on the phone more than four hours a day. The report further warns that children, adolescents, young adults and especially pregnant women should take precaution and avoid keeping phone close to reproductive organs, in addition to their heads. These parts of the body are highly sensitive to electromagnetic radiation coming from cell phone, the report concluded. Besides, there is a link between radio frequency energy from cell and fire when it comes in contact with gas, hence people are always warned to have their cell phones turn-off in gas/petrol stations or fuel dumps. Yet, people make and receive in gas/petrol stations

One begins to wonder why almost everything about cell phone is cancer-related. Like the case of HIV/AIDS since in 1980s, the interconnectedness between frequent cell phone use and cancer is still a subject of debate, because it is a puzzle that can only be solved by scientists working on cancer and those developing telecoms soft-wares that would not compromise the user’s health. While it remains so, there is need for cell phone users to take precaution through the following ways.

One, always keep your phone away from your body, especially your head. By doing this, you protect vital organs of the body from the electromagnetic emission. Men should avoid putting cell phone in the thigh-pocket or breast-pocket, instead make use of leather-case and stripe to belt. Ladies can use their hand-bag. Among market women, cell phones are kept in their bra. This is very dangerous! If cell phones could cause cancer to the brain because of their proximity to the ear when in use, how much more lady’s br***t?

Two, the habit of using ear-piece in cell phone conversation must be nurtured. The quality of ear-piece to be used is another issue to grapple with here. This is because, ear-piece that serves as antenna to the phone while playing radio still transmit the emission from the cell phone no matter how distant the cell phone is from your body. Therefore, quality ear-piece with filter is most likely to be the safest. When playing radio on your phone, the hands-free or loudspeaker mode could be activated.

Three, do not use your cell phone as your alarm by your head on your bed’s side. Provided the cell phone is not switch-off radiation still travels, not only when your make/receive calls. Get a standard alarm that will save you from the hazard of keeping your phone by your head- remember the research-based debate of brain cancer and cell phone?

Four, spend less time on the phone at one time, because if for anything, the frequency of contact with the cell phone is the root cause of the linkage. Many young people stay up and spend their nightly hours in phone conversations just because such calls (dubiously call ‘happy hours’) are free from some telecom operators. I think people engage because of weak economic situation. So, make short calls and always send text messages, or at best, use good quality ear-piece with filter to avert body contact.

Lastly, do not scratch you recharge card with your finger nails. Always encourage your vendors to get a spatula-like object to peel-off the silver covering concealing the card’s secret pin whenever you want to recharge. And always obey signs that prohibit cell phone use in gas/petrol stations, fuel dumps, hospitals etc. Do not risk your life with your cell phone!

Asamoah Gyan leaves Sunderland for UAE side Al-Ain

yan made 37 appearances for Sunderland, scoring 11 goals

Sunderland striker Asamoah Gyan has signed for United Arab Emirates side Al-Ain on loan.

The Ghanaian joined Sunderland from French club Rennes in August 2010 for £13m.

But on Friday, Sunderland boss Steve Bruce claimed “parasites” turned Gyan’s head after his goal in the 1-1 draw with England at Wembley in March.

And on Saturday it was announced that the striker, 25, was on his way to the UAE.

Bruce said: “Anyone who has seen Asamoah play will know that he hasn’t been himself in recent months. This option suits all parties at the present time and the club is well-protected in the deal.

“Asamoah has three years remaining on his contract and of course my wish would be that he finds his spark again and we see him in red and white stripes next season in the form that first attracted us to him.”

Throughout the transfer window, Gyan was linked with a move to a big European club.

On Friday Bruce blamed agents for turning Gyan’s head.

“Since that game at Wembley, all the parasites, as I call them, hover around,” said Bruce.

“People are in his ear constantly trying to engineer a deal for him. Certainly since the England game, when he played at Wembley so well on the night, something has been troubling him.

“It’s very difficult, the constant speculation, no matter what you try to quash or quell, and the people around him, the people who want to make a fast buck, and it affects him in the end.

“He was going from Real Madrid to Bayern Munich to Valencia to Atletico Madrid.”

Bruce added on Friday that he had challenged the striker to rediscover his form.

“I had a conversation with him two days ago to say: ‘Look, the window as now closed, Asa,” Bruce said. “Right, we need to see you back playing again and back the way you know you can play’.”

Gyan – who has yet to score this season – was due to miss Saturday’s Premier League match with Chelsea because of a hamstring problem picked up on international duty with Ghana

Is the West losing Africa to China?

Teo Kermeliotis

With Chinese yuan and Indian rupees increasingly finding their way into Africa’s economies, Western powers are worried that they are losing influence in the resource-rich continent, according to analysts.

Driven by their appetite for natural resources, trade opportunities and political alliances, emerging powers such as China and India are moving from the sidelines to the center stage in Africa — a region the West has long considered to be its own trading partner.

While Western countries are still important players in Africa’s energy sector, the deepening engagement of China in Africa’s infrastructure, mineral sector and telecommunications is creating “deep nervousness” in the West, says David Shinn, the former U.S. ambassador to Burkina Faso and Ethiopia.

Asian giants scent opportunity in Africa

The competition in these areas, he explains, usually pits big Chinese enterprises that are financially backed by Beijing’s deep pockets against Western companies that often have shareholders to consider and are by-and-large acting independently of their governments’ desires.

“If the Chinese government wants to encourage an engagement in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, they can make it happen,” says Shinn. “If the United States wants its companies to get involved in the DRC all they can do is say ‘look, there’s an opportunity there, why don’t you go explore it’ and if they want to explore it, they do and if they don’t they don’t.”

According to Shinn, this different system of government “does create anxieties” because “the United States and the West see China filling all kinds of voids that it thought it would eventually fill.”

China overtook the United States as Africa’s biggest trade partner in 2009, according to OECD figures, whereas in 2000 the United States’ trade with Africa was three times that of China’s.

India’s bilateral trade with Africa jumped from around $1 billion in 2001 to about $50 billion last year.

India bids to be Africa’s ‘new best friend’

The European Union still accounts for more than 40% of Africa’s trade but the share of Africa’s trade with the EU and U.S. fell from 77% to 62% over the last decade. At the same time, the share for new economic forces — China and India but also countries like Brazil, Turkey and South Korea — rose from about 23% to 39%.

China’s first official aid project in Africa took place in the 1960s, and in 1975 it completed construction of the iconic Tanzania-Zambia railway. In the early 1990s, when headline-writers would often label Africa as the “failed continent,” Beijing decided to step up its foray into the continent, filling the gap left by an exodus of Western investors.

“Just as Western companies were mothballing mines, walking away, certainly not bringing new investments, China plunged in and dared to go where the white man feared to trade,” says Richard Dowden, director of the Royal African Society, based in London.

“It was quite amusing to see the Western mining companies, who’d been shrugging their shoulders at Africa and looking elsewhere, suddenly rushing back in.”

The emergence of China as a major player in Africa has prompted many Western countries to change their strategies on the continent and emphasize the need for collaboration.

“Earlier on, you heard (U.S.) officials maybe talk about China as a threat or as a competitor in Africa,” says Richard Downie, deputy director of the Africa program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “All the language from officials now is about Africa as a place where competition is good … and all the efforts here (in the United States), at least in public, are about seeking areas for cooperation and collaboration with China — so the language has shifted.”

Yet concerns about China’s role are still being voiced in public.

When U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was asked about China’s growing influence in Africa, during her visit to Zambia in June, she said that Africa must beware of a “new colonialism.”

“We saw that during colonial times it is easy to come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave,” Clinton said from the mineral-rich country that has attracted heavy Chinese investment in mining.

Although Clinton avoided naming China specifically in her remarks, the suggestion that it could be fostering colonialism in Africa was immediately dismissed by Beijing.

Downie says Clinton’s comments come at a moment when China’s increasing role is creating “a sense of unease” in the United States which echoes a larger debate about America’s declining influence as a world power and China’s rising prominence.

“The U.S. is very sensitive about it at the moment,” he says. “Africa is the corner of the world where that declining U.S. influence is most evident,” he adds.

Ayo Johnson, director of Viewpoint Africa, a media organization dealing with news from the continent, says the growing influence of emerging players has left the West feeling “very rattled” and put African countries in a stronger bargaining position.

“It’s becoming very difficult for the West to deal with Africa from their usual perspective,” says Johnson.

“When you’ve been used to doing business in a particular fashion, when you’ve been used to dealing in a certain way and then there’s an injection of a third or fourth player who risk the entire dynamic — that’s exactly what has happened with India and China and now made it so much easier for Africans and their leaders and their communities to choose among the various investors.”

Shinn says that to the eyes of many African leaders China’s capacity to move fast, coupled with its policy of non-interference in other countries’ internal affairs, often makes Beijing a more attractive partner than the West, whose policy in the continent is usually linked to conditions about good governance and human-rights reforms.

One of China’s big advantages is that “the Chinese have no mission, no intention at all to change Africa,” agrees Dowden.

He adds: “There’s still a narrative in our minds in the West that Africa is backward and Africans have got to become like us — ‘we have got to change them’ — I think that Africans feel that and the young African generation that’s coming through are now very resentful of that.”

If you like this article, I’d recommend my book “If I Was Famous, I’d Have a Lot to Say”

Remains of Earliest Human Ancestor Found in South Africa

Remains of human ancestor in South Africa dated at almost two million years

THE remains of what may be our earliest human ancestor have been dated at almost two million years old and may unlock some of the mysteries of human evolution.

The skull of Australopithecus sediba may unlock secrets to human evolution

Expert analysis of the hands, feet, skull and pelvis, published today in the journal Science, offers “unprecedented” access to our family history, and the remains bear striking similarities to both ancient apes and members of our own species, homo sapiens.

The remains of two individuals, a child and a young woman, come from a cave in South Africa.

Human evolution professor Lee Berger, from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, made the original discovery in August 2008.

Last year he introduced the world to a new species, Australopithecus sediba or “southern ape, wellspring”.

The “really extraordinary material” has now been dated at 1.977 million years old, and the results can be shared with the rest of world.

“We have the most complete hand from one individual, from any species of early human ancestor ever discovered and it’s a lot like ours, with its shortened fingers and its long thumb,” Professor Berger said.

“We’re getting a vision into the moment where our grip, the thing that makes us so unique, that allows us to play piano, to paint a picture, type on a computer, make a stone tool or shake hands, evolved.

“It’s amazing to see that, particularly on the end of an arm that’s like an ape.”

He said the species also had a “surprisingly advanced but small brain” (420 cubic centimetres) and a very modern pelvis, but the foot and ankle shape combined features of both apes and humans in the one anatomical package.

The many advanced features, and its age make it “possibly the best candidate ancestor for our genus, the genus homo, more so than previous discoveries such as Homo habilis”.

At the University of Melbourne, Dr Robyn Pickering performed uranium lead dating of the flowstone above and below the bones, while colleagues at La Trobe University conducted a palaeomagnetic analysis of sediments surrounding the fossils.

“Knowing the age of the fossils is critical to placing them in our family tree,” Dr Pickering said.