What Utter Hypocrisy

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Abdul Bangura

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Jun 11, 2011, 9:42:34 AM6/11/11
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I love you, Sista Hillary, but your regime and racist European allies are doing worse, and even bombing Afrikan Libyans in order to steal their oil and kill the dream of a Pan-Afrikan Union. But you can never kill an idea that will come to fruition in 2017,

Saturday, June 11, 2011 6:29:00 AM EDT

Clinton warns Africa of 'new colonialism'

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin? Photo: AP

LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) � U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Saturday warned of a creeping "new colonialism" in Africa from foreign investors and governments interested only in extracting natural resources to enrich themselves.

African leaders must ensure that foreign projects are sustainable and benefit all their citizens, not only elites, she said. A day earlier, she urged scrutiny of China's large investments and business interests in Africa so that the African people are not taken advantage of.

"We saw that during colonial times, it is easy to come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave," Clinton said. "And when you leave, you don't leave much behind for the people who are there. We don't want to see a new colonialism in Africa."

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Clinton said the United States didn't want foreign governments and investors to fail in Africa, but they also should give back.

"We want them to do well, but also we want them to do good," she said.

"We don't want them to undermine good governance, we don't want them to basically deal with just the top elites, and frankly too often pay for their concessions or their opportunities to invest."

Clinton said that American development aid and public works projects come with good governance conditions and that the Obama administration is interested in Africa and its people. Their success, she said, is in everyone's long-term interest.

Her comments, in a pan-African television interview in the Zambian capital, followed the handover of a U.S. built pediatric hospital in Lusaka to the Zambian government.

Earlier, at the inaugural meeting of the U.S.-Zambia Chamber of Commerce, Clinton laid out the U.S. strategy for helping Africa.

"We want a relationship of partnership not patronage, of sustainability, not quick fixes," she said. "We want to establish a strong foundation to attract new investment, open new businesses ... create more paychecks, and do so within the context of a positive ethic of corporate responsibility."

"We think it's essential that we have an idea going in that doing well is not in any way a contradiction of doing good," she said.

Clinton is the first secretary of state to visit Zambia since Henry Kissinger came in 1976 to lay out the Ford administration's policy for southern Africa as revolts against white minority rule in South Africa and what was then Rhodesia were intensifying.

Clinton, on the first leg of a three-nation tour of Africa, arrived in Zambia from the United Arab Emirates, where she attended an international conference on Libya. After Zambia, she heads to Tanzania and Ethiopia before returning to Washington next week.


Online:

State Department background on Zambia: http://tinyurl.com/3r9gugp

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Wale Ade

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Jun 11, 2011, 11:06:46 AM6/11/11
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Hillary should go and clean up the Delta region if she wants us to believe what she is saying.
 
 
They should also leave Libya for the African not sell it to the Arabs interest.
 
 
 
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kenneth harrow

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Jun 11, 2011, 11:50:47 AM6/11/11
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this is so funny, and sad.
here is where i see the new colonialism. the minister in wade's govt who controls fishing rights just sold them off to a group of major european and asian enterprises. they are emptying the seas of fish off the coast of senegal. the local fisherman are finding it harder and harder to make a living, the senegalese population now finds the staple of their diet, fish, more and more expensive, and eat more and more carbohydrates. people risk dying by paying fishermen to get them by boat to the canaries or spain.
new colonialism. no, it is now old-school globalization, and the biggest fishing trawlers are raking in all the big and little fish off the continent, and making untold sums of money selling the fish in the global north.
it is an example of what neophytes like myself, who know too little about economics, can immediately grasp.
ken

On 6/11/11 3:42 PM, Abdul Bangura wrote:

I love you, Sista Hillary, but your regime and racist European�allies are doing worse, and even�bombing Afrikan Libhyyans in order to steal their oil and kill the dream of a Pan-Afrikan Union. But you can never kill an idea that will come to fruition in 2017,

Saturday, June 11, 2011 6:29:00 AM EDT

Clinton warns Africa of 'new colonialism'

Hillary
              Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin? Photo: AP

LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) � U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Saturday warned of a creeping "new colonialism" in Africa from foreign investors and governments interested only in extracting natural resources to enrich themselves.

African leaders must ensure that foreign projects are sustainable and benefit all their citizens, not only elites, she said. A day earlier, she urged scrutiny of China's large investments and business interests in Africa so that the African people are not taken advantage of.

"We saw that during colonial times, it is easy to come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave," Clinton said. "And when you leave, you don't leave much behind for the people who are there. We don't want to see a new colonialism in Africa."

Advertisement

Clinton said the United States didn't want foreign governments and investors to fail in Africa, but they also should give back.

"We want them to do well, but also we want them to do good," she said.

"We don't want them to undermine good governance, we don't want them to basically deal with just the top elites, and frankly too often pay for their concessions or their opportunities to invest."

Clinton said that American development aid and public works projects come with good governance conditions and that the Obama administration is interested in Africa and its people. Their success, she said, is in everyone's long-term interest.

Her comments, in a pan-African television interview in the Zambian capital, followed the handover of a U.S. built pediatric hospital in Lusaka to the Zambian government.

Earlier, at the inaugural meeting of the U.S.-Zambia Chamber of Commerce, Clinton laid out the U.S. strategy for helping Africa.

"We want a relationship of partnership not patronage, of sustainability, not quick fixes," she said. "We want to establish a strong foundation to attract new investment, open new businesses ... create more paychecks, and do so within the context of a positive ethic of corporate responsibility."

"We think it's essential that we have an idea going in that doing well is not in any way a contradiction of doing good," she said.

Clinton is the first secretary of state to visit Zambia since Henry Kissinger came in 1976 to lay out the Ford administration's policy for southern Africa as revolts against white minority rule in South Africa and what was then Rhodesia were intensifying.

Clinton, on the first leg of a three-nation tour of Africa, arrived in Zambia from the United Arab Emirates, where she attended an international conference on Libya. After Zambia, she heads to Tanzania and Ethiopia before returning to Washington next week.


Online:

State Department background on Zambia: http://tinyurl.com/3r9gugp

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Abdul Bangura

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Jun 11, 2011, 12:46:20 PM6/11/11
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Thanks a heap for your posting, Mwalimu Wale Ade. Their old trick of divide and rule will no longer work on us. As Afrikan Nationalist Gamal Abdel Nasser would have said, "They can take their aid (and other imperialist machinations) and drink from the sea."
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Wale Ade
Sent: 6/11/2011 11:17:04 AM
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - What Utter Hypocrisy

Hillary should go and clean up the Delta region if she wants us to believe what she is saying.
 
 
They should also leave Libya for the African not sell it to the Arabs interest.
 
-------Original Message-------
 
Date: 6/11/2011 10:41:44 AM
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - What Utter Hypocrisy
 

I love you, Sista Hillary, but your regime and racist European allies are doing worse, and even bombing Afrikan Libyans in order to steal their oil and kill the dream of a Pan-Afrikan Union. But you can never kill an idea that will come to fruition in 2017,

Saturday, June 11, 2011 6:29:00 AM EDT

Clinton warns Africa of 'new colonialism'

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin? Photo: AP

LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) � U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Saturday warned of a creeping "new colonialism" in Africa from foreign investors and governments interested only in extracting natural resources to enrich themselves.

African leaders must ensure that foreign projects are sustainable and benefit all their citizens, not only elites, she said. A day earlier, she urged scrutiny of China's large investments and business interests in Africa so that the African people are not taken advantage of.

"We saw that during colonial times, it is easy to come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave," Clinton said. "And when you leave, you don't leave much behind for the people who are there. We don't want to see a new colonialism in Africa."

Advertisement

Clinton said the United States didn't want foreign governments and investors to fail in Africa, but they also should give back.

"We want them to do well, but also we want them to do good," she said.

"We don't want them to undermine good governance, we don't want them to basically deal with just the top elites, and frankly too often pay for their concessions or their opportunities to invest."

Clinton said that American development aid and public works projects come with good governance conditions and that the Obama administration is interested in Africa and its people. Their success, she said, is in everyone's long-term interest.

Her comments, in a pan-African television interview in the Zambian capital, followed the handover of a U.S. built pediatric hospital in Lusaka to the Zambian government.

Earlier, at the inaugural meeting of the U.S.-Zambia Chamber of Commerce, Clinton laid out the U.S. strategy for helping Africa.

"We want a relationship of partnership not patronage, of sustainability, not quick fixes," she said. "We want to establish a strong foundation to attract new investment, open new businesses ... create more paychecks, and do so within the context of a positive ethic of corporate responsibility."

"We think it's essential that we have an idea going in that doing well is not in any way a contradiction of doing good," she said.

Clinton is the first secretary of state to visit Zambia since Henry Kissinger came in 1976 to lay out the Ford administration's policy for southern Africa as revolts against white minority rule in South Africa and what was then Rhodesia were intensifying.

Clinton, on the first leg of a three-nation tour of Africa, arrived in Zambia from the United Arab Emirates, where she attended an international conference on Libya. After Zambia, she heads to Tanzania and Ethiopia before returning to Washington next week.


Online:

State Department background on Zambia: http://tinyurl.com/3r9gugp

 
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Segun

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Jun 11, 2011, 10:42:49 PM6/11/11
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One may not necessarily agree totally with Hilary Clinton in her comments on the Chinese investments in Africa but there is some element of truth in her observation. The Chinese investments in Africa are in my view not self sustaining. The infrastructural development in terms of road construction in several African countries are genuine efforts by the Chinese companies has some enduring values. Be that as it may, one will ask: at what cost? Just like other colonial masters the interest of the Chinese is to exploit Africa and not to make the continent to be self sustaining. The attitude of the Chinese working in Nigeria is enough to teach Africans that they are worse than the Europeans who colonized Africa. The Chinese corporations are Sudan for the oil there. They are in the Congo region of Africa for gold and other essential minerals for their country. Are there any Chinese industries in Aftica that can be sustainable? I doubt if there is any. 
We may not put the blame on the Chinese alone because some African leaders and politicians allowed them after taking all sort of bribes to enrich their pockets. The general interest to make Africa an industrial continent is yet to be embraced. The need to sexologist African mind is an urgent business of all African scholars and the elite. 
If American Goverment is to lead in the emancipation of Africa I the 21st century this is the time to do so. It is not enough to harmed on democracy and good government before they engage in Africa industrial revolution that is self sustainable. If they are not ready to do so, then they have no moral justification to challenge the Chinese who are emerging colonial master in the continent.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 11, 2011, at 4:06 PM, "Wale Ade" <wal...@HumaniCorporation.com> wrote:

Hillary should go and clean up the Delta region if she wants us to believe what she is saying.
 
 
They should also leave Libya for the African not sell it to the Arabs interest.
 
-------Original Message-------
 
Date: 6/11/2011 10:41:44 AM
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - What Utter Hypocrisy
 

I love you, Sista Hillary, but your regime and racist European allies are doing worse, and even bombing Afrikan Libyans in order to steal their oil and kill the dream of a Pan-Afrikan Union. But you can never kill an idea that will come to fruition in 2017,

Saturday, June 11, 2011 6:29:00 AM EDT

Clinton warns Africa of 'new colonialism'

<484716h425pd1w52711.jpg>

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Huma Abedin? Photo: AP

LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Saturday warned of a creeping "new colonialism" in Africa from foreign investors and governments interested only in extracting natural resources to enrich themselves.

African leaders must ensure that foreign projects are sustainable and benefit all their citizens, not only elites, she said. A day earlier, she urged scrutiny of China's large investments and business interests in Africa so that the African people are not taken advantage of.

"We saw that during colonial times, it is easy to come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave," Clinton said. "And when you leave, you don't leave much behind for the people who are there. We don't want to see a new colonialism in Africa."

Advertisement

Clinton said the United States didn't want foreign governments and investors to fail in Africa, but they also should give back.

"We want them to do well, but also we want them to do good," she said.

"We don't want them to undermine good governance, we don't want them to basically deal with just the top elites, and frankly too often pay for their concessions or their opportunities to invest."

Clinton said that American development aid and public works projects come with good governance conditions and that the Obama administration is interested in Africa and its people. Their success, she said, is in everyone's long-term interest.

Her comments, in a pan-African television interview in the Zambian capital, followed the handover of a U.S. built pediatric hospital in Lusaka to the Zambian government.

Earlier, at the inaugural meeting of the U.S.-Zambia Chamber of Commerce, Clinton laid out the U.S. strategy for helping Africa.

"We want a relationship of partnership not patronage, of sustainability, not quick fixes," she said. "We want to establish a strong foundation to attract new investment, open new businesses ... create more paychecks, and do so within the context of a positive ethic of corporate responsibility."

"We think it's essential that we have an idea going in that doing well is not in any way a contradiction of doing good," she said.

Clinton is the first secretary of state to visit Zambia since Henry Kissinger came in 1976 to lay out the Ford administration's policy for southern Africa as revolts against white minority rule in South Africa and what was then Rhodesia were intensifying.

Clinton, on the first leg of a three-nation tour of Africa, arrived in Zambia from the United Arab Emirates, where she attended an international conference on Libya. After Zambia, she heads to Tanzania and Ethiopia before returning to Washington next week.


Online:

State Department background on Zambia: http://tinyurl.com/3r9gugp

 
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