Friday, 30 May 2014

Guest Columnist: Vladimir Ilyich Lenin on Imperialism

Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism
A POPULAR OUTLINE

VII. IMPERIALISM AS A SPECIAL STAGE OF CAPITALISM
We must now try to sum up, to draw together the threads of what has been said above on the subject of imperialism. Imperialism emerged as the development and direct continuation of the fundamental characteristics of capitalism in general. But capitalism only became capitalist imperialism at a definite and very high stage of its development, when certain of its fundamental characteristics began to change into their opposites, when the features of the epoch of transition from capitalism to a higher social and economic system had taken shape and revealed themselves in all spheres. Economically, the main thing in this process is the displacement of capitalist free competition by capitalist monopoly. Free competition is the basic feature of capitalism, and of commodity production generally; monopoly is the exact opposite of free competition, but we have seen the latter being transformed into monopoly before our eyes, creating large-scale industry and forcing out small industry, replacing large-scale by still larger-scale industry, and carrying concentration of production and capital to the point where out of it has grown and is growing monopoly: cartels, syndicates and trusts, and merging with them, the capital of a dozen or so banks, which manipulate thousands of millions. At the same time the monopolies, which have grown out of free competition, do not eliminate the latter, but exist above it and alongside it, and thereby give rise to a number of very acute, intense antagonisms, frictions and conflicts. Monopoly is the transition from capitalism to a higher system.
If it were necessary to give the briefest possible definition of imperialism we should have to say that imperialism is the monopoly stage of capitalism. Such a definition would include what is most important, for, on the one hand, finance capital is the bank capital of a few very big monopolist banks, merged with the capital of the monopolist associations of industrialists; and, on the other hand, the division of the world is the transition from a colonial policy which has extended without hindrance to territories unseized by any capitalist power, to a colonial policy of monopolist possession of the territory of the world, which has been completely divided up.
But very brief definitions, although convenient, for they sum up the main points, are nevertheless inadequate, since we have to deduce from them some especially important features of the phenomenon that has to be defined. And so, without forgetting the conditional and relative value of all definitions in general, which can never embrace all the concatenations[1] of a phenomenon in its full development, we must give a definition of imperialism that will include the following five of its basic features:
(1) the concentration of production and capital has developed to such a high stage that it has created monopolies which play a decisive role in economic life; (2) the merging of bank capital with industrial capital, and the creation, on the basis of this “finance capital”, of a financial oligarchy; (3) the export of capital as distinguished from the export of commodities acquires exceptional importance; (4) the formation of international monopolist capitalist associations which share the world among themselves, and (5) the territorial division of the whole world among the biggest capitalist powers is completed. Imperialism is capitalism at that stage of development at which the dominance of monopolies and finance capital is established; in which the export of capital has acquired pronounced importance; in which the division of the world among the international trusts has begun, in which the division of all territories of the globe among the biggest capitalist powers has been completed.
We shall see later that imperialism can and must be defined differently if we bear in mind not only the basic, purely economic concepts—to which the above definition is limited—but also the historical place of this stage of capitalism in relation to capitalism in general, or the relation between imperialism and the two main trends in the working-class movement. The thing to be noted at this point is that imperialism, as interpreted above, undoubtedly represents a special stage in the development of capitalism. To enable the reader to obtain the most well grounded idea of imperialism, I deliberately tried to quote as extensively as possible bourgeois economists who have to admit the particularly incontrovertible facts concerning the latest stage of capitalist economy. With the same object in view, I have quoted detailed statistics which enable one to see to what degree bank capital, etc., has grown, in what precisely the transformation of quantity into quality, of developed capitalism into imperialism, was expressed. Needless to say, of course, all boundaries in nature and in society are conventional and changeable, and it would be absurd to argue, for example, about the particular year or decade in which imperialism “definitely” became established.
In the matter of defining imperialism, however, we have to enter into controversy, primarily, with Karl Kautsky, the principal Marxist theoretician of the epoch of the so-called Second International—that is, of the twenty-five years between 1889 and 1914. The fundamental ideas expressed in our definition of imperialism were very resolutely attacked by Kautsky in 1915, and even in November 1914, when he said that imperialism must not be regarded as a “phase” or stage of economy, but as a policy, a definite policy “preferred” by finance capital; that imperialism must not be “identified” with “present-day capitalism”; that if imperialism is to be understood to mean “all the phenomena of present-day capitalism”—cartels, protection, the domination of the financiers, and colonial policy—then the question as to whether imperialism is necessary to capitalism becomes reduced to the “flattest tautology”, because, in that case, “imperialism is naturally a vital necessity for capitalism”, and so on. The best way to present Kautsky’s idea is to quote his own definition of imperialism, which is diametrically opposed to the substance of the ideas which I have set forth (for the objections coming from the camp of the German Marxists, who have been advocating similar ideas for many years already, have been long known to Kautsky as the objections of a definite trend in Marxism).
Kautsky’s definition is as follows:
“Imperialism is a product of highly developed industrial capitalism. It consists in the striving of every industrial capitalist nation to bring under its control or to annex all large areas of agrarian[Kautsky’s italics] territory, irrespective of what nations inhabit it.” [1]
This definition is of no use at all because it one-sidedly, i.e., arbitrarily, singles out only the national question (although the latter is extremely important in itself as well as in its relation to imperialism), it arbitrarily and inaccurately connects this question only with industrial capital in the countries which annex other nations, and in an equally arbitrary and inaccurate manner pushes into the forefront the annexation of agrarian regions.
Imperialism is a striving for annexations—this is what the political part of Kautsky’s definition amounts to. It is correct, but very incomplete, for politically, imperialism is, in general, a striving towards violence and reaction. For the moment, however, we are interested in the economic aspect of the question, which Kautsky himself introduced into his definition. The inaccuracies in Kautsky’s definition are glaring. The characteristic feature of imperialism is not industrial but finance capital. It is not an accident that in France it was precisely the extraordinarily rapid development of finance capital, and the weakening of industrial capital, that from the eighties onwards gave rise to the extreme intensification of annexationist (colonial) policy. The characteristic feature of imperialism is precisely that it strives to annex not only agrarian territories, but even most highly industrialised regions (German appetite for Belgium; French appetite for Lorraine), because (1) the fact that the world is already partitioned obliges those contemplating a redivision to reach out for every kind of territory, and (2) an essential feature of imperialism is the rivalry between several great powers in the striving for hegemony, i.e., for the conquest of territory, not so much directly for themselves as to weaken the adversary and undermine his hegemony. (Belgium is particularly important for Germany as a base for operations against Britain; Britain needs Baghdad as a base for operations against Germany, etc.)
Kautsky refers especially—and repeatedly—to English writers who, lie alleges, have given a purely political meaning to the word “imperialism” in the sense that he, Kautsky, understands it. We take up the work by the English writer Hobson, Imperialism, which appeared in 1902, and there we read:
“The new imperialism differs from the older, first, in substituting for the ambition of a single growing empire the theory and the practice of competing empires, each motivated by similar lusts of political aggrandisement and commercial gain; secondly, in the dominance of financial or investing over mercantile interests.” [2]
We see that Kautsky is absolutely wrong in referring to English writers generally (unless lie meant the vulgar English imperialists, or the avowed apologists for imperialism). We see that Kautsky, while claiming that he continues to advocate Marxism, as a matter of fact takes a step backward compared with the social-liberal Hobson, who more correctly takes into account two “historically concrete” (Kautsky’s definition is a mockery of historical concreteness!) features of modern imperialism: (1) the competition between several imperialisms, and (2) the predominance of the financier over the merchant. If it is chiefly a question of the annexation of agrarian countries by industrial countries, then the role of the merchant is put in the forefront.
Kautsky’s definition is not only wrong and un-Marxist. It serves as a basis for a whole system of views which signify a rupture with Marxist theory and Marxist practice all along the line. I shall refer to this later. The argument about words which Kautsky raises as to whether the latest stage of capitalism should be called imperialism or the stage of finance capital is not worth serious attention. Call it what you will, it makes no difference. The essence of the matter is that Kautsky detaches the politics of imperialism from its economics, speaks of annexations as being a policy “preferred” by finance capital, and opposes to it another bourgeois policy which, he alleges, is possible on this very same basis of finance capital. It follows, then, that monopolies in the economy are compatible with non-monopolistic, non-violent, non-annexationist methods in politics. It follows, then, that the territorial division of the world, which was completed during this very epoch of finance capital, and which constitutes the basis of the present peculiar forms of rivalry between the biggest capitalist states, is compatible with a non-imperialist policy. The result is a slurring-over and a blunting of the most profound contradictions of the latest stage of capitalism, instead of an exposure of their depth; the result is bourgeois reformism instead of Marxism.
Kautsky enters into controversy with the German apologist of imperialism and annexations, Cunow, who clumsily and cynically argues that imperialism is present-day capitalism; the development of capitalism is inevitable and progressive; therefore imperialism is progressive; therefore, we should grovel before it and glorify it! This is something like the caricature of the Russian Marxists which the Narodniks drew in 1894-95. They argued: if the Marxists believe that capitalism is inevitable in Russia, that it is progressive, then they ought to open a tavern and begin to implant capitalism! Kautsky’s reply to Cunow is as follows: imperialism is not present-day capitalism; it is only one of the forms of the policy of present-day capitalism. This policy we can and should fight, fight imperialism, annexations, etc.
The reply seems quite plausible, but in effect it is a more subtle and more disguised (and therefore more dangerous) advocacy of conciliation with imperialism, because a “fight” against the policy of the trusts and banks that does not affect the economic basis of the trusts and banks is mere bourgeois reformism and pacifism, the benevolent and innocent expression of pious wishes. Evasion of existing contradictions, forgetting the most important of them, instead of revealing their full depth—such is Kautsky’s theory, which has nothing in common with Marxism. Naturally, such a “theory” can only serve the purpose of advocating unity with the Cunows!
“From the purely economic point of view,” writes Kautsky, “it is not impossible that capitalism will yet go through a new phase, that of the extension of the policy of the cartels to foreign policy, the phase of ultra-imperialism,” [3] i.e., of a superimperialism, of a union of the imperialisms of the whole world and not struggles among them, a phase when wars shall cease under capitalism, a phase of “the joint exploitation of the world by internationally united finance capital”. [4]
We shall have to deal with this “theory of ultra-imperialism” later on in order to show in detail how decisively and completely it breaks with Marxism. At present, in keeping with the general plan of the present work, we must examine the exact economic data on this question. “From the purely economic point of view”, is “ultra-imperialism” possible, or is it ultra-nonsense?
If the purely economic point of view is meant to be a “pure” abstraction, then all that can be said reduces itself to the following proposition: development is proceeding towards monopolies, hence, towards a single world monopoly, towards a single world trust. This is indisputable, but it is also as completely meaningless as is the statement that “development is proceeding” towards the manufacture of foodstuffs in laboratories. In this sense the “theory” of ultra-imperialism is no less absurd than a “theory of ultra-agriculture” would be.
If, however, we are discussing the “purely economic” conditions of the epoch of finance capital as a historically concrete epoch which began at the turn of the twentieth century, then the best reply that one can make to the lifeless abstractions of “ultraimperialism” (which serve exclusively a most reactionary aim: that of diverting attention from the depth of existing antagonisms) is to contrast them with the concrete economic realities of the present-day world economy. Kautsky’s utterly meaningless talk about ultra-imperialism encourages, among other things, that profoundly mistaken idea which only brings grist to the mill of the apologists of imperialism, i.e., that the rule of finance capital lessens the unevenness and contradictions inherent in the world economy, whereas in reality it increases them.
R. Calwer, in his little book, An Introduction to the World Economy, [5] made an attempt to summarise the main, purely economic, data that enable one to obtain a concrete picture of the internal relations of the world economy at the turn of the twentieth century. He divides the world into five “main economic areas”, as follows: (1) Central Europe (the whole of Europe with the exception of Russia and Great Britain); (2) Great Britain; (3) Russia; (4) Eastern Asia; (5) America; he includes the colonies in the “areas” of the states to which they belong and “leaves aside” a few countries not distributed according to areas, such as Persia, Afghanistan, and Arabia in Asia, Morocco and Abyssinia in Africa, etc.
Here is a brief summary of the economic data he quotes on these regions.
Principal
economic
areas
Area
Pop.
Transport
Trade
Industry
Million sq.
miles
Millions
Railways
(thou. km)
Mercantile
fleet (mill-
ions tons)
Imports,
exports
(thous-million
marks)
Output

Of coal (mill.
tons)
Of pig iron
(mill. tons)
Number
of cotton
spindles
(millions)
1) Central
Europe
27.6
(23.6)
388
(146)
204
8
41
251
15
26
2) Britain
28.9
(28.6)
398
(355)
140
11
25
249
9
51
3) Russia
22
131
63
1
3
16
3
7
4) Eastern Asia
12
389
8
1
2
8
0.02
2
5) America
30
148
379
6
14
245
14
19
NOTE: The figures in parentheses show the area and population of the colonies.
We see three areas of highly developed capitalism (high development of means of transport, of trade and of industry): the Central European, the British and the American areas. Among these are three states which dominate the world: Germany, Great Britain, and the United States. Imperialist rivalry and the struggle between these countries have become extremely keen because Germany has only an insignificant area and few colonies; the creation of “Central Europe” is still a matter for the future, it is being born in the midst of a desperate struggle. For the moment the distinctive feature of the whole of Europe is political disunity. In the British and American areas, on the other hand, political concentration is very highly developed, but there is a vast disparity between the immense colonies of the one and the insignificant colonies of the other. In the colonies, however, capitalism is only beginning to develop. The struggle for South America is becoming more and more acute.
There are two areas where capitalism is little developed: Russia and Eastern Asia. In the former, the population is extremely sparse, in the latter it is extremely dense; in the former political concentration is high, in the latter it does not exist. The partitioning of China is only just beginning, and the struggle for it between Japan, the U.S., etc., is continually gaining in intensity.
Compare this reality—the vast diversity of economic and political conditions, the extreme disparity in the rate of development of the various countries, etc., and the violent struggles among the imperialist states—with Kautsky’s silly little fable about “peaceful” ultra-imperialism. Is this not the reactionary attempt of a frightened philistine to hide from stern reality? Are not the international cartels which Kautsky imagines are the embryos of “ultra-imperialism” (in the same way as one “can” describe the manufacture of tablets in a laboratory as ultra-agriculture in embryo) an example of the division and the redivision of the world, the transition from peaceful division to non-peaceful division and vice versa? Is not American and other finance capital, which divided the whole world peacefully with Germany’s participation in, for example, the international rail syndicate, or in the international mercantile shipping trust, now engaged in redividingthe world on the basis of a new relation of forces that is being changed by methods anything but peaceful?
Finance capital and the trusts do not diminish but increase the differences in the rate of growth of the various parts of the world economy. Once the relation of forces is changed, what other solution of the contradictions can be found under capitalism than that of force? Railway statistics [6] provide remarkably exact data on the different rates of growth of capitalism and finance capital in world economy. In the last decades of imperialist development, the total length of railways has changed as follows:

Railways (000 kilometers)
1890
1913
+
Europe
224

346

+122

U.S.
268
411
+143
All colonies
82
125
210
347
+128
+222
Independent and semi-independent
states of Asia and America
43
137
+94
Total
617

1,104



Thus, the development of railways has been most rapid in the colonies and in the independent (and semi-independent) states of Asia and America. Here, as we know, the finance capital of the four or five biggest capitalist states holds undisputed sway. Two hundred thousand kilometres of new railways in the colonies and in the other countries of Asia and America represent a capital of more than 40,000 million marks newly invested on particularly advantageous terms, with special guarantees of a good return and with profitable orders for steel works, etc., etc.
Capitalism is growing with the greatest rapidity in the colonies and in overseas countries. Among the latter, new imperialist powers are emerging (e.g., Japan). The struggle among the world imperialisms is becoming more acute. The tribute levied by finance capital on the most profitable colonial and overseas enterprises is increasing. In the division of this “booty”, an exceptionally large part goes to countries which do not always stand at the top of the list in the rapidity of the development of their productive forces. In the case of the biggest countries, together with their colonies, the total length of railways was as follows:

(000 kilometres)
1890
1913

U.S.
268
413
+145
British Empire
107
208
+101
Russia
32
78
+46
Germany
43
68
+25
France
41
63
+22
Total
491
830
+339
Thus, about 80 per cent of the total existing railways are concentrated in the hands of the five biggest powers. But the concentration of the ownership of these railways, the concentration of finance capital, is immeasurably greater since the French and British millionaires, for example, own an enormous amount of shares and bonds in American, Russian and other railways.
Thanks to her colonies, Great Britain has increased the length of “her” railways by 100,000 kilometres, four times as much as Germany. And yet, it is well known that the development of productive forces in Germany, and especially the development of the coal and iron industries, has been incomparably more rapid during this period than in Britain—not to speak of France and Russia. In 1892, Germany produced 4,900,000 tons of pig-iron and Great Britain produced 6,800,000 tons; in 1912, Germany produced 17,600,000 tons and Great Britain, 9,000,000 tons. Germany, therefore, had an overwhelming superiority over Britain in this respect. [7] The question is: what means other than war could there be under capitalism to overcome the disparity between the development of productive forces and the accumulation of capital on the one side, and the division of colonies and spheres of influence for finance capital on the other?

Notes
[1] Die Neue Zeit, 1914, 2 (B. 32), S. 909, Sept. 11, 1914; cf. 1915, 2, S. 107 et seq. —Lenin
[2] Hobson, Imperialism, London, 1902, p. 324. —Lenin
[3] Die Neue Zeit, 1914, 2 (B. 32), S. 921, Sept. 11, 1914. Cf. 1915, 2, S. 107 et seq. —Lenin
[4] Ibid., 1915, 1, S. 144, April 30, 1915. —Lenin
[5] R. Calwer, Einfü hrung in die Weltwirtschaft, Berlin, 1906. —Lenin
[6] Statistisches Jahrbuch für das deutsche Reich, 1915; Archiv für Eisenbahnwesen, 1892. Minor details for the distribution of railways among the colonies of the various countries in 1890 had to be estimated approximately. —Lenin
[7] Cf. also Edgar Crammond, “The Economic Relations of the British and German Empires” in The Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, July 1914, p. 777 et seq. —Lenin






[1] A series of interconnections – to connect or link into series or links….Free Dictionary online

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Deifying President Museveni is a means to an end for ideologically bankrupt youths

MUSEVENISM

The picture of purported youth groups from Western Uganda kneeling on their knees before President Yoweri Museveni has gone viral on the social media - facebook. The reason this picture has gone viral is embedded in its irony of deification or promoting Musevenism. The males adorning the traditional yellow NRM T-shirt do not appear to be youths. The concept of males kneeling before another man to beg for continued misrule strikes rather as very unusual for unemployment victims – the youths.
Sometimes one would like to look beyond the limitations of President Museveni in order to be able to look at the brighter side of his regime. But a deep scrutiny of the regime reveals yet a very sad reality of damages it has caused. Undoing these damages, especially those on the conscience of Ugandans may have to take the same amount of time the regime has lasted in power and more. The more it lasts, the more it will continue to inflict its unflinching nerve numbing damage on the conscience of our people.
The regime has drawn all powers to its center, leaving absolute powerlessness at the periphery by destroying institutions that anchor the people to the state. It is this powerlessness that enforces unprincipled submission to the repression making men to kneel before Museveni. Many of the victims now identify and deify the oppressor, not because they want to, but because the madness of deification is the inevitable process of showing loyalty to the delusional Presidency.
My visit to Uganda recently, revealed that many Ugandans were politically conscious for all wrong reasons. Every new person I met first falsely identifies as a Statehouse employee. On basic scrutiny, you only realize a posturing for petty privileges!
Now it would not be farfetched to assume that the large majority of those who claim to support the NRM are materialists or glory hunters. Deifying the President is just a means to the end for those ideologically bankrupt "youths". This is because everything NRM is about money and the flavor of power. Young and old people alike would die to get a chance to meet the President in person, and not the institutions of government. Just meeting the president is a must-do-before-I-die kind of thing. It is to the President that they press the demands for services that government institutions should have otherwise provided. The second explanation for deifying Museveni appears to be despondency. Most of the NRM supporters are semi-literate and to a greater degree, they appear intoxicated with insatiable needs. They need jobs, money, presidential favors and miracles. This lot shows deviation in character because they lack in every aspect of rationality and stateliness. They can neither defend their support for the NRM/Museveni nor their purpose of being in politics. Most of these spend many man hours wasted in politics with no legitimate interests; property to protect or a desire for liberty. They have turned politics into a way of life – a source of income. They remain poor until the next election to trade their will.
They then deify a leader so as to generate a false impression of indomitability. This has a danger of transforming a good leader into a monster. In Museveni’s case it hikes the cost of his tenure. He has to carry money in bags and to make pledges at every turn and places he visits.
This also means that the NRM popularity is not really genuine; it is procured or rather a rented unstable support. Luwero’s recent by-election shed some light in this respect. Many Ugandans have reached a point where they are either Musevenists or NRM. They also know that being NRM is associated with low end chaotic arrangements that are characterized by vote rigging in primaries. It is the Musevenists who have the real power with access to resources and privileges. Unfortunately, to bridge from NRM to the Musevenists section, one needs to be seen to deify the President!

END

Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Is achieving HIV free generation possible in Sub-Sahara Africa?

  
A letter to Janet K. Museveni and Center for Disease Control in Atlanta
 
GLOBAL HEALTH

I have just completed a valuable experience at a facility called the New Life Medical Center (NLMC) in a remote Northern Uganda District of Kitgum. This center offers HIV related treatment and provides psychosocial support to mothers who are enrolled in the Maternal Child Health’s PMTCT program. This facility belongs to Food for the Hungry - Uganda, an affiliate of FH International, a Christian based international organization. This particular health facility, accredited at health center II, is funded by Blood Water Mission in Tennessee, USA. This facility is quietly transforming lives of persons living with HIV in Kitgum, Pader and Lamwo districts with promises to realize HIV free generation!
The purpose of this letter are threefold: to applaud your endless efforts at fighting HIV and to recognize the investment in both human resource capacity development and provision of relevant logistics for the treatment of HIV such as ARV drugs and others; to inquire from your respective offices whether it is realistic and possible to achieve the dream of engendering HIV free generation in Sub-sahara Africa under its current conditions and; Ito contribute in shaping the global discourse towards consolidating MDG experiences in this region.
A background would suffice. The NLMC is the second most reliable treatment center in Kitgum district after St Joseph’s Hospital, a Catholic establishment. The NLMC is specifically focused on HIV treatment, although it provides general outpatient clinical services. In my stay at this facility, I witnessed 100% HIV negative turnover of Early Diagnosed Infants in the Stewardship study program which enrolled mothers to a PMTCT program when they are within 14 weeks of gestation or under.
The outcome of this treatment convinced me that the WHO Option B+ is a golden bullet for that shared global dream of HIV free generation. I believe that this is a unanimous global position because results from a strict adherence to Option B+ would exceed the 95% target of mothers not transmitting HIV to their unborn foetuses.
The CDC identifies three biomedical conditions under which this dream could be realized; lifelong antiretroviral treatment for persons living with HIV; eliminating mother to child of HIV infection and expanding voluntary medical male circumcision.
While I may agree with the CDC’s position on biomedical management of HIV, this prospect has its limitation in the global health realms. In Sub-Sahara Africa, studies show that Male circumcision can only reduce HIV infection invariantly by close to 60%. My critical analysis estimates that biomedical aspect of HIV care contribute to about 30-40% of the total HIV free generation discourse. The other 60-70% is mediated through psychosocial aspects. A robust combination of the two paradigms, however, has great potentials to yield the highest outcome expectancies.
Biomedical aspect of HIV care are known; counselling and testing; enrolment in ART, male circumcision and accompanying health education. The psychosocial aspect of the treatment is the recognition of the vast arrays of the impacts of social determinants of health on the persons or family living with HIV. This is very crucial aspect of HIV care and yet it attracts disproportionally little funding.
In my work with the NLMC, I found that health literacy/education, income, social support networks, gender (male involvement) and transportation were the major social determinants of health that affected timely uptake of EMTCT services and slows the realization of HIV free generation.
It is at this level that my question becomes relevant. How can we espouse so much hope in a HIV free generation when the children we are delivering HIV free are born into the very same risky social conditions under which their parents are entrapped in - especially in sub-Sahara Africa?
For Northern Uganda, this dream is very far off the mark as yet. For Uganda, where HIV statistics are politicized, the realization of this dream may even be challenging. For instance, studies by Ahaibwe and Kasirye (2013) showed that only 56% of Ugandans have ever used HCT/VCT services and therefore by implication, only half of the Ugandan population is aware of their sero-status. This contradicts the official figure that 1.5 million people are living with HIV. I challenge this position and argue that HIV prevalence in Uganda is about 15% with some regions having prevalence of up to 18% - thanks to antiretorviral medications. Unless we become bold and honest, how can we dream of a HIV free generation? In Uganda's case, honesty and integrity are missing in the HIV free generation discourse.

END

Monday, 12 May 2014

Reinventing indigenous science in Africa: A reflection on SASA conference 2014

Indigenous SCience

The second international conference for the Advancement of Science in Africa (SASA) ended at Hotel Africana last week on Friday, May 9th, 2014. This SASA conference started in Polokwane in South Africa last year. The conference draws from some of the world’s best scientists and researchers from USA, Canada, Europe, Japan, Mauritius etc who come to share their intellectual products with scientists in Africa. At the end of it all, SASA hopes to inspire African scholars, Universities and Governments, to invest in science in order to use evidence from science to influence policies and professional practices in Africa.
This years’ international conference was hosted by Gulu University in cahoots with Makerere University Uganda National Council of Science and technology and Muni University in Uganda. Internationally, Pennsylvania state University, Youth Employment and Income Enhancement project (YEIEP), Global Knowledge Initiative and Osaka University in Japan were very supportive.
During the four days of the conference, we were treated to some mind blowing innovations from Nabisunsa Girls School with their experiment of water purification. Most of the ongoing researches in integrating herbal or traditional medicines in practice being conducted around Uganda were breath taking. We learned with much enthusiasm how Japan was working closely with Gulu University in health research, improving diagnostic mechanisms for malaria management and so forth.
One of the outstanding themes of the conference was the increasing demand for indigenous (African) knowledge in science and practice in the mainstream research. At the forefront of the advocacy for indigenous knowledge were Prof. Njoki N. Wane and Dr Francis Akena Adyanga from the University of Toronto. The scholars made strong cases for the conspicuous absence of indigenous science and knowledge in the mainstream academia – either at high school or at Universities. They argued that the main facet of the frontiers of science in Africa lies in reinvigorating indigenous knowledge which shaped African science and technology way before the advent of colonialism. Dr Adyanga for instance illustrated how the modern caesarian section was first conducted successfully in Bunyoro way before Europeans indulged in this practice and yet today, the scalpels or tools used for that surgical intervention lies in archives in London.
This discussion also hinted on how Europe and western colonialism has continued to undermine and under develop African indigenous science by archiving all artifacts associated with African science in museums in Europe, Australia and America. Such artifacts provide references and evidence to how African science influenced the lifeways of the people. Today, religion and modern medicine remains the cornerstone of undermining African science and technology. For instance, every African practice and belief systems are deemed devilish or satanic by religious zealots who are brainwashed that the core of life has always been associated with Jewish life story as recounted in the Bible.
The medicine perspective rubbishes African herbal and traditional practices as risky, unsubstantiated and backward, without recognizing that most modern medicines are extracts from plants that are found in Africa and were used by the indigenous tribes for centuries. Medical practitioners, like church preachers and Reverends, do not recognize that life in Africa preceded western religion and modern medicine. In fact, African knowledge provided the back-born to the so-called modern western practices in science and technology. The building of the pyramids in Egypt; the current medical signs was taken from Nubians; the caesarian section was first conducted in Bunyoro, fire was discovered in Africa etc. African religious beliefs were far more advanced as it entailed holistic practices involving the dead, the living, non-living and environment and all rituals that western religion has emulated.
The presenters concluded that instead of bedeviling African indigenous practices, African scientists should invest in conducting research to establish concrete evidence to support or not support them. Some of these practices have sustained communities for a long time and yet today we see them as inferior or backward.
The conference was one of the best that I have attended and of course, my presentation titled “Advancing psychosocial frontiers in EMTCT: the role of self-efficacy in Male involvement” was well received as it articulated the challenges of achieving HIV free generation in Uganda and provided leadership direction in this field of maternal child health.

The 3rd International SASA conference will take place in Toronto, Canada and we look forward to receiving more research abstracts from African Scholars, Doctoral and post-doctoral scholars in 2015. I pass my sincere regards to the International Organizing Committee of SASA, notably, Prof Joachim Kapalanga, Prof Elain F. Fymat, Dr. Francis Adyanga and the National Organizing Team headed by Prof Emillio Ovuga and all the Sponsors and Universities that hosted us. This conference could not have been possible without your tireless efforts. See you all in our home turf, Toronto in 2015!

END

Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Acholi land appears to be hungry for human life


 LIVING WELL

On April 16th 2014 we drove through Pader Town Council to Lapeta central, Lanyirinyiri Parish in Lira Palwo, Agago District to bury Mzee Obaldo Opogo who succumbed to recurrent Tuberculosis. Mzee Obaldo was 83 years old, having been born in 1931. He was married to two wives and was blessed in his life with 11 children and 36 grandchildren. Considering the tumultuous times that Acholi has passed through, Mzee Obaldo’s death was a loss to the community, but his life deserved a celebration, not mourning. He lived a successful life in procreation and in life as a talented sportsman and traditional dancer. He left unceremoniously for an elder who is a valuable source of life lessons for the youths who are dying at tender age these days.

As we drove past Pader Town Council headquarters, my admiration for this town planner could not be hidden. Pader, like other Acholi districts of Agago, Kitgum and Lamwo have very attractive landscape. They all appear to be sitting in this beautiful green saucer hemmed in by C- shaped mountain ranges that stretches as far as Abim and zigzags its way to Lamwo through Kalongo, Latanya Agoro, and others. The scenic view offered by this blend of nature offers much potential for economic transformation. These mountain ranges, if well exploited can become serious sites of tourist attraction.

I am certain that there are mysteries and history to these mountain ranges. 

One obvious observation is the preserved forests on the mountains in comparison to the shrubs and thorns in the plain land. In Agoro and Lokung, the human settlement in villages littered at the foothills of the mountain proves that the fertile soil around these mountains can sustain livelihood. Usually other mountainous places offer very poor quality of soil and granite which does not support food crop.

But death in Acholi land is still very rampant. Not one week passes without hearing about death – either natural or senseless murders in villages. It appears that Acholi land is hungry for human flesh because the land is not being fully utilized to improve life. Acholi land is arable land which can sustain mechanized and modern farming. People here have to come to a convergence that their primary source of wealth is the soil under their feet.  According field extension specialist, Simon Ojok Odoch and Food for the Hungry - Kitgum manager, Seydou Adolatona, Mzee Obaldo was a prominent beneficiary of Food for the Hungry’s livelihood programs while still living in IDP camp in Lira Palwo Subcounty from 2006-2008.

Farming is popular here and yields have not been bad in the previous farming season according to villagers I spoke to in Pajule, Acholibur and Awere. The problem is reliable market for the produces and once disposed, how to plan to use to proceeds to meet basic household needs. Many people would rather buy alcohol than cloths and shoes for their school age children. Schools are charging PTA and other expenses at a meager cost of 5000 – 10000/= which many of the farming communities here can easily afford. I have gone to homes where children are staying home because their parents have not paid school dues of 10000/= for primary school and 50,000/= for secondary school.

This is upsetting because you find in such homes, there are chicken, goats, cows, pigs, sheep etc loitering around about. The current market price of chicken is about 15,000/= which could place three children in school. The current market price of a mature goat is 80,000 – 90,000/= which can put two children through secondary school. The market for pork is insatiable in restaurants and pork joints, and yet the supply is painstakingly very sluggish.

These contradictions bring to mind one question. Are we valuing the education of our children or we do value keeping animals at home? I believe that on the average, most families here can put their children through primary and secondary school under the UPE/USE. Emphasis on livelihood and household income generation has been made and responses are good. 

What remains prudent is to alter the mindset to encourage purposive investment in food production for education. Each child should be tasked with the responsibility of tending to his/her animals or field to ensure that they stay in school.

The addiction created by NGO culture of donation and offering free supplies must be surpassed so that people can become self-reliant to live longer like Mzee Obaldo. I end this piece by encouraging clan chiefs and leaders to attend urgently to the problem of alcoholism in northern Uganda.


END

Tuesday, 11 March 2014

Death by the Sachet!

ALCOHOLISM

Death is by far the most petrifying event in human discourse. But death, itself a fluid phenomenon, has found shape and form in all facets of human life. It manifests in unavoidable places and moments. In my home districts of Kitgum and Pader, death reveals its presence in each and every household and it is prescribed by the sachet of crude alcohol.

The amount of Gur alcohol packaged in sachets which are streaming into these places from Lango districts ensures that alcohol has become the primary source of all crimes including death and injuries. People die in several stages here before their actual time of death because of the sachet. Their gradual demise starts the moment they start to drink from the sachet.  Our elders once said that the death which kills men faster is that which begins like an appetite. Here, the appetite for the sachet alcohol is the license for death!

On Saturday, March 8th, 2014, I accompanied the Rwot of Paibwor Clan – HRH Okello Demoi Ajau and his esteemed Prime Minister – Mr. Adola-Tona Seydou to their clan meeting in Acholibur. In the meeting, a heated discussion of rampant death of Paibwor sons and daughters in the hands of other clans took place. It happens that all the recent deaths under discussion were alcohol related.

I attended the meeting in my capacity as a nephew of the Paibwor Clan. Those who know my family will attest that my late father, Lt Col Pangarasio Onek (RIP) was a nephew of the Paibwor clan, which, by extension also makes me one of their nephews – thereby, legitimizing my attendance.

I am cognizant of my Palwo clan roots, given that my birth place where my umbilicus was also buried is at Wangdugu village in Pajule. Although I have had very little time to spend in any of these places, Pajule has always had a special place in my heart. The pain of being a son of Pajule is also inscribed in witnessing its own children perish from this demon called the sachet.

The rampant sight of young men and women inebriated as early as 10am in the morning is more than one can fathom. This debilitating behaviour definitely affects the state of labour and threatens the future of children if these drunken men and women were all parents. Unfortunately, many people here acquire HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases because of drunkenness which leads them to risky sexual behavior. At the Kitgum jail, you find most of the youths serving time for petty crimes of assault, defilement and theft, most of which are alcohol inspired.

The issue of alcoholism is profound and also has a political twist to it. The villagers here have threatened elected leaders to desist from addressing the issue in exchange for votes. However, I found that the Paibwor Rwot, HRH Demoi to be a complete and accomplished leader who is cherished, respected and admired by his subject. He projects a humble, fatherly and well grounded royal pedigree. Instead of unleashing the expected punishment of whips to the drunken youths, he prefers to counsel them to quit abusing alcohol.

The Rwot recognizes that alcoholism is widespread problem in the entire Northern Uganda and yet, the Paibwor clan approach posed a great opportunity for us to learn from. Could the Clan approach help stave off this endemic problem of death by the sachet which has claimed many young lives and pitted clans against clans?

I saw a promising opportunity in collective responsibility (Communitarism) to addressing this problem. Regular clan members’ audit could roll back this dangerous drinking and other social habits. Here, when one kills another, the entire clan is called upon to settle the issue (culu kwor). They pay huge compensation to the clan of the deceased prior to reconciliation (mato oput) as a collective.

Although I conflicted at first with the collective idea of innocent clan members footing the bill for individual crimes, I was guided by the Paibwor clan Prime Minister, Seydou Adolatona Opoka that it took a clan to raise a child and the clan therefore shares equally in its spoils.


END

Sunday, 2 March 2014

Reasons why Northern Uganda schools will lag behind


SCHOOL PERFORMANCES

The recently released ‘O’ level result has proven that there are huge inequities in Education for students from Northern Uganda. Once again, this region has lagged behind in grade scores which also show how the region is failing to produce people to compete in the economy. The pattern has been consistent for the last several decades, in all national exams; PLE, ‘O’ and ‘A’ level. I can comfortably predict that the ‘A’ level results to be released soon will follow similar patterns.

It is not that the district education officers, parents and teachers in northern Uganda are not concerned about the education of their children here. This consistent and chronic below national average performances demonstrate lack of supportive infrastructure for education. The education system is not about brand new classrooms, but it is about many components such as having up-to-date laboratory and qualified science teachers, having reading space and text books, having reading light and supervision to complete homework and above all, a stable home with adequate nutrition and rest period for students.

I have travelled in a couple of secondary schools in Pader and yet none of them has science laboratory that can meet national standards. The ratio of science teachers to student is unimaginably large such that some teachers must teach more than one subject at “A” level. I have found many committed teachers and concerned parents who are helpless in these schools. Children are trying their very best, but the issues here in our schools are more than what the schools, the students and parents can fathom. All Secondary school exams require practical exams, if students don’t practice regularly, they cannot compete nationally. This will affect university entry and generation of science professionals in this region.

Teachers here lack housing and are not being given housing allowances or incentives to retain them here. This complicates the issue of quality teachers’ retention in northern Uganda. The ratio of student to teacher is very astonishing across the board.

Here, teachers and students do not have good reading environment and reading resources. Lack of light to study is very harmful here. In some of these places, having electricity has become an unusual experience. Many teachers here are out rightly uninformed about current scientific advances and knowledge.  You can image how students’ curiosity to learn is pampered with outdated information about the world. Here, there is hardly a computer and internet in schools so learning is still very traditional.

Rural schools have very special challenges that must be mitigated through a deliberate equalization policy at national level. Education is a key determinant of health and a medium through which national resources can be shared and utilized. A population which is under educated has low utilization potential of national programs and suffers from lack of innovativeness. Northern Uganda provides us with such a classical situation which has also alienated the region from sharing in the socio-economic transformation of society which the NRM regime brags about.

On an optimistic perspective, these problems could be mitigated by enacting a national policy to provide for incentives to retain teachers in rural districts and rural communities. Teachers need to educate their children and to house them in decent accommodation. I propose that children of teachers in rural schools who perform well should be considered as priority for all foreign and local scholarships. I also propose that decent accommodation and reading facility be built to serve a school-community using solar energy facilities.

This will enable teachers to share learning spaces with the community, so that teachers and the communities, in which they serve, can learn from the same resources. It is important to provide quality through encouraging teachers to develop personal learning goals each year and to regularly provide refresher courses, especially in modern modes of administering discipline without using the whip.

Significantly, each sub-county must have an aerial secondary school fully equipped and often replenished with laboratory ingredients where students can experience quality instruction. Ultimately, all secondary schools must have sufficient science laboratory and science teachers as requisite for licence.  Given the current trends, it will take northern Uganda over 100 years for it to realize grade outcomes like schools in central and western Uganda.


END 

Peasantry politics and the crisis of allegiance

PEASANTRY POLITICS Recently Hon. Ojara Martin Mapenduzi dominated the national news headlines over his decision to cooperate with the Nation...