SPECIAL FEATURE: Give Less Aid a Chance
A massive increase in aid will harm rather than help Africa, an aid industry veteran says. Donors and recipients should manage on smaller aid budgets until they know how to get it right.
A massive increase in aid will harm rather than help Africa, an aid industry veteran says. Donors and recipients should manage on smaller aid budgets until they know how to get it right.
The South African Institute of International Affairs convened a half-day conference on Zimbabwe, “Zimbabwe Election 2005 – Interpretations, Implications, Prospects Towards 2008”, with the objective of providing a constructive platform for the exchange of viewpoints and to develop ideas about the prospects for the country in the years preceding the presidential election scheduled for 2008.
MOROCCO, 1960s. The four-year-old US Agency for International Development is aggressively promoting a chicken improvement project in central Morocco.
After a series of secretive consultations France’s Pascal Lamy, former EU trade commissioner, has emerged to succeed Supachai Panitchpakdi as World Trade Organisation (WTO) director-general from September.
The mixed results achieved at the close of the Pan African Parliament’s third sitting provide food for thought. While it commendably resolved to send peace missions to Côte d’Ivoire and Congo, and made cogent recommendations on the Darfur conflict, it missed opportunities to exercise a crucial function of parliaments: that of oversight.
Walking in the eerie darkness engulfing Noah’s Ark, a centre that children in northern Uganda escape to for fear of being kidnapped by the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army, it is easy to see why so many in the region are eager for peace.
The study attempts to understand the nature and functioning of parliamentary democracy during the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) political transition.
The upshot is that the South African government and SADC have seriously compromised their credibility in global eyes by rubber-stamping a process that even domestic observers within Zimbabwe have disputed.
The path back to peace requires barring all current political rivals, establishing an interim government and holding internationally conducted elections.
The Global Best Practice series examines a number of case studies in various sectors, with the aim of assessing their potential applicability in the Africa developmental context.