Anti-corruption dominates U.S. Africa policy

DAKAR, (Reuters) – In the eight months since U.S.  President Barack Obama’s first visit to sub-Saharan Africa, the  army has seized power in Niger, a power struggle in Nigeria  bedevils its government, and Guinea’s then leader stands accused  of involvement in a massacre.

Hardly events in line with the goals that Obama, whose  father was born in Kenya, spelled out to an overwhelmingly  positive response, but the United States says it is undeterred  from banging the drum for democracy.

“We are actively implementing the policy priorities that  President Obama identified in his historic speech in Ghana.  Those priorities are democracy and good governance, economic  development public health, conflict prevention and mitigation,”  a spokesman for the Bureau of African Affairs at the State  Department said in response to e-mailed questions.

The message Africans say they are hearing most clearly from  Washington is that corruption is the root of many of Africa’s  troubles.

“Since the inauguration of President Obama … I have not  seen anything apart from asking African leaders to fight  corruption,” said Patrick Wafula, a businessman from western  Kenya, who agreed that governmental corruption was one of the  Africa’s biggest problems.

Obama even used this year’s State of the Union address to  highlight the effects of corruption in Africa, and his officials  have been vocal on the subject.

Visiting Nigeria in January, Secretary of State Hillary  Clinton blasted what she called “unbelievable” levels of  corruption in that country, one of Africa’s biggest oil  exporters, drawing a link between poor governance and the growth  of extremism.

“Persistent corruption … undermines government  institutions at all levels and erodes confidence in democratic  elections as a way of effectuating real change,” the State  Department said, citing other examples of U.S. efforts.

EMOTIONAL CONNECTION

In Niger, the soldiers who took power last month immediately  won explicit domestic support, and tacit Western approval, for  their anti-graft stance.

In Senegal on the West African coast, for years seen as a  rare example of democracy and stability in a historically  volatile region, high-level corruption is now near the top of  the political agenda.

Aid agency USAID is requesting from Congress $4.4 million  this year for its “Governing Justly and Democratically”  programme in Senegal, almost ten times the amount it spent on  the same project two years ago. The overall aid budget is rising  too: USAID wants $6.7 billion for Africa this year, up from an  estimated spend of $5.7 billion last year.

For some Africans, aid handouts do not adequately create the  conditions needed for economic growth and development that  Obama, on his visit to Ghana last July, said go hand in hand  with good governance and democracy.

“The United States needs to refocus their policy on Africa  in a beneficial partnership,” said Abubakar Momoh, professor of  politics at Lagos University.

“What Africa needs is to be treated with respect … and  given equitable opportunities to western and American markets  that will allow us to grow.”

The African Union complained in January that the United  States was denying some African countries access to its markets  by withdrawing trade benefits from Madagascar, Guinea and Niger,  citing an “undemocratic” transfer of power in each.

On the continent, emotions were high but expectations of  Obama were realistically modest. Most Africans never believed  Africa was going to shoot up America’s list of policy  priorities, given its domestic economic turmoil and wars in  Afghanistan and Iraq.

Kwesi Pratt, a Ghanaian newspaper publisher, goes further,  saying he believes the Obama administration has distanced itself  from Africa. “The Bush administration did much better for Africa  than we are seeing under Obama,” he said.

President George W. Bush is highly regarded by many Africans  for launching humanitarian initiatives such as the Millennium  Challenge Corporation, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS  Relief, and the President’s Malaria Initiative.

Still, Emmanuel Gyimah-Boadi, executive director at the  Centre for Democratic Development in Ghana, said the emotional  connection Africans felt with Obama would endure.

“For me the Obama presidency is a symbolism associated with  direct African heritage and no matter what happens, it is still  significant today as it was when he assumed office,” he said.