Re: [africanworldforum] Africa Can’t Let Old Traditions Stand in the Way of Progress, Warns Obama

Tajudeen, Dan et al:

Obama's exhortation that Africans should
not let our adherence to old ideas and traditions 
deter our match
to modernity and socio-economic progress
is not necessarily incompatible with the
notion that we Africans can achieve progress
by cherry picking which modern
ideas to embrace and which ones we should
ignore or flatly reject.

There are many more fundamentally sound
traditions amongst Africans that we must fight
to preserve despite the onslaught
of modernization or westernization than the retrogressive traditions 
and customs that we must eschew.

The world might be a better place, if most of the
world accept some of the basic traditional values
African values.

We must avoid conflating Obama's appeal
that Africans should eschew homophobia and
respect the human rights of all our citizens
with a universal campaign that all human beings
should embrace a certain set of rules and values
to govern our lives.

This is not what Obama is asking Africans to
embrace.

Obama is requesting that African leaders
respect the spirit and substance of the agreements
most African countries have already signed
as per Geneva's Human Rights Convention
which forbids discrimination against human beings
on the basis of race, ethnicity, religion, gender
Socio-economic class and sexual orientation.


Obama's point is that Africans should let go
of retrogressive ideas and traditions such as discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation ( homophobia),
caste (e.g. the Osu), and those directed against
albinos, pygmies and those who are suspected
of being witches.

Obama's campaign against the rampant homophobia
in African countries is similar to Mary Slessor's campaign
against the slaughtering and killing of twins,
triplets and other multiple births that was once a common
practice in some regions of Nigeria and other countries in Africa.

The common thread that binds most
forms of discrimination amongst human beings
throughout the world is IGNORANCE.


If Africans could finally accept the idea that 
Twins and Triplets are not evil beings that should
be sacrificed to the gods, that repeated early childhood
deaths (due to Sickle Cell Anemia and other inheritable diseases) are natural
phenomena with sound scientific explanations,
there is hope that one day in the near future
we would abandon homophobia and all other
forms of discrimination that leads to the violence
directed at witches, albinos and others
whose physical features are different from the
norm.

Obama is bang on correct! Africans remain the
most backward of all human beings partly 
due to our stubborn
adherence to too many old ideas and myths
that are out of place in the modern world!

Bye,

Ila








A





Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 28, 2015, at 12:00 PM, daniel Akusobi <dakusobi@gmail.com> wrote:

IW
I have determined to be one of the first to kick against any attempts to bring McDonald into my village in Nigeria.
I will also continue to fight any attempts by any Western or Eastern world religions  to label  my religion, Chism, as a paganism.
I believe the people of a nation should determine what they consider as old traditions to discard and new or foreign ones to embrace.
The idea of killing Saddam so McCain McDonalds can be established in Iraq can never be right.
See how soundly the world has been snoring since Saddam was killed by Bush and Muammar Gaddafi was killed by Obama.
Dan

Who determines the old traditions that we must let go?He or we Resident- Africans?Have we not acculturated enough?Are we going to be follow-follow all our lives?
When do religious beliefs become subsumed under Human Rughts?
There is a LIMIT.iw 
_________________
Ishola Williams
Maj-Gen. (Rtd)
Exec Sec
PANAFSTRAG
08056210960



On Tuesday, July 28, 2015 11:50 AM, 'Pa Fru Ndeh' via AfricanWorldForum <africanworldforum@googlegroups.com> wrote:


 
 
image
 
 
 
 
 
Africa Can't Let Old Traditions Stand in the Way of Prog...
President Obama was welcomed by the African Union's chairwoman as "one of their own"
Preview by Yahoo
 



Africa Can't Let Old Traditions Stand in the Way of Progress, Warns Obama

    

President Obama was welcomed by the African Union's chairwoman as "one of their own"

United States President Barack Obama wrapped up his four-day visit to Africa on Tuesday July 28 with a rousing address to the African Union, at its headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Calling for the empowerment of African youth and women, for an end to the "cancer of corruption" and greater economic ties between Africa and America, Obama told the 54-nation body that "It is long past time to put aside old stereotypes of an Africa forever mired in poverty and conflict."
The African Union was established in 2001 to achieve greater unity between African countries and a better life for African people. Over the past decade it has gained strength and respect in the international arena as it wields its political and military tools to solve thorny African problems, from civil conflict to terrorism and obstacles to trade. By becoming the first U.S. leader to address the A.U., Obama ensured that his praise, his exhortations to do better and his promise of partnership reached every corner of the continent, on what is likely to be his last visit to the region as President.
Welcomed by the African Union's first chairwoman, Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who introduced him as the President of the United States of America, the first to address the A.U., and "one of our own," Obama took the podium to sustained applause, cheers and whistles. In a wide-ranging speech that touched on his African roots, Obama celebrated the continent's gains, noting that Africa has one of the fastest growing economies in the world, with a middle class projected to grow to more than one billion consumers. "With hundreds of millions of mobile phones and surging access to the internet, Africans have the potential to leapfrog old technologies into new prosperity," he said. But to continue on that trajectory, Obama warned, Africa "can't let old traditions stand in the way."
He called on African governments to maintain economic gains by improving democracy, protecting human rights and ensuring freedom of the press, singling out his host, the Ethiopian government, in particular for its crackdown on journalists and opposition leaders. "Democracy is not just formal elections," Obama said to resounding applause. "When journalists are put behind bars for doing their jobs, or activists are threatened as governments crack down on civil society, then you may have democracy in name, but not in substance."
He also encouraged African leaders to respect term limits, to act more like Nelson Mandela, who stood down after his second term as President of South Africa, and not like Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza, who was just elected to a constitutionally illegal third term as President amidst widespread violence. "I have to be honest with you," Obama said in comments that appeared to go off script. "I just don't understand this. I actually think I am a pretty good president. I think if I ran again, I could win. But I can't. The law is the law and no one is above it, not even presidents." Even as representatives of the dozen African countries who have some of the longest-serving leaders in the world shifted uncomfortably in their seats, the audience erupted into the wildest cheers and loudest applause of the speech.
SEE SCENES FROM OBAMA'S AFRICA TRIP
President Barack Obama flanked by Ethiopia's Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn (top left) and African Union Chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma (top right), arrives to deliver remarks at the African Union in Addis Ababa on July 28, 2015.
President Barack Obama delivers a speech to the African Union in Addis Ababa on July 28, 2015.
Delegates react to remarks by President Barack Obama at the African Union in Addis Ababa on July 28, 2015.
President Barack Obama shakes hands with farmer Gifty Jemal Hussein, after seeing her corn during a tour of Faffa Food in Addis Ababa on July 28, 2015.
Jonathan Ernst—Reuters
President Barack Obama flanked by Ethiopia's Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn (top left) and African Union...
1 of 17
 
Obama had come to Africa to meet with Kenyan and Ethiopian leaders on issues ranging from security, economic development and human rights. His speech at the A.U reflected similar themes as he attempts to cement his African legacy. He has hinted, however, that he might consider returning to Africa at the conclusion of his presidency, telling the audience, "I'm looking forward to life after being President. It means I can go take a walk, I can spend time with my family, I can find other ways to serve. I can visit Africa more often."
The biggest challenges, however, remain unresolved and out of his reach, the damper on an otherwise successful visit. Large swaths of Africa remain in turmoil, with terror groups al-Shabaab in Somalia and Boko Haram in Nigeria continuing to take lives and disrupt progress. The ongoing civil war in South Sudan, which has seen tens of thousands killed, raped or tortured and has displaced millions, defies any attempts at resolution. "In South Sudan the joy of independence has descended into the despair of violence," Obama lamented. On Monday he met with regional leaders in an attempt to force rival South Sudanese leaders Salva Kiir and Riek Machar to accept a peace agreement. If they do not, Obama warned, "I believe the international community must raise the costs of their intransigence," a threat that most likely means an international arms embargo and increased sanctions.
Even on issues of human rights, Obama was met with some resistance from leaders in both Ethiopia and Kenya. When Obama publically called for an end to anti-gay discrimination in Kenya, President Uhuru Kenyatta noted that while the two countries share many values, gay rights were not among them. And in Ethiopia, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn demurred on Obama's calls for greater press freedoms by accusing journalists of acting unethically and consorting with terrorists.
Critics have complained that while Obama's visit was full of pomp and lectures, he has delivered little in the way of the expected monetary largesse. That may be the most successful part of his visit yet. "So many Africans have told me — we don't just want aid, we want trade that fuels our progress," he said in his speech. They say, "'We don't want patrons, we want partners who help us build our own capacity to grow.'" Throughout the past four days, Obama has been relentless in his calls for greater democracy, accountable governance, and rule of law, the foundations of economic growth that will do far more to deliver on Africa's promise than any amount of aid.
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