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“DICTATORLAND – The Men Who
Stole Africa” by Paul Kenyon (Harper-Collins, $NZ37:99)
Sometime ago I took the opportunity to review, in the
“Something Old” section of this blog, Chinua Achebe’s famous novel Things Fall Apart. I remarked then that
nearly all the books I’d ever read about Africa were not written by Africans.
That included Martin Meredith’s very depressing The State of Africa [also reviewed on this blog], published in 2005.
Meredith chroncled in awful detail the dictatorial regimes that have dominated
and oppressed most Africans in the last fifty years. So appalling was much of
the detail that, I said, I ended Meredith’s book being grateful that I lived in
a country where at least the rubbish is collected.
Paul Kenyon’s Dictatorland
covers similar territory, but it is not as inclusive as Meredith’s history. A
British journalist, Kenyon joins general history with anecdotes based on his
own travels in Africa. Dictatorland
therefore veers in style from pages based on earnest historical research to
more chatty and personal observations, sometimes with slightly jarring results.
Kenyon has also decided to organise his text thematically, rather than giving a
general survey of the state of the whole continent. His theme is the resources
of Africa, and how they have been exploited (or squandered). In his
introduction, he considers what he regards as the most significant natural
resources of Africa. So he divides his text accordingly into three parts: (1.)
Gold and Diamonds; (2) Oil; (3) Chocolate…. with an uneasily added fourth part
about the slave trade. This means that he deals only with those dictators who
have been related to these commodities, so readers should not be surprised that
some of Africa’s most notorious tyrants figure only in footnotes or not at all.
There
is a major problem when a European broaches the topic of indigenous African
tyranny. It can easily encourage the racist view that Africans are not capable
of ruling themselves. Although he is dealing with grotesque misrule by Africans,
Kenyon nowhere encourages such an idea. He prefaces each chapter with a
backstory showing how African resources and African peoples were exploited by
the old European colonial powers (Britain, France, Germany, Portugal et al.).
Those powers left a legacy of unstable states which often yoked together
incompatible tribes, and therefore set the conditions for strife and power
struggles once independence came half a century ago. Kenyon also shows how
international corporations have been happy to make profitable deals with
Africa’s own tyrants.
Even
so, the focus is on African despots.
We
begin with Joseph-Desire Mobutu (or “Mobutu Sese Seko”, as he later rebranded
himself). For thirty years he controlled what has now reverted to being the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, but which Mobutu insisted on giving the
artificial name “Zaire” (a name not accepted by the mass of Congolese any more
than the junta-imposed name “Myanmar” is now accepted by the mass of Burmese).
Having, with CIA and Belgian support, overthrown Patrice Lumumba, who was
clearly the more popular figure at the time of independence, Mobutu set about
ruling a state based entirely on cronyism and self-enrichment. International
corporations paid Mobutu fabulous sums to get the rights to the country’s
mines, but none of the proceeds trickled down to the population. Instead
Mobutu’s Swiss bank accounts became incredibly fat. Mobutu’s much-touted
“authenticity” (supposedly emphasising Africanness as opposed to Europeanness)
was always a fraud, and his attempts to articulate a coherent ideology came to
nothing. As Kenyon remarks:
“He demanded complete obedience to the
official ideology of his newly created party…. But what was his political
philosophy? It was difficult to pin down: generally liberal in economic matters
but almost Maoist in his social control. Anti-communist, but at the same time
anti-capitalist. There were bits and pieces of everything in there, a political
stew into which Mobutu tossed whatever ingredient he chose. He welcomed the continued
support of the US, while at the same time travelling to Beijing for
inspiration. Why not call it Mobutism and be done with it? And so it was, and
just like other personality cults, he needed to strip the country of all that
went before in order to start rebuilding it in his own image…” (p.35)
This
entailed bankrolling such prestige projects as his own version of the palace of
Versailles, while the country’s infrastructure degenerated to a level worse
than it had been under Belgian colonial rule. And, of course, thousands of
political enemies, or perceived political enemies, were imprisoned, tortured
and killed. When the economy of the Congo eventually hit rock bottom, Mobutu
attempted to bolster his international profile by intervening in the war that
was then going on in Angola.
I
couldn’t help feeling a huge wave of Schadenfreude when I at last reached the
page where Mobutu, sitting in front of his TV screen, watched footage of the
Rumanian Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu being overthrown and shot by his
own people; and Mobutu at last realised he could face the same fate. His
subsequent attempts at a charm offensive, to win over his own people, were a
miserable failure. To everybody’s relief, he was overthrown and died in 1997.
Mining
wealth also comes into the next chapter with its story of Robert Mugabe of
Zimbabwe, and his systematic destruction of that country’s economy – not to
mention his strong-arm tactics to suppress or intimidate any legitimate
political opposition. Comparing the post-independence histories of the Congo
and Zimbabwe, I am very struck by the fact that both despots began as close
friends and comrades of people whom they later spurned or destroyed – Patrice Lumumba
in Mobutu’s case and Joshua Nkomo in Mugabe’s case. Both also continued, during
their respective tyrannies, to live off the myth that they were genuine freedom
fighters, thwarted only by capitalist imperialism.
When
Paul Kenyon turns to the matter of oil, he first devotes a chapter to the
shabby deals that British, Dutch and American companies (BP, Shell, Esso,
Caltex) made in the 1950s with Libya’s King Idris, to get as much oil as
possible at the minimum cost. Naturally Idris and his ministers were all
hopelessly corrupt. When finally, in the 1960s, Idris was overthrown by the
handsome young army officer Muammar Gaddafi, there was real hope (as there had
been when Nassar unseated King Farouk in Egypt) that his regime would be a
humane and reformist one. Kenyon notes an iconic photo that was taken of
Gaddafi, just after he had taken over, standing with Nasser in the back of a
Land Rover. He remarks:
“And if the clocks had stopped there, in the
winter of 1969, that image might have adorned a generation of students’ walls.
There could have been silk-screen prints by Andy Warhol, Gaddafi ballads from
Joan Baez, revolutionary anthems from John Lennon. He had driven out the
imperialists and begun redistributing the country’s oil money. There were
promises of modern hospitals and schools for all. But, for those who watched
events more closely, there were already clues as to where all this was heading.”
(p.167)
Where
it headed was, of course, to another closed dictatorship, which in this case
took to sponsoring terrorist movements abroad. The sordid details of Gaddafi’s
regime are notorious enough (mass imprisonment, torture, public executions
etc.). So is evidence of his psychological instability – witnessed in the corps
(or harem?) of young women whom he kept as his personal bodyguard. But once
again some details are so grotesque that they can be greeted only as sick
humour. Take the story of his sons. One paid for a degree at the London School
of Economics, which gave him a doctorate on the strength of a thesis that somebody
else wrote for him. Another fancied himself as a football star. His father therefore
made him captain of the national team. When he performed dismally, the crowd
booed him. So he had the national football stadium bulldozed to the ground. You
can do that if your father has unlimited power.
The
other oil-rich countries with whose dictators Kenyon deals are Nigeria and tiny
Equatorial Guinea.
It
is quite clear that Francisco Macias Nguema, the dictator of Equatorial Guinea,
was literally and clinically insane. He suffered from drug-induced hallucinations
and real paranoia. He was the man who organised a synchronised execution, in
the national stadium, of 150 of his perceived enemies. They were hanged as the
pop song “Those Were the Days” was piped through the loudspeaker system. During
his reign, nearly half Equatorial Guinea’s population fled in terror to safer
countries. Macias was overthrown and succeeded by his nephew, the equally
corrupt Obianga, who is still in power. Kenyon notes that both West (America,
Europe) and East (China) court him for access to his oil.
Nigeria
is a far larger and more complex country. Like Zimbabwe (back when it was
“Rhodesia”), Nigeria was an artificial creation of the British Empire. In
Zimbabwe, the Shona and Ndebele peoples were pushed into one state by the
imperial power. In Nigeria the Hausa-Fulani, Yoruba and Igbo people were forced
together. Independence led to civil wars and a revolving door of coups and
dictators through twenty years. Every dictator looted the oil revenue which
mainly came from the Igbo region (which had vainly sought to win independence
as “Biafra”). The longest lasting dictator was Sani Abacha who (cue for sick
laugh, please) died of a heart attack after taking three Viagra pills when
trying to service three prostitutes.
As
always, Kenyon draws no racist conclusions from this mess, noting how much
Abacha throve on deals with international corporations who were not in the least
worried by violations of human rights – so long as they could extract the
precious black stuff. Nigeria’s most outspoken advocate for human rights was an
internationally-respected intellectual, Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was eventually
hanged by Abacha’s goons. Kenyon quotes Saro-Wiwa’s caustic comment on foreign
investors:
“We are face to face with a modern slave
trade similar to the Atlantic slave trade in which European merchants armed
African middlemen to decimate their people and destroy their societies… As in
the Atlantic slave trade, the multinational companies reap huge profits.”
(quoted p. 249)
Compared
with mineral wealth – gold, diamonds and oil – cocoa may seem a small element
in this saga. Perhaps it is. I can’t help feeling that Kenyon included his
“Chocolate” section so that he could tell, in a chapter of its own, the woeful
tale of a scandal back in the old imperialist days. In the very early 20th
century, the colonial power Portugal harvested the cocoa crop in its equatorial
possession by what amounted to slave labour. Chief beneficiaries of this were
the British companies Cadbury’s, Rowntree’s and Fry’s, all of which were run by
morally-righteous Quakers who were loudly opposed to the slave trade and noted
for their humanitarian enterprises. But when investigating reporters (one of
whom was hired by the chocolate companies themselves) exposed the conditions of
slavery under which the cocoa harvesters laboured, the British companies were
very reluctant to admit the fact, fearing a boycott of their products. They
successfully sued a newspaper which reported the facts.
Having
got this tale out of the way, Kenyon moves on to consider the dictator of
cocoa-rich Cote d’Ivoire, the Francophone and basically Francophile Felix
Houphouet-Boigny. Compared to other dictators, Houphouet-Boigny (who died in
1992) was relatively benign – at least his form of oppression didn’t amount to
full-scale genocide. He is most notorious for spending billions on having built
a basilica near his home village, vaguely modelled on St Peter’s in Rome, but
far larger. This sort of pointless conspicuous consumption is a feature of most
of the dictators covered here.
The
final chapter of Dictatorland is
poorly integrated into the book. Kenyon switches to Eritrea, to tell the story
of Isias Afwerki, who is still regarded as a nationalist hero by some, because
he fought (successfully) to extract his country fron Ethiopia. But in doing so,
Afwerki militarised his small state to the point where there is universal
conscription and a massive slave trade as young men are, in effect, kidnapped
for sale to the armed forces.
While
this book is filled with enlightening information, I closed it with the sense
that Kenyon has foxed himself in the framework he has chosen. By dealing, in
all but the last chapter, only with those African dictators whose power rests
on marketable natural resources, Kenyon misses out other equally notorious
dictators and self-appointed strongmen (Idi Amin, “Emperor” Bokassa etc.). The
picture is a skewed and partial one. Even so, Kenyon does prove how irrelevant declared ideologies
are to the history of oppression. Outside the megalomaniac designs of the
dictators themselves, the finger can very easily be pointed at international
capitalism, for bankrolling dictators in the interests of controlling
resources. But recently the rival ideology of Marxism has been just as
destructive in Africa, witnessed in the ultra-Marxist slogans both Afwerki and
his Ethiopian enemy Mengistu adopted. The old Soviet Union, the new Russian
Federation and China have been just as eager to get a share of the African loot
as any corporation plutocrat, and have sponsored regimes as brutal as those
bonded to neocolonialism.
As
for the high-sounding ideological manifestos which so many dictators produced
upon taking over their unhappy countries, they proved to be little more than smoke to
cover the ancient vices of greed and a lust for power.