Craig Eisele on …..

December 9, 2007

Nigerian President Overwhelmed by Corruption.

 

Nigerian leader finds power a problem

by Jacques Lhuillery

Umaru Yar’Adua has been in charge of Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and biggest oil producer, for six months and is already struggling against endemic corruption and political infighting.

Most observers agree that Yar’Adua, a Muslim from northern Nigeria, is well-intentioned and more sincere than his predecessor, military man Olusegun Obasanjo. They also agree that he lacks the clout and decisiveness of Obasanjo.

Yar’Adua has pledged to turn round Nigeria’s economy, to quell unrest that has slashed oil production in the Niger Delta, to restore law and order, and crack down on omnipresent corruption.

The new administration has also striven to dismantle the system it inherited from Obasanjo.

It annulled his firesale of state assets to cronies and booted out once untouchable officials, such as former House of Representatives speaker Patricia Etteh, removed after a corruption scandal.

The opposition and analysts say it has performed less well on security and on the economy and social infrastructure. Power and clean water remain in short supply and armed robberies are on the increase.

While most observers agree Yar’Adua has done more in six months to calm the Niger Delta than Obasanjo ever did, attacks on oil and government targets there continue.

“The months since the April elections have seen increasingly incendiary threats from the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta and continued volatility in the creeks,” François Grignon of the International Crisis Group, said this week.

“The Yar’Adua government must urgently come to grips with the core issues that have defined the agitation and conflicts in the region for two decades,” he said.

The main opposition party has been scathing about the government record.

“It is clear that this administration has not even begun to define the problems, not to talk of finding solutions to them,” the Action Congress party said this week. Its complaints ranged from law and order to “dilapidated roads”, “worsening unemployment” and power shortages.

The ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) is also in turmoil. According to one analyst, it is “plagued by a dispute between the old timers from the Obasanjo era and the new guard” who want to distance themselves from the “Obasanjo system”.

Yar’Adua’s health, however, which gave cause for concern during the election campaign, no longer appears to be giving him trouble.

But there are still doubts about whether Yar’Adua will make it through his first year if electoral tribunals, which are still hearing suits calling for the annulment of his victory, decide to void the presidential election.

Former vice-president Atiku Abubakar and a former president Muhammadu Buhari, both beaten by a wide margin, are still fighting to obtain that.

“Why Yar’Adua might lose Aso Rock?”, said Tell magazine this week, referring to why the presidency, which is known as Aso Rock, could be lost.

Tribunals have already reversed the victories of several governors from the April polls.

“Other annulments could follow,” predicted a Nigerian politician, who asked not to be identified.

Yar’Adua’s lawyers on Thursday submitted to the presidential election tribunal what they said were documents proving the president was the rightful winner. The court will rule on January 28.

“Since Yar’Adua took office in May, he has taken bold measures to increase his popularity and standing with the Nigerian people,” Sebastian Spio-Garbrah, an analyst with Eurasia group, wrote in a recent note to investors.

He cited the way the president, in addition to reversing unpopular taxes and privatisation plans, publicly declared all his family assets and released from jail two popular southern secessionists, concluding that even if fresh polls are ordered, “Yar’Adua will likely win a convincing electoral victory”.

Libya Opens Natural Gas Exploration to Foreign Firms.

Gazprom, Shell, Sonatrach and Polski win first gas contracts in Libya

Libya on Sunday awarded four potentially lucrative gas exploration contracts to fuel giants Shell, Gazprom, Sonatrach and Polski, the first ever given to foreign firms as relations warm between Tripoli and the West.

The biggest award went to Algerian firm Sonatrach in association with Oil India and Indian Oil, which was given four blocks covering 6,934 square kilometres (2,677 square miles).

Russian giant Gazprom was awarded three exploration blocs with a total area of 3,936 square kilometres in the southern Ghadames basin.

Gazprom beat off competition from Gaz de France, Inpex of Japan, Russian rival Lukoil, Britain’s BG and Polski, agreeing to cede 90 percent of its eventual production to Libya’s state-owned National Oil Corporation (NOC).

Anglo-Dutch company Shell was handed a two-block contract to explore a 1,790 square kilometre area in the northern Sirte basin and Polish firm Polski was also awarded a two-block area in the southern Murzak basin.

Shell was awarded its exploration rights following a bid of 93 million dollars and 85 percent of its eventual production.

Sonatrach outbid Gaz de France, BG, Polski and Germany’s RWE and proposed 87 percent of its production go to the NOC.

A total of 35 companies had been pre-selected to bid for the dozen contracts awarded Sunday to explore 41 gas blocks in the Mediterranean, the Sirte basin in the north-central area of the country, Cyrenaica further east and Murzek and Ghadames in the south.

The blocks cover a total of 72,500 square kilometres (almost 28,000 square miles), an area the size of Scotland.

It was the first time Libya invited tenders for natural gas exploration.

Regarding eight as yet unattributed blocks, National Oil Company president Shukri Ghanem said the NOC “will decide next week if it will award licences or if it will keep them for a second invitation to tender.”

With the end of UN sanctions after Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi’s dramatic decision in December 2003 to abandon weapons of mass destruction programmes, oil and gas exploration has picked up at a frenetic pace.

OPEC member Libya is the African continent’s second largest oil producer at 1.7 million barrels per day. It also has natural gas reserves estimated at 1,314 billion cubic metres (46,403 billion cubic feet).

Among the notable losers on Sunday was French company Gaz de France, which imports large quantities of Libyan natural gas.

Earlier, a company official said it was keen to “get a foothold” in exploration in the country.

“Libya interests us the most and we wish to work there,” head of exploration and production at Gaz de France Renato Gurrero-Serreau told AFP.

Kadhafi, whose country spent years in diplomatic isolation for its alleged support of terrorists, begins a high-profile visit to France on Monday during which he will hold talks with President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris.

Briton Continues to Antagonize African Countries… Now it is Kenya.

Filed under: Africa,African,Kenya,Trans Africa,Uncategorized — Mr. Craig @ 10:31 pm

Kenya tells Britain to keep off after grim pre-election assessment

by Bogonko Bosire

Kenya on Sunday angrily told the British House of Lords to keep out of local affairs days after it received a grim assessment of the situation in the east African nation ahead of this month’s polls.

Justice Minister Martha Karua said the House of Lords should keep off Kenyan pre-election affairs and concentrate on Britain’s own “grand corruption scandals and other rot”.

“They (House of Lords) are our friends but we want to remind them we are not their colony nor do we depend on them for survival,” Karua told a rally in central Kenya.

“You must look at issues holistically before passing judgment on the performance of our government in its war against corruption,” Karua said, explaining that Nairobi was keen on ending graft.

On December 4, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Department for International Development, Baroness Vadera told the Lords there was little hope that Kenya’s December 27 polls would boost governance and end graft.

Vadera said President Mwai Kibaki came to power in December 2002 with a raft of pledges that made Kenyans look “forward to change, growth, jobs, free primary education and zero tolerance for corruption.”

“This time, perhaps, disappointment has tempered hope,” Vadera said.

“Ethnicity and patronage are still important determinants of the outcome of elections and a career in politics is still one of the quickest ways of accumulating wealth. The incumbents and the opposition are mostly cut from the same cloth.”

“I fear that, whatever the outcome of this election, we cannot expect a dramatic step-change in governance and corruption,” Vadera said in a grim assessment of Kenya.

Kenya, which got its independence from Britain in 1963, has in the past locked horns with its former colonial master over rampant corruption.

Meanwhile, Kibaki on Sunday appealed for calm as pre-election mayhem gripped the country, where campaign rallies have regularly turned chaotic in recent weeks.

At least 39 people have been killed since July, dozens of houses razed and around 16,000 displaced in poll-related violence, particular in in the Molo district, about 170 kilometers (105 miles) northwest of Nairobi, police say.

“There is no need for anybody to be violent and abusive,” Kibaki said in Nairobi.

The European Union poll monitors have warned the violence will undermine the credibility of elections in Kenya, east Africa’s largest economy and a bastion of stability in a region beset by conflicts.

The Commonwealth and African Union are expected to deploy their observer teams.

More than 14 million Kenyans are registered to vote in the December 27 polls to choose a new president, parliament and local councils in the country’s fourth multi-party election since pluralism was introduced in 1992.

Opinion polls put sharp orator and opposition leader Raila Odinga slightly ahead of incumbent Kibaki in the presidential race, with former foreign minister Kalonzo Musyoka trailing far behind.

Kibaki, 75, has been credited with advancing basic freedoms, but criticised for failing to rein in corruption within government ranks.

Odinga, who casts himself as a champion of the poor, has vowed to re-organise every government sector and accused Kibaki of totally failing in his leadership.

Political observers expect the elections to be the closest ever in this east African nation of some 35 million people.

BioFuels and the Future of Africa

Biofuels: danger or new opportunity for Africa?

by Romaric Ollo Hien

The growing promotion of environmentally-friendly biofuels is raising questions for Africa: are such fuels a threat to food security or a golden opportunity to cut down on fossil fuel bills.

Some 300 experts from the continent and further afield in the Americas and Europe, gathered earlier this month in the impoverished capital of the non-oil producing west African nation of Burkina Faso to debate the pros and cons of biofuel generation on the continent.

“No matter what we say, today biofuels represent a pragmatic solution in light of the energy problems in relation to soaring oil prices,” said Paul Ginies, managing director of the Ouagadougou-based International Institute for Water and Environment Engineering.

Generation of biofuels could help provide solutions to transport costs and reduce expenditure on energy in rural areas by between 30 and 40 percent, argued Ginies.

Biofuel farming should not be perceived as being in competition with food production and other types of agriculture, he stressed.

“These two types of production are very well reconciliable. Our ambition is that they can help one another,” Ginies said, noting that biofuel byproducts could serve as livestock feed or fertiliser for food crops.

But Moussa Hassane, managing director of the National Institute of Agronomy Research in Niger, insisted that Africa should be wary of the sudden interest in biofuels.

“Why the particular interest in biofuel production now in Africa? Africa has always been a leading raw material reserve tank for the West,” he said.

“Africa constitutes the ideal site for the production of biofuels. But of what benefit is that to the continent? Could that be done without posing a danger to food production,” he asked.

Maurizio Cocchi of an Italian renewable energies non-governmental organisation Energy Transport Agriculture also urged caution.

“I am happy that African countries understood … the environmental risks and threats to food security related to biofuel production. There are still uncertainties that would require research,” he said.

Daniel Ballerini, of a French bio-energy development research institute Enerbio, suggested that biofuels be reserved for certain limited uses.

“Biofuel does not have have to be used for transport (vehicles), it should be used, for example, in tractors’ engines. I am not for the use of biofuels in cars as long as the problem of food security remains,” he said.

“We should not use good land for the production of energy, we should cultivate biofuel crops on land that is less favourable for food crops,” he said.

Experts elsewhere see the growing demand for biofuels coupled with the high prices of fossil fuel having a dramatic impact on millions of people, especially in Africa where food prices are beyond the reach of many.

Escalating food prices have affected almost every nation on the continent, so far sparking violent protests in parts of West Africa, home to the greatest number of the world’s most poverty-stricken countries.

Senegal’s Wade Blasts EU

Europe, Africa stuck on key issues

By BARRY HATTON, Associated Press Writer

The first summit between Europe and Africa in seven years came to an acrimonious end Sunday with leaders squabbling over human rights and no progress on a looming trade pact deadline.

Old divisions surfaced at the two-day summit as leaders swapped accusations over the crises in Zimbabwe and Darfur, and postcolonial tensions deepened over free trade deals.

The World Trade Organization has ruled that the EU’s 30-year-old preferential trade agreement with Africa was unfair to other trading nations and violated international rules. New deals are meant to be finalized by Dec. 31.

Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade said most African leaders had rejected the European Union’s free trade proposals, known as Economic Partnership Agreements, and wouldn’t discuss them further.

The proposals “aren’t in Africa’s interest,” Wade said in angry comments at a news conference.

Negotiations on the pacts — meant to replace colonial-era trading systems between Europe and its former colonies — have lasted five years and officials had hoped the summit would bring a breakthrough.

The EU is offering African governments unrestricted access to its 27-country market if they in turn grant tariff reductions for European goods — a measure Africans fear will make their less competitive local companies vulnerable.

African Union Commission President Alpha Oumar Konare said the EU had to give up its “colonial approach.”

“The riches of Africa must be paid for at a fair price,” he said.

During previous talks, African governments have said the agreements would do little to boost their access to European markets. They also viewed the conditions as an EU attempt to meddle in African affairs.

Friction between the continents comes as many African countries are developing strong trade ties with China, whose influence has soared on the back of billions of dollars in aid and investment.

The EU is concerned that the search by China and other rising powers for oil and other resources across Africa comes with no demands for democracy and human rights. Africans, though, say the Chinese come willing to negotiate as equals.

Officials from both continents said the presence of more than 70 heads of government at the summit showed leaders on both continents wanted better relations. But they left the Portuguese capital with only a broad statement of intentions.

Human rights and aid groups expressed exasperation. Save the Children said in a statement the summit was “a high-profile exercise of little substance.”

Differences over the human rights record of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and measures to help end the conflict in the western Sudanese region of Darfur dogged the event.

Asked what was his message to Europe as he arrived at the summit venue Sunday, Mugabe said nothing but raised his arm and made a fist.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Saturday the EU was “united” in condemning Mugabe for what they view as his economic mismanagement, failure to curb corruption and contempt for democracy. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown stayed away from the summit in protest against Mugabe’s attendance.

Mugabe was reportedly scathing toward his European critics in his speech at a closed session.

“He said criticisms were trumped-up charges against Zimbabwe and the result of arrogance from the EU,” according to a European official who attended the summit, but who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to discuss the details publicly.

Ghanian President John Kufuor, current chair of the AU, said the organization supports mediation efforts among Zimbabwe’s main political parties being led by South African President Thabo Mbeki and aimed at political reform. But he insisted that meddling from outside Africa would be unhelpful.

“We want to encourage a homegrown solution so there will be a restoration of normalcy and good governance for the people of Zimbabwe,” Kufuor said.

Measures to help end the conflict in the western Sudanese region of Darfur were another point of contention.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has so far refused to allow non-Africans into a 26,000-strong U.N.-A.U. peacekeeping force planned for Darfur. EU nations, meanwhile, have failed to come up with the needed military hardware to support the operation.

Sudan and United Nations envoys met on the sidelines of the summit. They said in a brief joint statement there had been “clarification” of some issues but gave no details.

On trade, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso acknowledged the difficulty of reaching free-trade deals between wealthy European countries and poor African nations.

“It is a challenge for both Africans and Europeans and will require time,” Barroso said in a speech to the gathering.

The World Trade Organization has ruled that the EU’s 30-year-old preferential trade agreement with Africa was unfair to other trading nations and violated international rules. New deals are meant to be finalized by Dec. 31.

The two sides will press ahead with talks on interim accords with individual African countries to assure they continue to enjoy privileged access to European markets, he said.

“We are nearly there and we now need to focus all of our energy to achieve this priority objective,” Barroso said.

___

Associated Press writers Daniel Woolls, in Lisbon, and David Stringer, in London, contributed to this report.

Africa Becoming Estranged from EU.

EU, Africa open new chapter after no-hold-barred summit

by Amelie Bottollier-Depois

EU and African leaders pledged Sunday to create a new partnership of equals at a summit marked by rows over trade and Darfur and a vitriolic attack by Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe on European “arrogance.”

After two days of what hosts Portugal described as a no-holds barred debate, leaders of the two continents put their names to an “Africa-EU Strategic Partnership” agreement to take their relationship to “a new, strategic level.”

They vowed “to move away from a traditional relationship and forge a real partnership characterised by equality and the pursuit of common objectives” and which “capitalises on the lessons of the past.”

And in a post-summit address to his guests, Portugal’s Prime Minister Jose Socrates said the often troubled history between the continents had entered a new era at the first such summit in seven years.

“What is important is that we met each other face-to-face, on an equal setting, in a new spirit,” said Socrates.

“I think I can say the idea that has been expressed most often is that this summit represents the turning of a page in history.”

Ghana’s President John Kufuor, the African Union’s current president, agreed the summit had witnessed frank exchanges but on an equal footing.

“We met at this summit talking plainly and directly as equals,” said Kufuor whose country was the first in Africa to gain independence from a European colonial power, Britain, exactly 50 years ago.

But despite the declaration on a “shared vision” for the future, the shadow of colonialism prevented any real warmth in a summit where starkly different views on issues such as immigration and human rights were on display.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel accused Mugabe on Saturday of “harming the image of the new Africa” with his rights record.

Mugabe hit back on Sunday, charging British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who boycotted the summit over his presence, was behind criticism of Zimbabwe.

“Yesterday, we heard four countries — Germany, Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands — criticise Zimbabwe for lack of human rights for non-observance of the rule of law..,” the Zimbabwean president said at a closed door session.

“Does the German chancellor and the pro-Gordon gang of four of yesterday really believe that they have a better knowledge of Zimbabwe” than African bodies? “It is this arrogance that we are fighting against.”

Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir received a similar carpeting from a delegation of European leaders, including Portugal’s Socrates and French President Nicolas Sarkozy who implored him to allow the rapid deployment of a UN-led peacekeeping force to stem the bloodshed in the western Darfur region.

“We told him it is in Sudan’s best interests … that there is a halt to the massacres on its territory and that in order for the massacres to stop, the hybrid (UN-AU) force needs to be deployed as soon as possible,” said Sarkozy.

Wary of China’s growing push into Africa, the European Union has been keen to nail down new trade agreements before the expiration of existing deals at year’s end.

But while the message from Europe was no one would be pressured into agreement, African Union Commission chief Alpha Oumar Konare warned EU negotiators to “avoid playing certain African regions off against each other.”

“No one will make us believe we don’t have the right to protect our economic fabric.”

EU Development Commissioner Louis Michel condemned the comments.

“I think that it was excessive and unjustified and that it was not the best way to defend the interests of Africa,” he said.

Asked how negotiations on the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) were going, Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi told reporters: “Not easy.”

“The African countries are more and more afraid to be in some way pushed down by sudden competition, so they are asking for guarantees.”

EU-Africa’s Acrimonious summit ends in trade deadlock

Filed under: Uncategorized — Mr. Craig @ 10:13 pm

EU-Africa summit ends in trade deadlock

By Axel Bugge and Henrique Almeida 

Sun Dec 9, 11:00 AM ET 

Africa and Europe’s first summit in seven years ended on Sunday without agreement on the key issue of trade, dealing a blow to efforts to forge a new economic partnership between the two continents.

More than 70 European and African leaders were also at odds on how to deal with Zimbabwe, which was singled out along with Sudan by German Chancellor Angela Merkel for not respecting human rights.

The two-day summit ended with an ambitious action plan and a promise to meet again in 2010. But the world’s largest trading bloc and its poorest continent were at loggerheads over trade, which would be the basis for future economies ties.

The EU is Africa’s largest commercial partner, with trade totaling more than 215 billion euros ($315.2 billion) in 2006. But EU officials and businessmen fear growing Chinese investment in Africa could displace Europe from the top spot.

Beijing held a summit for African leaders last year, wooing them with multibillion-dollar trade investment contracts.

The EU wants to replace expiring trade accords with so-called Economic Partnership Agreements or temporary deals, which anti-poverty groups have criticized for failing to provide protection for Africa’s poor farmers and its fragile industry.

“It’s clear that Africa rejects the EPAs,” Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade angrily told reporters. “We are not talking any more about EPAs, we’ve rejected them … we’re going to meet to see what we can put in place of the EPAs.”

Brussels insists on new trade deals by December 31, when a waiver by the World Trade Organization on preferential trade arrangements for developing countries expires.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Durao Barroso said Brussels was not strong-arming countries over trade, but said if interim deals were not signed “the preferential agreement will no more be applicable from January 1, 2008.”

The EU was ready to continue talks. “What we are saying is let’s have interim accords to avoid trade disruption,” he said.

MEAGRE RESULTS

While around a dozen African countries have recently agreed interim trade deals with the EU, most African leaders argue they need more time to prepare their weaker economies and societies for the impact of the end of preferential trade arrangements.

Germanys Merkel said EU leaders would discuss trade with

Africa at an EU summit on Friday. “We are going to look again if Europe can be more flexible,” Merkel told reporters, adding the December 31 deadline was not fixed in stone.

African Union Commission President Alpha Oumar Konare criticized the handful of interim trade deals signed.

“Our dearest hope is that the interim accords don’t tie down the rest (of the countries) and complicate things afterwards,” he said. “If we build our partnership on the weakness of unity in Africa we’ll have problems.”

Human rights and anti-poverty campaigners said they were disappointed by the meager results at the summit.

“If you wait seven years and then try to force through deals by the end of the year, you will inevitably end up with an exercise in grandstanding and not real progress … we think this is a waste,” said Martin Kirk of British charity Save the Children.

The atmosphere at the meeting had already been strained by differences of opinion over how to deal with Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe. Merkel said Africa’s image was being damaged by a lack of resolve to stop human rights abuses in Zimbabwe.

African leaders insisted that Mugabe, who is seen by many in Africa as an independence hero, be invited to the summit, prompting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to stay away.

When asked by a Reuters reporter what his message to Europe was, a smiling Mugabe lifted his fist in the air in defiance.

Mozambique President Armando Guebuza said it was worthwhile that Mugabe attended. “It proved that just because people disagree they can enter into a dialogue,” he said.

But the two continents, close neighbors through geography but worlds apart in terms of development, did sign a declaration committing them to establish a strategic political “partnership of equals.” Their joint declaration promised cooperation on investment, development, human rights and peacekeeping.

“We are resolved to build a new strategic political partnership for the future, overcoming the traditional donor-recipient relationship,” the statement said.

(Additional reporting by Ingrid Melander, Henrique Almeida, Pascal Fletcher, Sergio Goncalves, Elisabete Tavares, Ruben Bicho, Angelika Stricker; writing by Axel Bugge, editing by Mary Gabriel)

If West Gets Agricultral Subsdies WHY can’t Africa?? WTO to Blame??

Farmers in Africa, West rethink subsidy

By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press WriterFarmer Loi Bangoti picks corn by hand on the lush, cool slopes of his land, nestled under the cloudy shadow of Africa’s highest mountains.

Half a world away, farmer Tim Recker drives his combine through the famously flat, open corn fields that stretch out in the sun across the plains of Iowa.

For all their differences, both men rely on a complex global food market that decides how much their corn is worth and who will buy it. And the lives of both — along with millions of other farmers — will be affected by a growing movement to change one of the biggest forces shaping the market: subsidies.

Many experts agree farmers need help to grow food year in and year out, but Western farmers may get too much and African farmers too little. Western farmers receive billions of dollars in subsidies every year, which makes their food cheap to grow and sell. African farmers are left on their own because of decades of anti-subsidy policies pushed by the World Bank and others as a condition for aid money.

Now Africans are fighting back.

Some African countries are considering subsidies for their own farmers — Malawi has started providing discount vouchers for seed and fertilizer to farmers and is seeing such a bumper crop that it now sends emergency corn to neighboring Zimbabwe. African nations have also joined in lawsuits opposing American subsidies, resulting in a World Trade Organization ruling in October that the U.S. could face billions of dollars in sanctions.

At the same time, subsidies are facing more scrutiny than ever within the United States. A farm bill before Congress — the first in five years — was once a shoo-in, but now faces the threat of a veto from President Bush. He has called for an end to farm subsidies by 2010 to avoid trade conflicts.

The complexities of the subsidy debate play out far from the courts and the chambers of power in the daily lives of farmers like Bangoti and Recker.

Bangoti’s story shows how a little help can go a long way. He points with pride to his two acres of corn, beans and potatoes, stretching up the slopes of Mount Meru in a mosaic of various greens dotted with the brown of a few fallow fields.

Back in 1992, Bangoti lived in a mud hut, worked as a day laborer, herded skinny cows and harvested barely enough corn and beans to feed his family. Then scientists came to his farm as part of an agricultural aid program.

They looked at his soil, found the right seed and gave him his first batch of chemical fertilizer. They showed him how to get as much milk from two dairy cows as from his 20 traditional cattle. The techniques were simple, yet rare in Africa, where few labs analyze soil samples and few companies develop improved seed.

By 1993, Bangoti had tripled his output — and profits. At the time, he was profiled in an Associated Press story on African farming. His success since proves it was no accident. He is still farming, and still thriving.

“I built my own modern house,” Bangoti, 50, says proudly, sitting under a shiny tin roof surrounded by dark blue concrete walls. “I was able to send my children to school. … A long time ago, you could have a lot of cows, and have nothing. Now, with this modern way of living, you can have a few cows, but produce more.”

Bangoti says all it would take is a little training and a few supplies for Africans to grow all the food they need.

They once did, in the 1960s. Now, Africans import 25 percent of what they eat. Their share of the global agricultural market is down from 8 percent to 2 percent. And theirs is the only continent where food production per capita has fallen — roughly 22 percent since 1967, according to the World Resource Institute.

One reason, experts say, is the loss of subsidies. In exchange for foreign aid, debt-saddled African countries agreed to cut subsidies. Less than 4 percent of government spending in sub-Saharan Africa now goes to agriculture.

But without a safety net, a single bad season can bankrupt a farmer, and often does. And without help, African farmers are too poor to pay for the good seed and fertilizer that bring land to life.

There are signs of change. The World Bank is rethinking its stance on subsidies after a scathing internal review last month, and it made agriculture the center of its agenda this year for the first time in more than two decades. About 70 percent of Africans live off the land, and agricultural reform — from seed to market — is the surest way to lift the continent out of poverty.

African governments have promised to double their spending on agriculture. And the Gates Foundation and former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan are leading an effort to bring to Africa the green revolution that swept through Asia.

As Bangoti leafs through a photo album of the experts who have visited his farm, he says the training and the aid have changed his life.

“Now I am always moving forward,” he says. “I never go backward.”

Bangoti says he could grow even more — if he could sell it. But he is competing against farmers in the richest countries of the world who get a lot more help, such as Recker.

The corn fields Recker sees through the glass patio doors of his modest ranch house have supported his family for generations. Recker followed his father and grandfather into farming, and works 1,500 acres in northeastern Iowa with his brother.

Today, the price of corn is at a record high because it is in demand to make ethanol. Recker’s business revolves around the timing of the markets as much as the seasons. As he sits at his breakfast table in his overalls and baseball cap, his mobile phone beeps to announce the arrival of the opening commodity prices at his local mill.

It was a different story when Recker started out in the mid-1980s, during one of the country’s worst agricultural crises. He says he could never have survived it without subsidies.

Subsidies kick in when prices are low. But they are given for each bushel, which creates an incentive for farmers to grow as many bushels as they can. The torrent of food then drives down world prices and makes it next to impossible for African farmers to compete.

Some of the extra food ends up in Africa. Most Iowa corn floats down the Mississippi River on barges to become feed for livestock or grist for ethanol. But at some point Recker’s corn has almost certainly gone to Africa for food relief, which experts say destroys local markets.

The United States — the largest donor to the U.N. World Food program — sends Africa corn, wheat, sorghum and soybeans. Aid agencies then have to hand out free or cheap American food instead of buying from African farmers. The cheap imported grain keeps Africans poor, and dependent on cheap imported grain.

The crisis is such that Atlanta-based CARE International, one of the world’s largest charities, announced in August that it would walk away from $45 million in American food to avoid disrupting the economies of the people it wants to help.

The subsidy system makes it hard for African farmers to compete on the world market. Western farmers get 29 percent of their income on average from their governments, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. So they can sell their food for far less than Africans who get no subsidies.

African farmers may get help from an unexpected source — American corn and wheat farmers.

A new generation of corn and wheat farmers is arguing that the current subsidy system no longer meets the needs of their rapidly changing business. Instead of subsidies per bushel, they want the guarantee of a minimum level of revenue for each farm.

The change seems small, but it could result in farmers growing far less — and dumping far less extra corn and wheat on global markets. So Recker, the president of the Iowa Corn Growers Association, goes to Washington every three weeks to make a case that will benefit Bangoti, quite by accident.

“I think we have an opportune time to make sweeping changes in farm policy,” Recker says. “We need to have a program that is designed to supplement the farmer only when he needs it, and when he needs it most.”

Other farmers are not so sure. Peanut and cotton farmers want to keep the current subsidy system but get more money from it.

American cotton farmers receive $3 billion a year in subsidies — sometimes more than half their income, said Daniel Sumner, an agricultural economist at the University of California at Davis. He calculates that African cotton farmers — who pick each bud by hand and dig furrows with plows and oxen — lose $250 million a year because of the U.S. subsidies. That’s enough for each of those farmers to feed two children and pay all school fees for a year.

Cotton farmers in the U.S. say that the impact of subsidies on Africans is overstated, and that African farmers face internal challenges such as productivity and low yields.

Back in Tanzania, Loi Bangoti is not waiting for the outcome of the subsidy debate. In fact, he has never heard of subsidies for Western farmers, and he has no idea how they might affect his business.

But he is thrilled with his own success. His four sons have embraced the new ways he learned, and one even teaches modern dairy farming in a new program in neighboring Uganda.

He is especially proud of one thing: He no longer needs or takes handouts.

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