tv The Bottom Line Al Jazeera October 16, 2022 4:00am-4:31am AST
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ah short document to east from around the world. that celebrate curry and resilience in times of turmoil. out dizzy was select on now to day on november the americans warburton. all the seats in the house of representatives at 35 percent of the senate will be contested. americans are expected to split on strict ideological lines with abortion and the economy named as the key issues. the result pulled to find the rest of your biden's presidency. and put americas democratic principles to the test. special coverage of the midterm elections on al jazeera. ah,
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hello there, i'm associate a and her with the headline here on al jazeera, growing anger at unity as political and economic crisis has spilled over into huge protests with thousands tanning out as rival opposition groups held rallies against president chi, isiah. interrogating me has the story, ah, crowds gathered in the center of tunis ne keith, president high side of corrupting democratic institutions and wanting absolute power. hi lainey. i came here today because of the queue and the miserable conditions the country is in today. there is no water or milk, no sugar and no petrol, and we have a president who is only interested in power. oh, the 2 parties organizing the protests have long been bitter rivals. now both are focused on the fight against the age leaders of the national salvation. front
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coalition and the free constitution party urchin indians to boycott december's parliamentary elections. i the tunisian people who fought 50 years for democracy will not allow the school to settle. they'll see me, extent of mismanagement, incompetence and failure. ah, at both rallies, protest is cooled on side to quit. enchanted the people want the full of the regime . the slogan of the 2011 revolution which spark the arab spring, people are getting really quite prostrated for those 2 counts. those ones who are fighting for democracy and those who are just fighting for kind of bread and being able to live about ally friends. know what they got to put on the dinner table at nights. the government hasn't commented on the latest protests side says he's working to improve the economic conditions he inherited from his predecessors. to that end, that unity and government is just secure to $1900000000.00 loan from the i m f. oh
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wow. but these protest is say they won't give up. they don't believe the upcoming vote will be free. all fair. they say i eat has too much power, and democracy is in danger. victoria gay to be out there. now people in to kia are mourning, the death of 41 coal miners. they were killed in an underground explosion on friday night. at present, rush up type i do, i met survivors at the site and northern tech here and vowed to end mining accidents, said m costio lou has more from missouri in a very health day for the victims, families and for the rest the work last night. and finally, the last buddy of the worker was found in prisons are gone and has been found them evacuated from the side for 2 people. most of them have been very since this morning and the families are very upset. they don't want to talk to friends.
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we try to get in touch with them. russia says 11 people have been killed in a shooting as a military training ground in belgrade, near the ukrainian border. and says he assailants were from an unnamed former soviet nation, they were killed by return fire. meanwhile, russian forces a bond, a number of towns recaptured by ukrainian troops and crossed on the written military. hold out there, it suspects the russian attacks ought to secure air defense points. and i'm munition depos but not to advance the new chancellor jeremy hunter's warning of the difficult decisions ahead, including an increase in taxes, its being seen as another blowing to prime minister in this process or 30. it was a mistake to cut the top rate of tax. so the period when we were asking everyone to make sacrifices and it was a mistake to fly blind and not to back up the economic plans that were announced with an independent forecast from the office. the budget responsibility,
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both those things have been addressed. iran governance has a fire that broke out of the evan prison and terran, has been brought under control state media, se clashes broke out between inmates and guards. focused on someone to the us ambassador after president joe biden called the nation, one of the most dangerous in the wild fight. and says, is that has a nuclear off know without any cohesion. pakistan says it's new assets need every international standard set by the us. how those are the headlines? i'll have more news for you here. also the bottom line. ah hi, i'm steve clements and i have a question. how does the united states get africa so wrong and why, or other powers like china and russia and turkey making more headway on the continent? let's get to the bottom line. ah,
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no one can blame africans for assuming that the rest of the world has very little interest in their continent, except maybe for extracting natural resources, like gold and oil, or buying weapons and counter terrorism. former us president george w bush famously referred to it as a nation instead of a continent with $54.00 very diverse countries, each with its own unique interest in history. president trump had awful things to say about africa, and we're not going to repeat them here. the west simply hasn't updated its views on africa for centuries. either it's a place for global competition between the great powers or it's in need of christian evangelism or it needs help with food and medicine. there is an enormous gap between the realities of africa's dynamism and it's diversity. it's entrepreneurship that make the nations of africa, many of them, some of the most fascinating places in the world. so as the united states missing out on the reality of africa the day who's getting it right and who's filling that vacuum today, we're talking with. zina guzman senior fellow and director of the africa program at
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the carnegie endowment for international peace and previously at the world bank and he cut out a go k, a veteran journalist who's been covering innovation in africa for a long time for reuters courts and were recently semaphores, where he is the africa editor and i'm also editor at large, so he's a colleague is enough let me start with you and just ask how outdated is america's conception and engagement with africa as a continent? the perceptions of african, the u. s. very much outdated and i would say that they are stuck in the 20th century for the most part. you find this across various levels of american society . so overall, africa is seen as a humanitarian case rocked by conflict by corruption, by terrorism and in need of aid. as you mentioned in your introduction, all of these things are true. the problem is that they are incomplete. they present an incomplete picture of where african countries are today. sol,
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within the american government, things are starting to shift. but overall africa is seen as the humanitarian but quarter. that is not central to us strategic priorities. as you have in the case of europe, we can see with one ukraine, all of the billions of dollars, the ukraine, and even even even other european countries have received or the case of parts of asia. so africa is not seen as a, as core to strategic parties. prison biden has lots of africa since he assumed office over a year ago, although he has visited, europe hasn't been to the middle east with, for the trip to saudi arabia. right. president trump never visited africa, i'm cold africa use very colorful language to describe africa. i would just say he used abhorrent language, foreign language absolutely. at the level of economic engagement, investments, and trade. we're also seeing that the numbers are really decline and precipitously
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take trade. for example. you trade between the united states and african countries has actually declined from around $160000000000.00 in 2008 to just around $64000000000.00 today. and most of that is actually when you look aggregated, it's mostly involves oil and gas, extractive industries. it's not really trade in substantial things that can really transform for going economies. i like what you have in china with the case of china . so trade between china and african countries reached a historic high of over 250000000000 dollars and 2021 last year. and then finally, all of this is tied up with i would say media narrative on africa in the united states, which are still very much dated. again, this perception that africa struck by conflict. you know, it's the humanitarian crises, all of those things. and unfortunately, i think they affect how ordinary american c africa. you have
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a lot of reluctance for many people to engage with a part of the world that they feel is very, very problematic. but when we come to the issues you're talking about, you know, africa and what is happening there. i think part of the question is, why are china turkey even russia getting that story and americans are not to your points about dynamism. it is also the place with the world's youngest population, and you know, it's often even that sometimes it's portrayed as a, as a problem as a, as a disadvantage. but actually, the world will be relying on africa workers in the next 30 to 40 years, because it is the only continent actually producing people who will be the future of humanity, really, terms of, of young workers. but also, if you look at it today, there's a fast growing, fostering tech helps across the continent. which of the, you know, some of the one place in the, in the world where the, the slow down in tech investment hasn't,
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hasn't happened. more companies are coming out of there, and often even that story is told is african companies doing stuff for african people. but actually, increasingly because the same issue about young workers and where talent is what the internet has done, this is opened up the well. so even the young tech workers are beginning to be the tech welfare for massive companies like google and microsoft are on the continent. if i were to kind of look at the kind of a ingredients, if i wanted to kind of recreate what happened with, say, the asian tigers, the tire economies that, that grew so quickly and fast part of it is having a big population. part of it is having human capital this there you've got 1200000000 people. as i've learned from your article, i should tell you, but you can read say not working, foreign affairs recently how america can foster and african boom, but you document. and here that here you've got to 1200000000 people, greater greater investment in human capital. a very young audience to tomorrow is
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future global middle class, a big chunk of it will be in africa. and so i guess my question is what needs to happen by way of the social contract in some side is some of these african nations to fuel some of what you think it was just referring to the economic dynamism and you know, is there a space for someone like america to be part of it, and i guess might, it might part of does it matter if we're part of it? yes, a very, very crucial questions. i think i'm going to build on what you said about africa population and also i guess africa fundamentals, those fundamental, what is the demographics, whether it's the economic structure of africa, countries, they present both opportunities and challenges. unfortunately, the narrative today over emphasize on the challenges, right? so yes, this conflict us as violence in certain parts of the continent. but actually when you look at certain analyses that have been done by what it's entities like statistics and all those the world's most violent cities,
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the top 10 only one is in africa. cape town, all of the other cities are in latin america in brazil, and mexico, etc, etc. right? so it's just that the challenges in africa are over emphasized. and the fundamentals to day present opportunities and what are those opportunities we, let's dig demographics, for example. the continent has the walls fastest growing population, and it's also the world's youngest median age in africa today is around 19 compared to around 13, the middle east. and in south asia, in asia, compared to around 38 in the u. s. and in china, and also very important compared to, i think, 4445 in europe. so africa is a young continent and it's growing. it's going to be the continent with the world's future labor force. so already, you know, if you want to think future labor force and future buyers, future future buyers,
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future consumers. and we've seen already, entities from china, have made a lot of headway on this front because we've seen that potential. so mobile phone companies like tunzia and became global market need us today because of their investments in africa. whereas companies from other parts of the world in the early thousands felt that africa were to port afford mobile phones and their examples like that across the board. so the challenges today when you look at it and you invest there and you create opportunities for all these young people, become opportunities for companies in the future. right? so i think it's a matter of a mindset shift. and then to the last part of the question, is there a rule for the u. s. there is, of course, a huge role for the us to play. you look at the competitive advantage of the us, the way i would frame it anyways, in terms of private capital. this is the world's largest markets economy. africa countries need investments, right? it's actually a debt of investments,
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especially around infrastructure in the early 2, thousands that made a lot of african countries to, to china. because they're not getting the investments from was some bilateral lenders, or even from the world bank and other multilateral lenders. they tend to china, those investment needs still there. the content needs about a $150000000000.00 every year. for infrastructure investments, the continent again, needs around $50000000.00 for climate adaptation. right? to be able to invest in, you know, climate resistant, agriculture, crops, buildings, bridges, etc. those are all things. so the u. s. can help with digital technologies. you know, we have silicon valley, a companies want to expand to new markets today and in the future. africa is the place, so there are so many examples like these that i can bring that there's so much that can be done. the u. s. has a rule to play, but the mindset has to shift to see africa, not just a continent of problems, but a continent where when you think innovatively of addressing those problems,
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you come up with solutions that work for africans. but that also work for the investor and the partner country. right. well, let me ask you, you know, their companies like qualcomm and microsoft and mastercard, that i happen to personally know are investing and building teams to approach the africa market. much more earnestly and to invent to kinda look at that going on. i'm just interested, you know, we're still, we haven't talked many about this sort of member states, but you know, you're going to be at some of 4 folks in fall. you're african newsletter by the way, but you're going to be a symbol for writing about nations and summers and some of the economic dynamism. i just be interested just top of mind. you know, what are some of the stories that you think are worthy worthy of writing? in specific countries, i think very much about i have a big biased towards tech innovation and the fold it and get in touch with something that didn't touch on the about the way. because of
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a lack of is traditional legacy of a lack of infrastructure and various challenges. you see some of the most creative solutions to problems on the continent. and what we're finding more or more is the story, the i, the stories i'm looking at. all stories about african companies solving problems at home, but then taking, taking those solutions to other parts of the world. right. go, good, go into left america. i couple of companies that i know, but, you know, obviously we want to break excuses on this as you know, steve, but then there are couple of companies that are going to be launching in brazil that have started out in kenya, niger. and we're going to see that kind of thing happening more often. we're also going to see more. the story has obviously been a lot about china coming into to africa to invest. but increasingly,
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we're going to have more stories about japan and turkey and all the sorts of other fairly wealthy countries that are not traditional western countries or china who all will also see the opportunity of both investing in being a supplier partner. but also the market opportunity as well on the standing that you know this, this, this 1200000000 people or even more. busy can, can be incredibly promising market. so i think, i think that we're going to see a lot of that. then let me ask you a question and i don't know if i get this right, but i'm going to try. i think there's also a sense that african leadership who does want input from various places once investment. but i think part of the social contract or the
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expectation is that african matters in africa. leaders should also care about other things in the world that there are public goods problems around the world. whether it's climate, whether it's transnational crime, whether it's, you know, any number of other issues right now. the invasion of ukraine by russia and when president lensky was going to speak to 54 invited leaders from africa for leaders showed up. i guess my question to you is, should we have greater expectations as we look at what the united states is not getting right in this, which i want to get at. but are they in terms of african leadership not stepping up to some of the big global challenges to show that they're connected to things beyond app or is that a part of going up the ladder if you will, of both development and international respect? so absolutely. you know, african countries need to step up a bit more. i would say they would need to step up more internally and address
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certain governance challenges that are hobbling the large economies the large countries of the continent. do you think about nigeria, the democratic republic? of course, when you mentioned governance, are you really st corruption? so it's not just corruption. corruption is one aspect of it, but we cannot reduce the entirety of the complexity of governance to just corruption. it's really around delivering public services. public goods, increase the standards of living, increase in prosperity, stability address, and in new qualities. given people a sense of inclusion and fairness, all of those things they need to be address, especially in the large economies. and in a way that is in the 1st, that's why they're not really punching above their weight in many respects. so, you know, absolutely, and that responsibility lies with african countries individually, but also collectively. and we're starting to see progress on that front. they came together, the $55.00 countries of the african union to put for the vision of integrated
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continent through the africa, continental free trade area, which is the world's one of the world's largest retreat areas. there's an agenda 2063 to industrialize, and transform the continent. haven't said that though. and that, that came into force last year. right. the africa continental. free trader, i think about a year ago. right? yes. so, but hadn't said that they know and identified the responsibilities of african countries, i think, a global level. it's also the fact that there's, there's a lack of representation, equitable representation and multilateral for us. where in the case of the united nations of the united nations security council, the permanent membership, you have 5 countries fair, the snow african country. we have a country that is a member of the un security council. i'm not going to mention it. it has a population of 60000000, but the african continent, whether it's niger with 200000000 people, or if you're p o is close to over 100000000 people or the d r c. there's no
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representation of the african continent. a toll. there's no representation, even of india, which has 1500000000 people. so our global governance institutions are also not very equitable in terms of our presentation. if we want african countries to step up, they need to be at the table when it comes to the g 20. there are 19 member states of the g 20, as well as the european union. the european union has 27 countries and a population of 450000000 people. why is the african union with 55 countries and a population of close 1500000000 people, not a member of the g 20. so if we want african countries to step about, i think they should step up on globe issues. they should be given a seat at the table of decision making. and it goes like that across the board. you know, the membership and the shell hold in on the vote in the world bank and the i m f.
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the allocation of special doing right across the board. you find that african countries sometimes are completely excluded. so for one them to step up to the plate on decision making, they need to be given a seat at the table. that's fascinating against you. and i have talked about the african leaders summit, which is going to take place in washington, d. c. in december of 2022 and in that summit i'm interested in the yank out of ok analysis of, you know, to get to some of the points that i've just mentioned, which is to measure whether any successful structural shift occurred, you know, is it greater representation or at least american support for greater african representation in some of these international institutions. what would you be saying this was either a failure or this was a success? you know, after that some it occurs?
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well, i think what we'd be looking out for is, you know, how, how, how seriously did the u. s. the vitamin ministration take this event, who just something that they felt they had to do? was it just a saw the convenience event before? by just turns out, because to the point about biting, never actually going to the african continent, the only sending out secretary blank and all the kind of one of the mission that what, what people want to hear, what those leaders want to hear is some serious commitment from the u. s. government towards african countries to that points about what sort of investment are you actually going to make or you just are you just that, you know, doing the usual sort of ticking boxes and making sure you'll see for folks opportunities cool. actually, we actually could get anything of substance in terms of key decisions,
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but key investments, you know, every, every, every i don't know was every to every 3 years. the chinese have the, the focus conference with, with, with african leaders. and it goes back and forth between beijing and an african city. and there are actual substances, issues of substances, sort of elements that come out of those, of those meetings every 2 or 3 years. this, this needs to happen with, with the biden and destruction always with the u. s. government with any u. s. government, it needs to be a regular, a normalized sort of events rather than kind of happens this time and then you don't hear about it. but other for 5 years and, and then sometimes another administration comes in as a complete change of sort of attitude towards africa. that needs to be some consistently. and they need to be able to come up with actual
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sort of, you know, frankly just call it what it is, but some dollars not, i don't know what they actually want to do with african continent. i'm interested in, as you look at china and turkey and even russia, which you have written about who are now significant players, china, the biggest investor in africa today. what are they getting right, that america is not doing and needs to pay attention to? to begin with, i would say that i, i think the u. s. is starting to recalibrate it's thinking on africa, which is a good thing. and in fact, in august the year, a new strategy towards sub saharan africa was published by the biden administration . that and visions and new partnership between the united states and african countries. and that is a very good start, of course that there is the u. s. african liter summit,
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which is coming up in december this year, which is a follow on to the 1st summit that was done in 2014. also during the time of barack obama. all of those are good, but they're not enough more needs to be done. so what is that more that needs to be done? and if we take the example or take a cue from what china turkey and others are doing so well, i think the 1st thing is really that mindset shift that this is a continental opportunities. you talk to whether it's chinese entrepreneurs or even some governmental officials, they would tell you to us, we see many parts of africa as what china is to be 20 years ago. like we see the potential here. we see that there's a future middle class and they need services, they need schools and hospitals, they need mobile phone, all of those things, and those create opportunity. so is a mindset shift that there are opportunities here as well as there are challenges. i would say that is really,
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really the main thing. perhaps the 2nd thing is also that that africa is crucial to global issues. not just in the, you know, africa as a silo, but africa, whatever happens that is going to affect and shape the rest of the world. you know, we're already starting to see this. you mentioned the ukraine, right? the votes in the you and we can just ignore africa. what, what happens in africa matches for the rest of the world. and the u. s. can actually support some africa initiatives. some african causes whether it's, you know, join in the un security council. the permanent membership or the g 20, there are things that the u. s. can use its influence. it's convenient power influence, particularly with the european allies to push those courses for africa, political economy, xena, who's mine and journalist got out a go. okay, thank you so much for being with us today. so what's the bottom line from algeria
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t, as in bob way, folks in africa are busy building biotech hubs hosting innovation challenges and scaling their entrepreneurship across the continent. americans still there, but faintly, most of the fresh ink on the deals that will bring major economic development, or either chinese or russian or turkish. america still looks at the continent to archaic lenses, a poor war torn place, dependent on outsiders and in need of saving by the west, and more recently as a base for special forces and counter terrorism. sure, there are real hot spots, but washington is generally losing out countries that have updated their worldview on africa, or making partnerships and planting the seeds for the future. and if washington doesn't do the same, it's going to miss the proverbial african both. and that's the bottom line, ah, a society's progress is dependent on the quality of its experts be need more i find
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professionals. i talk parity is to my, to waive the new generation to study, find new teaching methods, or infusing tie students to become the agents of change, taking them out of the classroom to solve problems in their local communities. ready level education, inspiring science, tyler on, i'll just do. the wait for the world. come is meily as the main event gets closer out just here. i was here. every step of the way. i'm gonna go with one month to go. we focus on asia. teams can expect some strong support hearing. got caught up. cope with the pressures of hosting will australia make the most of squeezing it through the player or will it be south korea, japan saudi arabia or iran progress furthers the world cup count out on it. jesse, uta ah.
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