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						Book Talk: Africa's 
						natural wealth: its burden and blessing 
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						[March 05, 2015] 
						By Ed Stoddard 
						JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - 
						Martin Meredith, one of the most prolific writers on all 
						things African, takes readers in his new book on a 
						5,000-year journey through the continent, which remains 
						the world's poorest despite fabulous natural wealth. | 
			
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				 The notion of a "resource curse" - the distressing tendency 
				of developing countries to fail to translate their minerals and 
				hydrocarbons into wider prosperity - is a very modern one. 
 But a central theme of "The Fortunes of Africa: A 5,000-Year 
				History of Wealth, Greed and Endeavour" is that gold, ivory and 
				other natural riches have long been both a burden and a blessing 
				to the region.
 
 Meredith spoke to Reuters by telephone about the book.
 
 Q: Africa's natural riches have long been coveted and 
				exploited by outsiders. Can the continent take control of its 
				own destiny in this regard and extract its minerals and 
				hydrocarbons in such a way that the wealth can be spread?
 
 A: In theory it could be. Unfortunately, the pattern that 
				most African governments have adopted is to use the resources 
				mainly to benefit elite groups or reward supporters. It's 
				sometimes called a resource curse, but the resources are a huge 
				benefit. It's the management of the wealth that comes from those 
				resources where the problem lies.
 
 
				 
				Q: One sub-theme in your book is the long history of 
				religious tensions in Africa between Islam and Christianity. Is 
				history repeating itself at the moment?
 
 A: Not really, no, because the nature of the collision 
				between different religions, particularly between Islam and 
				Christianity, is completely different from what it has been in 
				the past. The intention of Muslim radicals to drive out or 
				expunge Christian churches and opponents, it's different in 
				modern times. If you look at the Jihadist movements of the 19th 
				century, which took place in many areas of West Africa, the 
				intention there of the Jihadist leaders was to convert the local 
				population to a purer form of Islamic practice. So many of the 
				religious wars that went on in the 19th century were not really 
				aimed at anything other than converting large sections of the 
				population towards Islam. It was not so much a collision between 
				Islam and Christianity.
 
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			Q: What is your take on the "African Rising" narrative that 
			is currently fashionable?
 A: I find it a rather foolhardy notion. It's quite true that 
			in the first decade of the 21st century the growth rate in Africa 
			after some 40 years of economic mayhem, the growth rate has been 
			quite impressive. The general average over that period would have 
			been about 5 percent, which is impressive. But much of that had to 
			do with rising commodity prices. And if you take out the rise in 
			commodity prices you are left with a much less impressive economic 
			record.
 
 Q: You have traveled widely in Africa. What is your favorite 
			country or region?
 
 A: One of my favorite countries is certainly Ethiopia because 
			of its extraordinary historical and religious traditions and indeed 
			its magnetic beauty. I rather like Zimbabwe as a country but find 
			its politics are very ugly.
 
 Q: What is your next book project?
 
 A: I've started research on a book about an Afrikaner family, 
			an aristocratic family, caught up in the turmoil of the Boer War, 
			and what happened to them.
 
 (Editing by Michael Roddy and Gareth Jones)
 
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