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Cameroon: The Intrigues of Privatisation And the Stalemate At Camair


The Post (Buea)
 

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The Post (Buea)

ANALYSIS
9 May 2008
Posted to the web 9 May 2008

Nfamewih Aseh

The law of neo-liberalism states that "government is a bad manager"; that business men and women were more transparent and accountable and were thus better able to manage corporate business within the framework of the private corporate sector than the state; that this business men and women should either be white or have a white backing.

Most importantly, that the white control of the corporate private sector is the foundation for "good governance", hence the need for privatisation.Neo-liberalism by definition would refer to that period in Africa, in the late 1980s, after the end of the independent struggles of the 1950s and 1960s, when the white man countries returned to reclaim the economy.

And one way of achieving that goal was by making sure that the structure of the state "adjusted" to accommodate the private corporate capital; by taking away the corporate sector from the state and handing it over to the private business men and women, in this case whites.

It thus became imperative for the United Nations to commission its specialised organs such as the World Bank and the IMF to come up with a strategy of achieving that goal.They did and that strategy was embodied in the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) which had privatisation and liberalisation as main items on the grand agenda and targeted thirty seven African countries including Cameroon.

Like any other agenda that is set by the West destined for Africa, the announcement for the coming of SAP in June 1987 raised the hopes of Cameroonians who believed in the daydream of private business coming to rescue Cameroon's economy from the state, the "bad manager", and bring to about "good governance".

All the noise about liberalisation and privatisation as antidotes for an economy in crisis turned out to be a doom, an eyewash, a cover-up; a butterfly chase that kept Cameroonians dreaming of a pie in the sky. Even the political liberalisation only successfully liberalised the political sphere achieving only the creation of "opposition" political parties whose duty has only been to check the mismanagement antics of the state, also turned out to be rubbish.

Before long, even the "Good Governance" singsong went into a tail spin while the white man, acting through local allies, were all over the place buying up everything under SAP with the state told to hands off the provision of social services.

In Zimbabwe, the imposition of ESAP (Economic Structural Adjustment Programme) in 1989 by the very Bretton Woods twins (World Bank/IMF), being the Zimbabwean version of SAP, brought back the descendants of the Rhodesian rump capital from Johannesburg with a mission to wrest power from the state on behalf of Britain and the USA.

It also selected from among the urban "jobless" elite Morgan Tsvangirai to, in collaboration with the white business class, fight Mugabe on the ticket of Britain and the USA whose political agenda was to wring power from Mugabe and reclaim the economy of Zimbabwe and overrun the entire Southern African sub-region.

Unlike the case of Zimbabwe, which is a revolutionary state under a nationalist president, the state in Cameroon is rather a contrivance for political cover-up for economic crimes under a collaborating stratum over which is a President.

The role of this collaborating stratum is to prove as much as possible that, truly, the state is a "bad manager" to ensure the successful implementation of SAP; to ensure that SAP reaches its "completion point".

In that case, both the numerous opposition political parties that sprouted in Cameroon in the 1990s following the wind of liberalisation that was blowing from the East, the state bureaucrats and managers of state corporations were struggling to achieve the same goal: to prove as much as possible that the neo-colonial state is a "bad manger".

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While the hardcore opposition political parties were busy counting the failures of the state, state bureaucrats and managers of state para-statals, for their part, were busy "mismanaging" state affairs, all of which brought ample evidence against the state as a "bad manager" and validated the neo-liberal law of which corruption and embezzlement can be understood in that light.

For example, before CamPost was sold to a Canadian firm, Tescult International Ltd, on February 26, 2007, over FCFA 50 billion of Cameroonian's savings were deliberately stolen from that corporation which was then used as good reason to sell it to a white man's corporation on the grounds that the black man cannot manage a corporation; that the "state is a bad manager".

And almost all the para-statals that have been privatised in Cameroon have gone through this experience. The case of Cameroon Airlines, which also shows how government officials deliberately swindle funds from state para-statals to justify the idea that "government is a bad manager" so as to justify the sales of such outfits to white man companies, is another case in point.

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