United States Millennium Challenge Corporation (Washington, DC)

Ghana:Helping Africa Release Its Potential Starts With Boots On the Ground - Farming Boots

Aaron Sherinian

9 July 2009


opinion

In certain villages throughout Ghana, poor farmers and field workers recently received a simple, yet strong, investment in their quest for a better life: a pair of boots. It may seem like a simple solution for a complex problem, but it is just one piece in a remarkable effort underway. The provision of boots, seeds, fertilizers, and nine weeks of expert training signals an innovative and integrated approach to helping Africa win the fight against global poverty.

This kind of "boots on the ground" - in the fields and farms of Africa - is a powerful symbol not only of tangible investments in the poor but also of how the poor are making investments in themselves and their future.

It is a symbol of helping Africans with assistance they have requested, that will help them move forward. As President Obama travels to sub-Saharan Africa-where the poverty rate remains at a crippling 50 percent-he will see and hear how responsible U.S. assistance is delivering results in the lives of Africa's poorest.

In recent years, U.S. assistance to Africa has quadrupled, climbing from $1.5 billion in 1996 to $6.6 billion in 2006. To combat HIV/AIDS, more than 2.1 million Africans are alive today through anti-retrovirals made possible through American support. To protect against the malaria-infected bite of a mosquito, millions of African families sleep under U.S.-provided bed nets, and others benefit from anti-malarial drugs.

To spur economic growth to improve the livelihoods of the poor, Africa is the largest recipient of grants from the U.S. Government's Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a smart approach to sustainable development that partners with countries practicing good governance, fighting corruption, and developing and implementing their own homegrown anti-poverty solutions.

For example, MCC partnerships throughout Africa, totaling $4.5 billion, are building roads, like those in Cape Verde, to help farmers reach markets and families reach health clinics; renovating schools, like those in Ghana and Namibia, to educate the next generation in safe classrooms; and building water and sanitation systems, like those in Mozambique, to benefit households and businesses.

These partnerships are also helping farmers access training and credit to improve their agricultural production-equipping them not only with seeds, fertilizers, and tools but also the very boots necessary to work their fields. Just ask Mary, a Ghanaian farmer from the village of Affumkrom, who benefitted from training in modern, sustainable, environmentally-friendly farming methods as part of Ghana's $547 million MCC partnership. As a result, she can now increase the productivity of her fields and provide her family with a better standard of living. Mary is one of nearly 15,000 farmers who have already completed MCC-funded agricultural training, developed business plans, and are working to access much-needed credit.

The idea of this kind of "boots on the ground" in Africa-and the integrated approach it represents-is as much about all these practical investments bearing tangible results in the fight against poverty as it is about a transformational mindset of empowerment and partnership. It's about helping Africans help themselves, giving them the up-to-date know-how to plough their fields, sell their crops, and, in turn, earn the income to buy their children boots for a better life.

It's about leveraging development assistance to invest in the poor's health and food security, not just because that's the right thing to do, but also because sick and hungry people can't work productively to take care of themselves and their families, let alone their communities and economies. Empowering Africans to confront these challenges and pull themselves out of poverty is helping expand the entrepreneurial class and promote further private sector opportunities for joint ventures, business, and trade-all of which create jobs and fuel long-term economic growth. U.S. assistance needs to continue to think-and act-along these objectives.

As the world focuses its attention on Africa during the upcoming visit of President Obama, people will find that U.S. assistance is already delivering such accountability in Ghana and throughout Africa. This benefits Africans as well as American taxpayers. As prosperity and opportunity replace poverty and despair in Africa, the United States and the world community stand to benefit from a peaceful continent that is stable, healthy, and flourishing with new markets of entrepreneurs and consumers. Africans are on the move, pulling on their boots to forge a path to sustainable development, and Americans should be proud to partner with them toward this shared vision for growth.

Mr. Sherinian is the acting vice president for Congressional and Public Affairs at the Millennium Challenge Corporation, a U.S. Government development assistance agency, and recently returned from visiting MCC project sites in Ghana.

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AllAfrica - All the Time
Author: upliftdarace_144
Fri Jul 10 19:18:18 2009

INDEPENDENT FARMERS’ UNION IDEA

I'm an entrepreneurial sort of person and I got an idea along those lines that I believe many of us who are grassroots thinkers have been overlooking.

So here goes my idea :

a) We have all kinds of Farmers and Farms that are struggling to make a profit. I believe that they are struggling because they are farming under a kind of Third World system that advantages the persons who convert what farmers produce.

b) In most Third World countries , the First & Second World countries will only build enough infrastructure to allow shipment of RAW MATERIALS from their source(s) to the modes of shipping transportation used to transport the RAW MATERIALS to those First & Second World countries that will turn the RAW MATERIALS into processed goods.

* For example - They will build a railroad line of tracks from some Third World country's gold and diamond mines ( e.g. Zaire ) to the Giant Ships docked and waiting to carry them to processors and sellers such as De Beers, Coca-Cola , Cadbury's etc..

c) What kinds of RAW MATERIALS do Farmers produce and/or have access to :

* Gold - Rice , Cocoa ,Mangos, etc…

d) Major Problems stopping small farmers from taking advantage of the possibility of turning your products into a profitable business : LACK OF TIME

e) Solution - My Idea : Form an Independent Union Of Farmers . Having a Coop is great, but it’s only a way of further enriching the processors of our RAW MATERIALS.

* How would this work ?

1) Each Region would represent a chapter of this Independent Farmers Union

2) Generally speaking, each farmer would retain all of their rights ; just as they had before they joined the Independent Farmers Union .

3) The Independent Farmers Union would be finance collectively by individual members paying dues.

4) These dues which would be used to set-up business ventures in each Independent Farmers Union's Region.

Some Examples Of Businesses That could be set up

* Chicken Processing Plant, and restaurants that would sell the chickens could be supplied right their in each Independent Farmers Union's Region.

* Produce Markets

* Dairies

* Ice Cream Parlors (using fresh milk)

* Fast Food and/or Restaurants - featuring meat from various farm animals

* Supermarkets

* Chocolate Processors – instead of giving your cocoa to companies like Cadbury’s. What do companies like DeBeers, Coca Cola,Cadbury’s and others have that entitles them to get rich off of our Natural wealth ? NOTHING.. We empower them by our economic laziness !!!

5) The Independent Farmers Union's would need persons with expertise in areas concerning the setting up and running of these businesses on behalf of the Independent Farmers Union's.

WE ARE MAKING HUNDREDS WHILE GIVING AWAY BILLIONS TO OUR ECONOMIC SLAVE MASTERS !!!

THERE IS NO REASON WHY WE CAN'T TAKE CONTROL OF OUR OWN COUNTRY !

- FEED YOURSELVES SUGGESTION -

NEIGHBORHOOD COOP GREENHOUSES

ANOTHER SUGGESTION IS FOR THOSE LIVING IN THE CITY TO POOL

THEIR RESOURCES TOGETHER AND MAKE NEIGHBORHOOD COOP

GREENHOUSES . HERE YOU CAN GROW SOME KIND OF FOODS AND NOT

BE TOTALLY DEPENDENT ON GROCERY STORES.

HERE’S SOME EXAMPLES OF WHAT BLACK AFRICANS HAVE DONE :

BLACK AFRICAN INVENTORS AND THEIR INVENTIONS

The type of Invention is capitalized (e.g. TRAFFIC SIGNAL, MOTOR, etc..)

We Black Africans Can Be Self-Sufficient . Here are some major Black Africans who have had an impact on the world With their initiative These are INVENTORS .

This Listing includes The Inventor’s Name, Their Invention and in some cases the date the invention was recognized and the invention’s U.S. patent number.

* Sarah Boone - IRONING BOARD - April 26, 1892

* John A. Burr - LAWN MOWER

* Marie V. Brittan Brown - HOME SECURITY SYSTEM - Dec 2, 1969

* Buridge & Marshman - TYPEWRITER

* George Carruthers - X-RAY MACHINE

* George Washington Carver - PEANUT BUTTER - PAINTS – PAINT STAINS – ETC

* John Clark - TRACK ATHLETE TRAINER

* W.A. Dietz - SHOE

* Joseph Dickinson - PLAYER PIANO - ARM FOR RECORD PLAYER

* P.B. Downing - POSTAL LETTER BOX

* Charles R. Drew - BLOOD PLASMA STORAGE SYSTEM

* T. Elkins - TOILET (COMMODE)

* Robert Flemming Jr. - GUITAR

* Cathleen McCoy Garrett SIREN - HORN LIGHT INDICATOR

* George F. Grant - GOLF TEE

* J. Gregory - MOTOR

* Joanna Hardin - KEYBOARD STAND - Feb 23, 1993

* Michael Harney - LANTERN

* Solomon Harper - THERMO(HEATED) HAIR CURLERS

* Augustus Jackson - ICE CREAM

* B.F. Jackson - GAS BURNER

* H.A. Jackson - KITCHEN TABLE

* Ruane Jeter - DIGITAL TOASTER - April 14, 1987

* Isaac R. Johnson - BICYCLE FRAME

* John A. Johnson - WRENCH

* Lonnie Johnson - SUPER SOAKER WATERGUN

* P. Johnson - EYE PROTECTOR (GOGGLES)

* W. Johnson - EGG BEATER

* Frederick M. Jones - DEFROSTER - REFRIGERATION CONTROLS – AIR CONDITIONER

* Jones & Long - BOTTLE CAPS

* John H. Jordan - CLOTHES DRESSER

* Mary B. Kenner - SANITARY BELT (TAMPONS) - May 15, 1956

* Mary B. Kenner - SANITARY BELT (WATERPROOF) - April 14, 1959

* Mary B. Kenner - BATHROOM TISSUE HOLDER - Nov 19, 1982

* Mary B. Kenner - BACKWASHER ( BATHTUB OR SHOWER MOUNTED) - July 29,1987

* Lewis Latimer & Nichols - ELECTIC LAMP

* W.A. Lavalette - PRINTING PRESS

* F.W. Leslie - ENVELOPE SEAL

* Maurice W. Lee PRESSURE COOKER

* A.L. Lewis - WINDOW CLEANER

* John L. Love - PENCIL SHARPENER

* Tony J. Marshall - FIRE EXTINGUISHER

* Alexander Miles - ELEVATOR

* Jan E. Matzeliger - SHOE LASTING MACHINE

* W.A. Martin - LOCK

* Garrett A. Morgan - GAS MASK - Traffic Signal

* Lydia Newman - HAIR BRUSH - Nov 15, 1898

* Alice H. Parker - HEATING FURNACE - Dec 23, 1919

* J.F. Pickering - AIR SHIP (BLIMP)

* Purdy & Sadgwar - FOLDING CHAIR

* W.B. Purvis - FOUNTAIN PEN

* L.P. Ray - DUST PAN

* W.H. Richardson - BABY BUGGY

* Walter Sammons - PRESSING COMB

* G.T. Sampson - CLOTHES DRYER

* Dewey Sanderson - URINALYSIS MACHINE

* Ralph Sanderson - HYDRAULIC SHOCK ABSORBER

* S.R. Scottron - CURTAIN ROD

* Adolph Shamms - MULTI -STAGE ROCKET

* .W. Smith - LAWN SPRINKLER

* Richard B. Spikes - AUTOMATIC GEAR SHIFT

* J. Standard - REFRIGERATOR

* T.W. Stewart - MOP

* Maxine Snowden - RAIN HAT - 1983

* Theora Stephens - PRESSING & CURLING IRON

* Rufus J. Weaver - STAIR -CLIMBING WHEELCHAIR

* Paul E. Williams - HELICOPTER

* J.B. Winters - FIRE ESCAPE LADDER

* Granville T. Woods - Telephone System Apparatus Oct 11, 1887 – Patent # 371, 241

* Granville T. Woods - Roller Coaster

* Granville T. Woods - Auto Air Brake - June 10, 1902 - Patent # 701, 98

* Granville T. Woods - Telegraph Transmission Devices - Dec 2, 1884 Patents # - 308, 816 (7)

* Thanks to The Black Inventors Museum *

* Address : P.O. Box 76128 - Los Angeles , Calif. (90076)

* Phone (310) 859-4602)

* Director : Ghanaian Mr. Hamza Salifa

* Major Contributor of Information : SEESTAH Imahkus Nzinga Okofo

[This inspiring poem was featuring in the movie “Coach Carter ”]

Our Deepest Fear Is Not That We Are Inadequate, Our Deepest Fear Is That We Are Powerful Beyond Measure. It Is Our Light , Not Our Darkness That Most Frightens Us.

We Ask Ourselves, Who Am I To Be Brilliant, Gorgeous, Talented, And Fabulous ?

Actually Who Are We Not To Be ? You Are A Child Of God.

Your Playing Small Doesn’t Serve The World.

There Is Nothing Enlightened About Shrinking So That Other People Won’t Feel Insecure Around You.

We Are All Meant To Shine, As Children Do.

We Were Born To Make Manifest The Glory Of God That Is Within Us.

It’s Not Just In Some Of Us; It’s In Everyone.

And When We Let Our Own Light Shine We Unconsciously Give Other People Permission To Do The Same.

And As We Are Liberated From Our Own Fear, Our Presence Automatically Liberates Others

- Marianne Williamson -

[NOTE – BEING AFRAID AND REFUSING TO GET INVOLVED WON’T STOP US FROM DYING. BUT BEING AFRAID CAN PREVENT US FROM LIVING]

(Nkosi Sikeleli Africa )

God bless Africa May her glory be lifted high Hear our petitions .

God bless us, Your children God we ask You to protect our nation Intervene and end all conflicts Protect us, protect our nation, our nation.

From the blue of our heaven, From the depths of our sea, Over our eternal mountain ranges, Where the cliffs give answer.

Sounds the call to come together, And united we shall stand, Let us live and strive for freedom, In South Africa our land.

[Enoch Mankayi Sontonga]

WAKE UP !!! STAY UP !!!

TRUTHSEEKERS MOUNT UP !

[http://www.infowars.com/infowars.asx] / [gcnlive.com]

Life Is A Game. Have Fun . Luke 18:17 - Isaiah 11:6


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