Email this page to a friend!

Film Review: Dispatches-How to Get Ahead in Africa

 

‘This is the real story of how Africa works. How the rich are getting richer, and the poor are dying.’ It is with these lines that BAFTA Award-winning journalist Sorious Samura begins his documentary. What is tearing the African continent to pieces, he says, is not diseases, war or underdevelopment. It’s corruption.

The documentary, part of the Dispatches series on current affairs on UK Channel 4, provides a first-hand portrait of corruption in Africa. With the aid of a hidden camera, Samura goes to Kibera, Kenya’s largest slum located in the heart of the capital city, Nairobi. He stays with a local family for a week to show us what corruption means in the daily life of slum dwellers.

Bribes are needed to get into hospital, to get a job − ‘if we don’t pay we don’t work’ − and even just to build a shack in a slum. After paying 3,000 Kenyan Shillings (about £20) in bribes, Samura comments, ‘This is a dirty experience. Altogether I have paid a month’s rent in bribes just to be allowed to build a shack in one of Africa’s most notorious slums. For people here it must be financially crippling, if not impossible’.

Policemen, teachers and housing inspectors − they all need to be routinely bribed. Taxi drivers bribe policemen so that can drive their taxi; students bribe teachers so that they can get their assignments marked (and occasionally get free marks in the process); and slum dwellers bribe housing inspectors so that they can build a roof over their head.

‘There is no sense of efficiency’, says Samura, ‘it pays to be corrupt.’ He points out how the meagre income of hospital staff, policemen and teachers contributes to fuel the bribing cycle. Not being paid properly is part of the problem; greed is another one.

Samura goes on showing the cracks through which development aid allocated for HIV/AIDS programmes in Kenya has fallen, without ever reaching most of its intended recipients. He discovers how many agencies exist only ‘by name’, and how easy it is to set up your own agency and cash in donations.

On the failures of NGOs handing out aid on the ground, a corruption investigator comments, ‘It is a question of going public, making big speeches and saying nice buzzwords…most of them [NGOs] come here as this is a trouble spot. Serve your time, don’t rock the boat. And avoid anything controversial. Do your time and then off you go. Because they have no heart and soul in what they’re doing in terms of what is happening to the country. I remember this music guy, Bob Geldof, talking about making poverty history. I’m sorry, with all due respect to his efforts and whatnot, I think it’s all a waste of time. The key is fighting corruption.’

This is not what you would call a typically optimistic documentary: there is no sugar coating in showing the impact of aid and government malpractice in Kenya.

Rather, it is a disillusioned first-hand account of how corruption works in the daily life of thousands of Africans. With its poignant editing and dialogue, the documentary delivers a clear and expressive message. Both images and content are testimony to Samura’s courage in the photographic journalism and non-adulterated presentation of facts in his documentaries.

A few points to leave with: the documentary is a good reminder of reality vs. idealism − we should not lose sight of what actually needs fixing (food for thought: governance, accountability and international trading agreements) and where/how development/humanitarian work could effectively be improved. Acknowledging limitations and challenges provides an entry point for effective action.

Also, we should not forget that corruption is not just an African problem, but a world-wide one. And when talking about African corruption, the West needs to take responsibility too: as Samura reminds us, there is no shortfall of Western banks willing to help move and store corrupt money coming from Africa.

Lastly, we need to avoid the trap of generalisation and label all development efforts as failed and corrupt: although abuse and misuse of aid do happen, there are brilliant, successful and committed organisations out there that are really putting their energy and soul into making a difference in people’s lives. One at a time. 

Posted by Martina Tomassini in Corruption & Governance for column Issue Analysis on Feb 14th 2012, 15:35

Comments

15/02/12 6:05pm - Posted By Graeme Codrington - Reply to this comment
Martina, thank you for alerting me to this documentary - it sounds brilliant, and I will definitely watch it. Corruption is a scourge (whether in Africa or elsewhere), but it's easy to forget that it has real consequences for real people in their every day lives. It is probably the biggest issue standing in the way of Africa's development and growth.

I do have one concern, though, with your article. Your last point is a good one: don't generalise. And yet, that is precisely what you do at a monumental level, starting with your heading. This documentary was about Africa's (Kenya's) most notorious slum area, Kibera. I have been to Kibera and stayed there, and anything you tell me about it I can believe. It is a soul destroying place, in which some remarkable people nevertheless manage to live with dignity and humanity. Humbling and horrifying at the same time.

But Kibera is not Africa. Kibera is not even Kenya.

To extrapolate what one sees in Kibera to a whole country, and then an entire continent is just plain wrong.

I don't want to deny that corruption is a problem, nor that the points you made are not important. Far from it. But, I would just ask that you be more careful in how you report about Africa.

If someone did a documentary on a poor suburb of a poor European country, and then made a comment that implied that the whole of Europe was like this, it would cause outrage. Somehow, though, we allow people to use "Africa" as a stand in descriptor for anything we don't like in some part of that vast continent. For example, with protests in Athens and the mobbish mentality of those who burnt buildings this past weekend, we do not see reports saying, "Europe is burning" or "Europeans refuse to submit to economic austerity". That would be ludicrous. And, yet, over and over again, that is how "Africa" is reported on.

You can't even do that with African countries. The Congo is the SIZE of Western Europe itself! How can one generalise.

So, thanks once again for your article. And thank you for you reminding us not to generalise.

As an African, can I please ask you to take your own advice and stop referring to "Africa" when you really mean "Kenya" or "Kibera" or "slums" or something else.

(Thank you for letting me ride my hobby horse!)
15/02/12 7:20pm - Posted By Ingrid - Reply to this comment
?People must be corrupt to survive, so the question in the system becomes, ?How corrupt are you??? ( Nordstrom 2007:66).

It's scary to see how common corruption has become, that it has simply become part of the system. The same trends are present in the West as well, but many people choose to not ask qestion as it's better not to know what's really going on.

Will recommend "Global Outlaws: Crime, Money, and Power in the Contemporary World" by Carolyn Nordstrom, who gives a really interesting account of this and how simple it is to get away with it - in many parts of the world, especially Africa, it's accepted by many, and in the West there are easy ways of hiding it.
15/02/12 11:19pm - Posted By Martina - Reply to this comment
Hi Grame,

Many thanks for taking the time to post a comment. In response to your observation, I would like to point out, as I wrote in the review, how the heading itself and the point about ?Africa? made across the article (as opposed to ?Kibera? only) were words I reported from the director of the documentary himself, Sorious Samura. If you haven?t watched the documentary yet, perhaps doing so will help you understand what I mean and how it was not me twisting and generalising reality, but rather a film director expressing concern about a problem which is not only an African, but a world-wide one. Saying this, though, does not mean that the whole of Africa, Europe, Americas or Asia is corrupt, but rather that the problem exists in many parts of Africa, Europe, Americas and Asia.

I am very much aware of how diverse Africa is and would never compare say, Congo with South Africa − in the same way that I would not compare Greece with Sweden. But thank you again for highlighting the difference: this is something many people in the West often miss, sometimes even making the gross mistake of referring to Africa as ?a country?.

I agree with you: Kibera is a very complex and peculiar reality. It is not Africa, and not even Kenya, somehow. Yet, I think that what the director was trying to do with his documentary is using the Kibera example to explain how corruption works in similar ways in other parts of Africa, and how the West is part of the game too.

If you feel this is not a reasonable thing to do, then perhaps you should address your concerns to the director himself. Thanks for reading the article!
25/02/12 9:47pm - Posted By Graeme Codrington - Reply to this comment
Thanks for responding, Martina,

I don't see the Dispatches feature available on the Channel 4 website. Do you have a direct link to it?

Graeme
28/02/12 1:03am - Posted By Graeme Codrington - Reply to this comment
Martina,

On further investigation, it appears that this documentary was put together in 2007, before the significant political change in Kenya just a few years ago, and while Sierra Leone was in the middle of a significant war. Do you know if an update has been done as both these countries have undergone recent political and economic change?

Given this information, I think my original point stands!

Graeme
04/03/12 5:56pm - Posted By Adam - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
anything in this nrcutoy is worse than it was in apartheid needs to have their head read. Gareth is a tv personality, which means he gets paid for being an idiot and pleasing his listeners and audience. But the support he gets does not surprise me. I have come to realise that white people in this nrcutoy are like a bunch of factory produced toys: they think the same. You need only get one man's opinion and you have figured them out. As for the brothers and sisters commenting here too, well, I do not blame you anymore. Years and years of oppression have made you think like that. You are black so your priority is to please the wanker at the expense of your fellow brother, cute. But then when they chew and spit you, we will be there because believe me, it is going to happen. Gareth is a product of a sick system of apartheid and he thinks he is untouchable. I wish he can go to zimbabwe where he will learn a few lessons and how to curb his tongue!
05/03/12 12:15am - Posted By Otsile - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
Thank you kindly.Kenya is tirgac. Angry young men' running riot gangland style has never accomplished much of anything except breed fear and loathing. On the other hand, oppressive/subjugating dictatorial military regimes don't accomplish much of anything either, except breed systemic corrupting distrust and generational anger, with equal gobs of fear and loathing. Kenya's current power struggle is acute. Does either side' offer any kind of comprehensive integrated plan' for Kenya's FUTURE? It doesn't appear so. One wonders if they actually have the capacity to retain nation state' status. As long as brother kills brother' there seems little likelihood of reconciliation and/or resolution. For now, their respective chest thumping mantras remain the same, Every dog has their day Hoorah! . I don't know that the international media' frenzy/coverage is actually helping' the situation either. Nothing generates brazen stupid acts of machismo faster than being on T.V'. , heard on the radio', or printed in the press', locally and globally. It is a false form, the worst form, of instant status' and celebritydom'. It fuels the fire'.One can only hope that perhaps the situation' will create an opportunity for a genuine LEADER of the NATIONAL TRIBE of KENYA to advance forward through the many tears and horrific bloodshed Nation States evolve.And growing pains hurt.
09/03/12 3:57pm - Posted By mezguijr - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
ol4rjm <a href="http://yrcubpudlcbz.com/">yrcubpudlcbz</a>
09/03/12 5:37pm - Posted By gzlmrrr - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
crSVLp <a href="http://dxvfceafhnfi.com/">dxvfceafhnfi</a>
10/03/12 8:00pm - Posted By zcxhkorxnub - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
1ION6N , [url=http://uogcbiuguluk.com/]uogcbiuguluk[/url], [link=http://leidwfjulzyk.com/]leidwfjulzyk[/link], http://pmwyapikwfhn.com/
10/03/12 9:21pm - Posted By qyjwhjk - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
uLVQxj , [url=http://efeuoshxvdid.com/]efeuoshxvdid[/url], [link=http://pdvamyphoazl.com/]pdvamyphoazl[/link], http://pgvdfyksifmc.com/
12/03/12 10:07am - Posted By sncqldqusa - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
1jP8X8 <a href="http://ymgujutpwzrj.com/">ymgujutpwzrj</a>
12/03/12 11:14am - Posted By yqhxipfqhfs - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
jvNygM <a href="http://jxlgxhiooqcd.com/">jxlgxhiooqcd</a>
15/03/12 8:09pm - Posted By qrbrqm - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
AJQHuk , [url=http://zhahrgoziwkc.com/]zhahrgoziwkc[/url], [link=http://yykwdvnayciq.com/]yykwdvnayciq[/link], http://itppjlxujcic.com/
15/03/12 8:15pm - Posted By boxrbbtyhr - Flag as inappropriate - Reply to this comment
DdH1Ws , [url=http://kdmebcpdntnd.com/]kdmebcpdntnd[/url], [link=http://uoskwylpwgsw.com/]uoskwylpwgsw[/link], http://qividlhitken.com/

Add Comment

Your Name:

Your Email (Not Displayed):

Please enter the code in the image into the box

Code:


Can't read the image? Reload