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About $18 billion a year has been drained from Africa by nearly
two dozen wars in recent decades, a new report states, a price
some officials say could've helped solve the AIDS crisis and created
stronger economies in the world's poorest region.
''This is money Africa can ill afford to lose,'' Liberian President
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf wrote in an introduction to the report by
the British charity Oxfam and two groups that seek tougher controls
on small arms, Saferworld and the International Action Network
on Small Arms.
''The sums are appalling: the price that Africa is paying could
cover the cost of solving the HIV and AIDS crisis in Africa, or
provide education, water and prevention and treatment for tuberculosis
and malaria,'' Sirleaf added. ''Literally thousands of hospitals,
schools, and roads could have been built.''
That war makes economies suffer is nothing new, but few have
tried to estimate the real cost across Africa.
Compared to peaceful countries, war-battered African nations
have ''50 percent more infant deaths, 15 percent more undernourished
people, life expectancy reduced by five years, 20 percent more
adult illiteracy, 2.5 times fewer doctors per patient and 12.4
percent less food per person,'' the report estimates.
On average, the economies of African nations wracked by armed
conflict contracted by 15 percent and the impact generally worsened
the longer a war lasted, the report said.
The report based its figures on the ill effects on economic growth
by estimating what growth might have been in countries if they
had not suffered conflicts. During Guinea-Bissau's 1989-99 war,
for example, projected growth was 5 percent, but the economy decreased
10 percent, it said.
''This methodology almost certainly gives an underestimate,''
the group said in a joint statement. ''It does not include the
economic impact on neighboring countries, which could suffer from
political insecurity or a sudden influx of refugees. The study
only covers periods of actual combat, but some costs of war, such
as increased military spending and a struggling economy, continue
long after the fighting has stopped.''
The report looked at 23 African nations that had wars between
1990 and 2005, estimating the fighting cost a total of about $300
billion.
''This is a massive waste of resources roughly equivalent to
total international aid to Africa from major donors during the
same period,'' the report said.
The report did not include Somalia, which has been in a state
of anarchy and war since a dictatorship was overthrown in 1991
but for which no statistics were available.
The group blamed the availability of small arms for fueling fighting
in Africa. It said about 95 percent of the weapons used in African
wars, mostly the ubiquitous Kalashnikov automatic rifle, are imported
from outside the continent.
Source: AP |