Fair play to Bush, however letting the Christian Right set the agenda as to where much of this African Aid goes is a bit dubious to me (in much the same way he channeled billions of dollars of federal funds into these organisations to peddle their agenda in US Prisons for instance) Government business should be secular imo//
to quote Dr Lee Marsden
George Bush rightly deserves credit for the President's Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (Pepfar). However, Chris McGreal's report (George Bush: a good man in Africa, February 15) underestimates the influence of the Christian right in persuading the president to change US policy on assistance to Africa and setting the agenda for programme delivery. Pepfar could be even more successful if the influence of the Christian right were mitigated. Through their influence one-third of the programme is reserved for organisations teaching abstinence-only rather than safe-sex messages.
Pepfar is a lucrative source of funding for faith-based organisations with little or no previous experience, enabling them to combine missionary activity with HIV/Aids relief. This acts to the detriment of long-standing assistance providers such as Planned Parenthood that are denied funding, along with other organisations offering advice on abortion as part of their service, or seeking to work with prostitutes and their clients by providing condoms.
The attitude of the Christian right to sex workers, homosexuals and drug users reinforces local prejudices in Kenya and other African states with growing evangelical populations. Hopefully an incoming administration will improve on the good work already taking place by also funding secular organisations with the requisite experience and discontinuing the absurd insistence on abstinence.
This is also not Bush's only contribution to Africa either, as Dr Elliott Green reminds us
That honour should go to his militarisation of US policy towards Africa: even before 9/11 Bush established the US navy base of Camp Lemonier in Djibouti, and last year he created the new US Africa Command (Africom) to guide American defence policy in Africa.
Africom was supposed to be based in an African country, but the proposal was so unpopular that its headquarters is now in Germany and will probably be spread across Africa when it becomes fully operational this year. Indeed the 15-member Southern African Development Community, which contains the countries most afflicted by HIV/Aids and thus most likely to benefit from Bush's Aids policies, agreed that no member countries would host Africom. Concerns that Bush's policies have had less to do with humanitarian impulses and more to do with African oil and countering Chinese influence have driven much of this suspicion.