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21 KiB
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355 lines
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Underground eXperts United
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Presents...
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[ A Saga Of The African Child ] [ By Simon Moleke-Njie ]
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____________________________________________________________________
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____________________________________________________________________
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A SAGA OF THE AFRICAN CHILD
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by Simon Moleke-Njie
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"Zo'o! Zo'o! Get up, it is already 3:30 am. You will be late!" the mother
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called. She sleeps in the only room of the plantation apartment, which
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consists of a bedroom and parlour. Zo'o sleeps in the parlour, on chair
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cushions. They had the flat thanks to the fact that he works with one of
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the many sub-contractors who has to supply the necessary man labour to tap
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the rubber trees in the large Gabonese rubber company. This is a luxury, as
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accommodation poses a serious problem in the overcrowded camps. Aliens from
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across sub-Sahara Africa - Ghana, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal,
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Equatorial Guinea, etc. - are here in their numbers to seek greener pasture.
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The 12 year-old kid stretched on his bed, sitting up. He got up, and walked
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to the adjacent wall mistaking it for the door. He hit his head and cursed.
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"Look where you are going now!" the mother said, "you are still drunk with
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sleep, my poor boy!" Zo'o stretched again - like a cat, and released a yawn.
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He went to the veranda, to empty his bladder. "Your breakfast is ready. You
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should eat it on your way, or you will be really late if you want to eat
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here," she said. The breakfast consists of 'baton de manioc' (a local
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delicacy made from fermented cassava). He wrapped it in a nylon bag, and
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embarked on the 10 km trek to the forest to work in the rubber plantation.
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He is the 'carrier' for a taper, and is expected to carry a basket on his
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back and walk behind his taper to pick coagulated rubber balls. Before the
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morning runs out, he would have walked several kilometres in the to and fro
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trips of loading and emptying his basket. He would also have carried several
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tens of kilograms of the product, and would return home worn out from
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fatigue, stinking of the rubber stench.
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Zo'o is a victim of child labour. Now living and working in a rubber
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plantation in the central African state of Gabon, revered for its relative
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economic prosperity as compared to the other neighbouring countries. He was
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withdrawn from primary school to become a bred winner for his family. He has
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X-shaped legs. For those who know the game of football, this is a potential
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for defensive talent. He is just this; a fantastic footballer who never will
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get a chance to exhibit his innate abilities, as he now considers mediocrity
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as the highest form of excellence.
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Zo'o is from the village of Ndengue, in the South province of Cameroonian.
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Born and raised here, there exists an emotional bond between him and his
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village. It was a painful divorce when he was forced to travel away from it,
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to the neighbouring boarder district of Gabon to work in the rubber
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plantation. The decision was reached by his mother who was more interested
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in the financial dimension of the adventure, than his feature. He had no
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choice whatsoever to decide his fate, and now finds consolation in nostalgic
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contemplation. He could sometimes be seen sitting quietly in solitude and
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contemplating about Ndengue...
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... Ndengue is a typical African village; mud wall huts and thatched roofs
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for the average villagers, and block walls and Zinc roofs for the village
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bourgeois. The village is without any complications from a rural
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perspective. A major third world high way road runs through it, uniting all
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the villages along the way from the provincial capital to the river Ntem,
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which separates Cameroon from Gabon; a distance of about one hundred
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kilometres. The dusty road characterised by pot holes and large stones cuts
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through the tick equatorial forest, through rickety bridges and lethal
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hills; (quite slippery and muddy during raining seasons), ending on the
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banks of the river. Only very old and battered Toyota vehicles, usually
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pick-up trucks ply the road. Clusters of bushes and forests separate the
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villages. The drivers, mostly young men, take to the wheel usually after a
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few glasses of the locally fabricated illicit gin called 'Hah'. It is
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dangerous driving all through, with the Speedo-metre fluctuating
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nonchalantly between 60 and 180 Km per hour. Dangerous acrobatic swings of
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the car tell the expertise of a driver. This is a criterion for judging good
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driving according to their ethics and standards. Usually, an illegal rally
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would unfold, pitching a driver against the Police. Such a case is quite
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common; the Police eager to squeeze money and the driver not willing to part
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with anything, especially when he has in his car illegal immigrants heading
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for Gabon. The car would end up for repairs afterwards, having overtaxed its
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engine with suicidal over speeding. Sobriquets like "Fire-Man" etc. are
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boldly printed on rear screens; something the drivers are proud of. "I took
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45 minutes from Ebolowa to Ambam", a driver would boast to his friends. This
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is a distance that going at 60Km/Hour, would require an hour and half to
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cover. It is quite often for them to increase speed in an attempt to hit an
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antelope crossing the road. "Ha! We missed it"; "it is a lucky antelope,"
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passengers would yell. From time to time, a hit would be made, and the car
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would stop in the next village, where the dead antelope would be shared
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among the passengers.
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Zo'o sometimes thought about all these events which characterise village
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life. His greatest rapture is to think about the third semester school
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vacation that lasts for three months. As it brings home the village students
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from the cities, it is lively with colourful cultural, social and sporting
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activities. It is the period of ' who is who' in the village. College boys
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running after young girls dressed in the latest fashion designs are the
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talks of such times. Local nightclubs operating only within this period, are
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often times the rendezvous points for romantic encounters. And sometimes,
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some unfortunate young girls would have their academic dreams shattered by
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unscrupulous pregnancy. Zo'o thought often of how they would sneak on
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tip-toe silently to peep through holes on the walls of mud houses, when they
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see a boy and a girl go inside.
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His greatest fantasy centres on the sporting activities, especially
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football, which is his favourite game. There is an annual come-together
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within this period, which brings all the surrounding villages to vie for a
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local football trophy, popularly known as 'inter-village'. He was one of the
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kids who helped to wash and clean the village sports equipment, and local
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pitch. It is a highly competitive tournament, which unites each village; the
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coming together to defend their pride. The 'man of the match' would be the
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talk of the moment till the next match. Old men would be seen sitting in the
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Village Square talking excitedly about the latest match over local gin and
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palm wine. Each would come with something edible to liven up their debates.
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It was a moral obligation, sometimes, for Zo'o and his mates to watch and
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listen to the old men attentively as they spill wisdom in their narratives
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on various subjects about life, their experiences etc, while chewing cola
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nut or snuffing tobacco, with bare chests under the heat of the fiercely
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burning midday sun. Most of the old men would be simply dressed; usually
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with only a half loin on their waist. Zo'o was really missing all these
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excitement.
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Once after watching him display his soccer skill, he was asked what his
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greatest dream was as a potential footballer. "My greatest dream is to go
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back to Ndengue someday, and defend my village in the local tournament."
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Zo'o now imagines no life outside his village. Each time he watches his
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favourite soccer idol (Kunde Emmanuel) on Television, or his photo in
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magazines, he affirms the self-conceived fact that there is an unbridgeable
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gap between them, willed by the hand of fate. This philosophy he inherited
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from his environment that worships excellence as a gift reserved for the
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wealthy. Zo'o's fate was weave not by some blind forces, but by his
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society's opinion leaders, who shape policies to protect the interests of a
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few opportunists. Most of these intellectual dictators take delight in
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spreading the epidemic of ignorance so as to manipulate their subjects
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without any resistance. Zo'o is considered now 'a non-potential intellectual
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risk'. He has being properly dealt with, and many like him have being
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conquered for a lifetime; reduced to play the 'tropical tool', at the
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services of perverted sadists. With a clustered brain mechanism that
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harbours no worthy civilised ambition, he now takes pleasures in ignorant
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simplicity - eat, drink and procreate. As if this is not enough for one
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lifetime, his path has been marked to pursue vain shadows. No doubt his
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parents are directly responsible for his present fate, but they too are even
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greater victims of the perpetrators of national economic perversion. Today,
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his mother plays the role of his financial secretary. She has a book where
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she records all his hours of labour, and at the end of the month, she
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collects his salary. Zo'o has no knowledge about his income, nor does he
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care. He is satiated with a packed of chocolate, sweet- milk and a bottle of
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'Top Orange'; his favourite juice, which his mother flatters him with after
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collecting his salary.
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Across the length and breadth of his country, it is a common practise for
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parents to condemn their children to mediocrity with the assumption of "I
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would rather my child learn a trade after primary school, than waste money
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in furthering his education. What is the use? Most graduates end up jobless,
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some return home to be fed by their parents again like babies. All they have
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to show for education are certificates and big grammar. Do we eat
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certificates?"
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Like this, the demise of education gathers strength. Who is responsible for
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this pessimistic school of thought? Could J.S. Mill's question on Liberty be
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raised here, that 'is it not a self-evident axiom that the state should
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compel the education up to a certain standard of every human being who is
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born its citizen?' Perhaps the most detrimental dimension of this tragic
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philosophy is the forced marriage imposed by a disillusioned society between
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education and financial prosperity. Of course one should get a job after
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education to end an honest living, but is this the greatest aim of
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education? ... Many philosophers of the past propounded theories on the
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subject; Epictetus in his Discourse, said 'we must not believe the man who
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says that free persons only ought to be educated, but we should rather
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believe the philosophers who say that the educated only are free'. This is a
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serious challenge that faces any legitimate regime, as Rousseau, on
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Political Economy said 'Public education is one of the fundamental rules of
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popular or legitimate government'.
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A bad Educational Policy is a moral crime against a state. The consequences
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might be misted by the present, but only a fool would underestimate the
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long-term impact. A nation inherited by a mediocre intelligentsia is doomed
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to become the boot-licker of her superiors - 'wisdom is the fruit of a
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balanced development. It is this balance growth of individuality which it
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should be the aim of education to secure', Whitehead said in his Science and
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the Modern World. When citizens pursue a strictly financially oriented
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education, the criminal class is being strengthened, and evil geniuses are
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brewed- patriotism then faces extinction.
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'That education should be regulated by law and should be an affair of the
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state is not to be denied, but what should be the character of this public
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education, and how young persons should be educated, are questions which
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remain to be considered' - Aristotle.
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Polemics would do little for Zo'o now. He is the victim of a moral ailment;
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a socio-political system which has dehumanised the fibres of national
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ethics. His greatest teacher now is the world; his lessons are geared toward
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making more money. Parochial heroes influence his dreams, and his ambitions
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are fuelled by the desire to go back to Ndengue someday, and be the village
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idol. His psyche will never pulsate to the thoughts of great minds from the
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past found behind the sacred leafs of books... he cannot read!
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The story however is slightly different for the 7 year old Adjua, in the
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West African state of Ghana...
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... It is noon, and Adjua is back from school. She rushes through a meagre
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lunch of kenkey and pepper, with the head of a little fried fish (a luxury
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to her). She unbuttons her school uniform, and searches around for her old
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dress, which usually hangs on a nail by the wall. She is surprised that it
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isn't there, and this inflates her annoyance provoked by the very hot
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weather, which zoomed within 40 degrees. There is nowhere else to look for
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it, as she lives with her parents and six brothers and sisters in this
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single little room. They all sleep on floor mats, except for her mother, who
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sleeps with their baby on a little bed. It is difficult to discern this fact
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except at night, as during the day, they all leave like birds to the
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different 'worlds' of city life; with one aim, to try and make a few
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dollars. And now, back from school, she has to play her role of selling
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chilled water to support the home.
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She finally sees her old dress under the bed. "Certainly it was dragged
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there by some hungry rat," she reasoned with herself silently. The building
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is infested by them. She dresses and collects a bucket of chilled water in
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little plastic bags from a neighbour's house. They employ the service of his
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refrigerator, and pay for it weekly. With the bucket on her head, she heads
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for the busiest spot of the city- the car station full of travellers and
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petty vendors. She does not forget her popular cry of "ice water here",
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that she employs to attract the thirsty. It is her only medium of publicity.
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This is a routine, and Adjua would return home usually at night. A bag of
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ice water was 50 cedis; and a return of 1000 cedis is considered a
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successful day indeed. It is worth noting that a 1000 cedis is not worth
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half a dollar, as a US dollar is the equivalent of 2500 cedis. Adjua has
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been trained to employ dishonesty to increase her return. This is usually
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employed through a lie. She uses her judgement to detect a client who would
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not bother about parting with a few cedis. When a potential victim gives say
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100 cedis and ask for a bag of water, it is normal for Adjua to persuade
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with the words "sorry sir, but I no get change." Most often the victim
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would simply leave it behind. Her mother taught her this trick. It is a
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common practise among elders as well. "The total amount of 50, and 100 cedis
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I have left with you on the excuse of you not having 'change', would buy me
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a new suit in six months," a client once told a food vendor. "This no be
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true," was her reply. No qualm is felt about this, and the gnashing economic
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quagmire justifies this petty misconduct, according to the verdict of public
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judgement.
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Like in Zo'o's case, who would fathom the moral consequences this will have
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on Adjua? But Adjua would perhaps be considered the luckiest, while Zo'o's
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case would pale into insignificance, when one reads through an interesting
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News article once carried....
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On November 26th 1997, the foreign page of a popular Ghanaian weekly
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Newspaper carried a story sub-titled 'Child Slavery hits West and Central
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Africa'. The story was quite moving...
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The slave trade is not over yet! In the central African State of Gabon,
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the buying and selling of children to do hard labour without salary was
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recently reported. According to reports from Radio Africa N0.1,
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Libreville Gabon, the case of a Togolese 17 year old was recently
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uncovered. This child, as investigations reveal, was sold by a relative
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to a Gabonese household for the sum of 50,000 CFA (about 85 US dollars).
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The relative had earlier on promised the parent of the child that she was
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taking him to Nigeria to continue his education.
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The child was 7 years old then. He worked for ten years as a slave, until
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early this year when he ran from home, and was advised to go to the
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Police, who took up the matter. As he narrated his story to Africa N0.1,
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he did all the menial jobs in the house, slept on the floor, and had
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enough food only when there was leftovers.
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The Police are still looking for the perpetrators of this unholy trade,
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who when caught would be brought to book, according to Gabonese law. As
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sources disclosed, the child would be paid ten years salary as stipulated
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by the Gabonese labour constitution, which fixes a minimum monthly salary
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at 60.000CFA ($100 US). This will net him about 7.2 million CFA a decade,
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about $13.000 US.
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He was sent to Togo by the Gabonese authorities, while investigations
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continued. The authorities are trying to crack down on the unholy trade
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which reports say, is greatly practised in West Africa. Children are
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kidnapped or stolen and smuggled from especially Togo, Benin, and Nigeria
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to be sold in Gabon for between fifty and seventy-five thousand CFA, to
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do all sorts of menial jobs including house cleaning, to selling for
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their masters.
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A Stringer in one part of the continent was going through the three cases.
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The case of the Togolese kid forced tears from his eyes. He thought about
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children in other parts of the world who had total freed of choice...
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choosing what they wanted to be in life, in the centre of countless
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possibilities. For the first time in his career, he wept as a result of a
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story. He felt even worse upon thinking that such cases are lost to the
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larger world. And that the unholy trade is going on while he is writing his
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story, and would go on still. He felt bad that his story would just create a
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'nine-day wonder', and pale into insignificance. He knew there is nothing he
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could do, or anyone, to arrest the situation. The Stringer pondered over all
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these cases. He realised that the culpable culprit is a monster with
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indefatigable tentacles buried in the conscience of the perpetrators -
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people ready to do anything to earn money, even at the expense of their
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fellow beings, and their very souls! "What is the root cause of it all?" he
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asked himself; "could it be greed?, ignorance?, is it the result of
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deliberately misapplied Political and economic rules?; or still could it be
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the repercussion of violated natural laws; the working of things arcane -
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the consequences of deeds buried in the abyss of manifested evil, far
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removed than the rational mind would fathom?"
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He sat behind his typewriter to punch the keys for a story; he did not know
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how to start. For a long time he was lost in thought. Finally, struck by an
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idea, the intro in his head took a philosophical literary form...
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There was a pause. A fatal, unearthly pause that stretched beyond time
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and space. For a brief moment the fate of Christ rested in the hands of
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the people, by virtue of their constitution which conferred on public
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opinion the mandate to decide the fate of a condemned criminal on the
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day of the Sabbath feast; the power to mete out death or freedom. On
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this day, it was to be Christ the Messiah or Barabbas the murderer.
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When Pontius Pilate asked for their verdict, the axe of death fell on
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divinity. For the second time mankind betrayed 'Truth', and let loose
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'Evil'. The first was in the Garden of Eden when prototypal parenthood;
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Adam and Eve, sacrificed immortality for a ball of apple.
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At that crucial point in time and history, when the people demonstrated
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their democratic rights as stipulated by their ancient constitution by
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opting for the release of Barabbas the murderer to the death of Christ,
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a fatal blow was dealt the archetypal conscience of mankind which caged
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truth, and liberated evil. And when in sadistic ignorance the people
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echoed this with the shout of "his blood be upon us and our children!",
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what better way to describe the infernal consequences than Marie
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Correlie; that - 'the hideous, withering, irrevocable curse rose
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shudderingly up to Heaven - there to be inscribed by the Recording
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Angel in letters of flame, as the self-invoked doom of a people...
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What better...
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The Stringer was at this point with his intro, when a vexing electrical
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blackout announced its unwelcome presence.
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MOL SIMON.
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uXu #563 Underground eXperts United 2000 uXu #563
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http://www.textfiles.com/ | http://scene.textfiles.com/
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