Arusha’s Aga Khan University unique in Africa

August 29, 2007

Arusha’s Aga Khan University unique in Africa

Development to prop Usa area

By Our correspondent

Arusha is bracing to host a fully-fledged university of international standards that will be built and financed by His Highness Karim Aga Khan 1V, the spiritual leader of the Shia Ismaili Muslim community.

Aga_Khan1
His Highness Karim Aga Khan

The site for the University in the environs of the Arumeru district area has already been identified and preparations for construction work are underway.

This will be the second university run by the Aga Khan in Tanzania. The other one is in Dar es Salaam.

His Highness Karim Aga Khan revealed the plans when he met with Vice President Ali Mohamed Shein in Dar es Salaam last week.

He said the university would be unique in Africa because it would provide training in unique professions only.

`We have acquired a plot and have set aside funds for the construction work. Plans are also under way to introduce a master`s degree and a PhD in medicine at the Aga Khan University in Dar es Salaam,` explained the Aga Khan, now on a five-day tour of Tanzania.

The Dar es Salaam-based already offers a master`s degree in public health, adding that both institutions would be keen on offering quality education and training.

During the talks, Dr Shein pleaded with the Imam to ensure that the universities place a premium on research, diagnosis and treatment of commonly neglected tropical diseases “as a way of eradicating them once and for all”.

He praised the Aga Khan for the role he was playing in supporting the health, education and tourism sectors in Tanzania, adding: `We highly value the assistance you have been extending to us which has supplemented the government`s efforts towards bringing about development to our people.`

Responding to the appeal, the Aga Khan said that he subscribed to the recommendation and that the best way was to incorporate the diseases in medical research.

The Vice President also congratulated the Aga Khan on the occasion of the Silver Jubilee of the latter’s foundation, which he said had achieved a lot in improving the people’s well-being ‘through the funding of development projects in Tanzania and various other countries’.

Arusha Times


Newspaper Article by H.H Prince Karim Aga Khan “Closing Africa’s Journalism Deficit”

August 29, 2007

http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/khan1/English

This Article is written by H.H Prince Karim Aga Khan in July 2005

In the last quarter-century, the state of both governance and the media in

Africa have shown encouraging progress. Not only has Africa moved beyond the worst legacies of colonialism, but it has also transcended the rigid constraints of the Cold War. Old dogmas have given way to a new pragmatism – a new freedom to innovate, experiment and find African answers to African challenges.

Africa has learned a lot about democracy in these years, both its fragility and its potential. Governments are increasingly expected to change peacefully, to cooperate regionally, to attract the capable, and to punish the corrupt. And the progress reaches beyond governments. As the Economic Commission for Africa concluded in its recent report: “Civil society and the media have increased their voice and power in the last decade of democratic reforms.”

But there is still a long way to go in many areas, particularly the media.

Respect for press freedom grows out of a respect for pluralism as a cornerstone of peace and progress. Pluralism implies a readiness to listen to many voices – whether we agree with them or not – and a willingness to embrace a rich diversity of cultures.

When our diversity divides us, the results can be tragic, as we have seen in Rwanda, the Ivory Coast, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Sudan. But when we welcome diversity – and the debate and dissent that goes with it – we sow the seeds of stability and progress.

But there is a second important media-related question today concerning the adequacy of journalistic knowledge in an increasingly complicated world. Africa’s leaders appear to have serious misgivings about the depth of that knowledge, and genuine doubts about the breadth of understanding that many journalists bring to difficult issues. Clearly, deeper and broader knowledge will be crucial to the future of African journalism.

The revolution in bioengineering, for example, promises to transform rural societies just as the old industrial engineering once reshaped urban landscapes. Genetic research will transform approaches to personal and public-health problems, including scourges like AIDS and malaria.

Meanwhile, the physical sciences offer new ways to think about the impact of climate change on Africa’s food and water supply. New information technologies will transform education throughout Africa, including remote rural areas, even as they re-energize non-industrial economies.

But there is a shortage of journalists who know enough about these subjects to inform African audiences.

To improve matters, we need to increase dialogue and communication among journalists and those they write about: politicians, civil servants, business people, and religious leaders – in short, the voices of civil society.

On the media side, this ought to mean more rigorous research at the start of the reporting and writing process. Cultivating knowledge is as important as cultivating sources.

But sources can also do more to help. Off-the-record background briefings, for example, are regular and routine in the West, but are relatively rare in Africa. Some journalists have difficulty getting responses even to direct requests. The habit of sharing information is one that Africa needs to hone.

In an ideal world, journalists would be educated in the nuances of the beats they cover. Scientific sophistication, economic acumen, political subtlety, and legal and medical expertise – all these skills should be present in our newsrooms as matter of course.

There are understandable reasons why this ideal has still not been realized. Above all, journalism is not regarded as a noble profession, because too many young Africans, for too long, saw the journalist as a mere propagandist. Moreover, journalism was often dangerous. Between 1985 and 1995, 108 journalists were killed in Africa; the risk, while diminishing, is still real. Finally, most African journalists are paid substantially less than those who enter other professions.

Media owners and managers are also at fault for poor quality. Too often, those who set the media agenda view it primarily as a business agenda. Too often, the measure of media success is simply financial profit. This often makes for manipulative media that distort and mislead in the pursuit of readers and ratings. Journalism is subordinated to entertainment, and the duty to inform yields to the need to please.

Responsible and relevant reporting is not the priority in that business model. Instead, the power of the press is used to turn traditional value systems on their heads – to make the irrelevant seem essential and the trivial titillating.

The damage that can be done by such distorted journalism is especially severe in Africa, offending African value systems, distracting African energies, and disserving African development. Manipulative journalism is not merely a nuisance here; it can be downright destructive.

Working in partnership with governments, the private sector, and the institutions of civil society, African media can become a source of relevant information, competent comment and insight, and constructive and cooperative socially responsibility, even as it remains free, independent, and commercially successful.