Friday, March 13, 2020
Read my articles on MC-Media
Dear readers
I will be more active on
mekkicenter.com
Mekki ELMOGRABI
March 202o
Thursday, August 1, 2019
A New Paradigm for U.S.-African Relations – African Regional Capitalism
Read my article on:
http://mekkicenter.com/a-new-paradigm-for-u-s-african-relations-african-regional-capitalism/
Thursday, December 14, 2017
Which is better for Africa Wind Mills or Solar Plates?!
Which is better for Africa Wind Mills or Solar Plates?!
Both are good and needed, but for Africa and underdeveloped countries, wind energy is prior because:
1\ Wind mills are easily to be manufactured or assembled; the technology is not that complicated like solar-electric plates. Some would say it is not difficult to localize solar manufacturing or assembling. Yes, it is true but Wind energy is still easier, it should be the backbone for the energy in Africa then solar-thermal, then solar-electric and then others join in conducive atmosphere for investment.
2\ Maintenance of wind energy system easy is to be trained on. Technicians and local labors in Africa and underdeveloped countries who are able to maintain the tractors and trucks, it would be easy for them to install and fix wind mills and its electric attached equipments and convertors.
3\ Wind mills produce energy during night time, cloudy weather and dust storms. These are the times that energy is needed to protect disasters, crimes and all bad things threaten Africa. Development in Africa is not just matter of energy. Couple of negative factors should be addressed and targeted.
Mekki ELMOGRABI
Dec 2017
Thursday, July 7, 2016
Business in Africa is not risky!
Corruption is not just in Africa, even in first world countries the practice is the same of Africa but “human rights – coated”. If you are running very big business, you should dedicate your donation for specific political organizations “claiming that they are not political” and you should make that donation through specific media. Sometimes you pay for advertisements for NGOs! In fact, it is a kind of political commitment to a group, lobby or some politicians who are protecting your business. An African successful businessman, graduated from US told me he didn’t see any difference “doing business in some unsafe and corrupt countries anywhere, not just Africa is not that dangerous or risky, it will be very simple when you allocate some money for the cost of “private security” and “politicians” in your calculation and then make your feasibility study.” In spite of poverty and deterioration in human rights situation, “really happening or because media focus”, some of African countries still have very strong economy, because the private sector is still strong and well connected with global economy. Multinational companies are there, local tycoons have their own private aircrafts.
Mekki ELMOGRABI
July 2016
Saturday, July 4, 2015
What do you know about PIDA?
By\ Mekki Elmograbi
July 2015
The assembly of African heads of state and government on 26th May 2013 at African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa, was historical not just because it marked the Golden Jubilee of the African Union but also because it adopted the declaration of Africa’s long term national and continental development and technological transformation through a strategic planning and implementation process “Africa’s Agenda 2063”.
Nevertheless, the real challenge to Agenda 2063 is to translate political statements and commitments into concrete actions not just by envisioning several measures at regional and national levels but by integrating the targets of Agenda 2063 into planning and implementation levels.
Still we need “actions and programs” and also measurable achievements; here comes the importance of (PIDA); but what is (PIDA)?
It is the Program for Infrastructure Development in Africa with the objective to accelerate the implementation of regional and continental infrastructure by 2040 according to action plan comprises the 51 well-studied and well-prioritized programs and projects that designed to address infrastructure main concerns and deficits in four careers: energy, transport, ICT and trans-boundary water.
Figures and numbers can judge the implementation level especially when it comes like this “PIDA will implement short-and priority projects until 2020, medium-term projects between 2020 and 2030, and long-term projects between 2030 and 2040”
Africa is aware of its challenges, one of them is the vital need of partners; it is worth mentioning that NEPAD, which is the New Partnership for Africa’s Development, was adopted by African governments of the Organization of the African Unity (OAU) in 2001 and was ratified by the African Union in 2002.
This means there is a comprehensive development framework which is NEPAD, and there specific programs on infrastructure which is PIDA.
Before PIDA and NEPAD, about six initiatives paved the way to establishment of these Pan-African frameworks and programs on a strong foundation and unanimous political and economic concepts.
The initiatives were: “the Lagos Plan of Action (1980), the Final Act of Lagos (1980), Africa’s Priority Program for Economic Recovery (1986-1990), the African Alternative Framework to Structural Adjustment Program (1989), the African (Arusha) Charter for Popular Participation and Development (1990), the Abuja Treaty (1991) and the Cairo Agenda (1994) amongst others”.
Read on: Sudan Vision
http://news.sudanvisiondaily.com/article.html?rsnpaid=2547
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
This is Djibouti that I know!
By\ Mekki Elmograbi
June 2015
Djibouti visit was the last station in “Kerry’s East African tour – May 2015” after Kenya and Somalia. It was the first ever visit for a U.S. Secretary of State to the Horn of Africa.
Associated Press published very interesting article on the visit, “Kerry trip to Djibouti highlights importance of small nation now increasingly key to US policy”, the article commented on tiny Djibouti, which covers an area in the size of “New Jersey state” with less 1 million population, “A sleepy coastal nation in the Horn of Africa, Djibouti was the last French colony to achieve independence. Today, nearly four decades later, the mainly Sunni nation has become a critical part of U.S. foreign policy”
Kerry headed directly from the airport to Salman Mosque, Djibouti, where he addressed the Islamic world through a short meeting with Djiboutian youth and the Imam of the Mosque.
It is a wonderful initiative organized by the Djiboutian government; for this reason, I wrote “this is Djibouti that I know”, the people are loyal to their country, loyal to their religion and their culture but in the same time very open to discuss and to convey peaceful messages to the entire world not just U.S.
Really, Djibouti is an advanced model of tolerance and sense of balance.
Kerry discussed with President Ismail Omar Guelleh cooperation on security and other matters.
Djibouti because of the wise and balanced policies of the President Ismail Guelleh became the safe heavens in the horn of Africa. It is small in size but big in its influence in the region; this made me write a series of article under the title: “Djibouti the Pomegranate of the Scale in East Africa”. It is just like the small metal ball in the Steelyard scale that makes the poise.
U.S. is not one the biggest partners of investment and development but the ties between Djibouti and Washington based on cooperation, peace and security. In May of last year, President Guelleh paid a visit to the U.S. and met President Barack Obama and discussed several issues related to peace and security in the region.
Djibouti is stable and it has been a political laboratory supplying other countries with stability remedies. Despite resistance to implementation here and there, the country has remained neutral against polarization and hijacking, it remained in safe hands of the smart leadership, whose wise foreign policies yielded it a state of security and stability to render it a rising regional economic power.
It is worth mentioning and repeating again that Djibouti’s neighborhood has never been stable; this is what we will explain in another article.
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
I am not NCP member any more
I have been asked in 2011: What will you do, if the reform fails and if the reformative memo doesn't work.
I said I will quit the party but that doesn't mean joining the opposition against the state, nor standing against my country or the Islamic orientation in Sudan. There is a big difference between political Islam that I criticized and the General Islamic orientation which could be very positive for democracy and stability in Sudan.
What I want to confirm now, I failed in my efforts in reforms, I am not a member of NCP, I will stand with the NCP and all other political parties within the government or in the opposition in defending the country and working for democratic transformation. I still believe that Cooperation is needed among all parties.
I will participate in the activities of Sudanese parties if I find the opportunity to cover the event or to say what I believe in but I am not a member of any party in Sudan.
I hereby apologize for any mistake or misunderstanding. I participated in NCP for the sake of Sudan and I left the party when I discovered I cannot reform the bad things that I mentioned in My reformative memo of 2011.
http://arabic-makki.blogspot.com/2011/02/reformative-memo.html
Mekki ELMOGRABI
January 2015
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