Tuesday, 17 March 2020

Jack Ma’s #Africa #COVID-19 Donation: If Money Was That Simple


By Takura Zhangazha*

Billionaire Chinese philanthropist Jack Ma of the famed Alibaba Group has donated medical equipment for Africa to step up its fight against the Corona Virus, now officially referred to as COVID-19 by the World HealthOrganisation (WHO).  It is a donation, as reported and celebrated in the mainstream (global) media, that is for every African country. 

In the urgency of the global pandemic this is an immediately welcome donation. No matter what part of the world you are from. Mainly because this is a global health crisis that needs all hands on deck.  Even if the donation is not limited to Africa.   Ma will also donate relevant preventative materials to countries that would not want to be known to be in need of such help.  He will also donate preventative kits to the United States of America (USA), Europe and Iran.  

And as quoted in the mainstream media, the main reason he donated is because, "Now it is as if we were all living in the same forest on fire. As members of the global community, it will be irresponsible of us to sit on the fence, panic, ignore facts, or fail to act. We need to take action now." 

He is very correct. Except in a number of other respects.  The rich people of the global political economy probably feel a moral obligation to help the rest of us in times of tremendous crisis.  As he says, “its all the same forest on fire.”

The metaphor he uses is awkwardly interesting given the recent forest fires in South America, Central Africa and Australia which were attributed to the devastating impact of climate change.

As an African it is also important to place Ma’s generous gesture into perspective.  The first being that I, for all my own personal ideological differences with him (not that it matters), I have no choice but to be grateful for any help that comes from those that are already in positions of privilege.  Also in anticipation that my own Zimbabwean government will accept the act of generosity in this very unpredictable global health crisis. 

The second being that I would however retain a serious sense fo trepidation at the fact that Ma would easily announce this to the world.  As another philanthropist who probably has algorithms and human behavioral experts at his behest as to how the COVID-19 crisis would likely pan out.  Especially in Africa, a continent that is regrettably still viewed as one that is a source of many a potential global epidemic.  Or in Edward Said  terminology still ‘orientalised’ together with the Global East. As has recently happened with USA current president Donald Trump’s uncouth, racist reference (not once but twice)  to COVID-19 as a ‘ Chinese virus’. 

Ma probably sees an urgent need to demonstrate his public concern as a necessity. For what has been historically the world’s most vulnerable continent. I would not know what favours he would want from all 55 African Union recognized countries in the potential aftermath of the COVD-19 pandemic, but the generosity does not come without business/profit considerations. And we would all know that, if we were not either in the global health crisis we are in.  Or if we had not been ‘hegemonised’ into an awe of ‘apprentices’ (Trump anyone?) or an assumption that we, even as Africans, can become as rich and therefore as philanthropic as Ma is.

But this is where we are.  And this points to an even more important third consideration.  While we could never have predicted as dangerous a pandemic as COVID-19, we know we could have had public, not private, health services prepared for it.  Had we not taken a route as calamitous as that of abandoning the role of the state in the well-being of its own citizens.   Our still very regrettable penchant for privatized medical services, more as a status symbol than an ability to keep everyone regardless of class, able to receive the best treatment has unfortunately come to haunt us.  That Ma and other philanthropists most likely to follow if not already doing so, identify a void that they probably think only they can fill is an indictment on the state of our public health services. 

As arrived at via ruinous neo-liberal economic policies that left a greater majority of our populations vulnerable to public health crises such as the one we are currently having to deal with. 
To the extent that the key question emerges around the fact that while COVID-19 may be untreatable it is the question of the capacity of our health delivery systems to look after the inflicted to recover from it that matters the most.  Not only in Africa but globally.  The default mode of more privatized hospitals for the rich and less for the poor will directly affect our ability to deal with the COVID-19 global health crisis. 

While the help of philanthropists such as Ma is welcome in emergency situations as at the moment, it is more reflective of our public health system’s shortcomings than their random acts of kindness.  And even from their evident positions of privilege. Almost like in dystopian and apocalyptic films (again- hegemonic) where the rich guy eventually finds the antidote and saves everyone else.  But him/herself first. 

Finally, there is the geo-political fallout between global superpowers such as the USA and China that Ma would inadvertently represent.  Being Chinese, Ma probably knows too well that he also represents his country of origin’s foreign policy imperatives.  Especially in relation to its counter-hegemonic global economic role (if there are billionaires in USA surely the same can and will exist in China?)  And this means the first philanthropist to make an offer that Africa, in desperate circumstances, cannot refuse, will represent more than him/herself. But with the same aim of presenting and re-presenting individual wealth as the proverbial holy grail to public health well-being.  

Or at least intervening to ensure public health well-being particularly for states/governments that abandon their democratic roles of being the guarantors of  social and economic justice for all. 
So many thanks to Jack Ma for the support.  We, in learning from Amilcar Cabral, probably need all the help we can get in our struggles to prevent COVID-19 from being an even more comparatively catastrophic pandemic in Africa. As imagined and as we live and again, struggle against it.  We however do not owe Ma an eternity of gratitude nor do we owe the same to globalized capital that arguably has got us to where we currently, again, globally, are. 

There shall be after effects that are wide ranging from COVID-19. A lot of us would be well aware of that.  One that is most certain, from an African perspective is that we need to get our public health service fully back on track. For the many not the few. With or without Jack Ma of Alibaba.
*Takura Zhangazha is an optimist. He writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)


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