Mortality
rates rising in Africa
by Linda de Hoyos
Executive Intelligence Review April 16, 1999, pp. 15-18
"Evidence continues to accumulate that the countries of
Sub-Saharan Africa are failing to keep pace with gains achieved elsewhere in the developing world. Though the
reasons for this divergence are complex and the gap between Sub-Saharan Africa life expectancy and that of
other developing regions has been widening since the 1950s (United Nations 1969), a substantial part of the
stagnation of the region's life expectancy during the 1990s and during the coming decade can be attributed to
the HIV/AIDS epidemic,'' states the ``World Population Profile: 1998'' published by the U.S. Agency for
International Development based on statistics of the U.S. Census Bureau's International Data Base.
But HIV is
clearly not the only problem. The same report notes that the Program of Action put forward by the
United Nations, calls upon developing countries to achieve "mortality
goals" in terms of levels of infant and child mortality (deaths per 1,000 live births) for the years
2000 and 2015, and in terms of life expectancy at birth, for the year 2015. ``The Program of Action calls for all
nations to cut infant mortality rates to under 35 per 1,000 live births by 2015; to cut child mortality to under
45 per 1,000 live births by that year; and to raise life expectancy to at least 70 years by 2015.... Of the
less-developed countries, only 6 of 51 Sub-Saharan African countries are likely to attain the target of fewer than 45
child deaths per 1,000 live births. The average level of child mortality projected for Sub-Saharan Africa for 2015
is 117 per 1,000 live births.''
In short,
HIV alone does not account for the lack of progress in reducing mortality (death) in Sub-Saharan
Africa. Children are also dying.
In fact, on
the African continent today, there are two notable trends: a rise in mortality across all ages,
and a decrease in the fertility rate. Africa, although it may still be attaining an incremental rise in population
at rates below 2% per annum, is heading towards a net decrease in population.
The
understated bureaucratic style of the ``World Population Profile: 1998'' belies the horrific reality
which produces the trends reported: people are dying from war, famine caused by war and drought; widening epidemics
of all types; and the collapse of medical services in the face of the onslaught against the population. Despite its
high fertility rate--high only in contrast to the low fertility levels elsewhere--Africa is a dying continent.
Births cannot keep up with the {continuous} catastrophe that is now hitting more and more countries.
A survey of
the various statistical data bases for the population of Sub-Saharan Africa reveals that none of
the data bases are consistent with each other, and often not consistent within themselves. The fact is that no one
knows what the actual population of Sub-Saharan Africa is; no one knows the actual birth and death rates,
because these figures are largely unreported in African countries. Figures are extrapolations and projections
based on incomplete information. This causes major problems, when an area of the world, such as Sub-Saharan
Africa, goes through a phase-change in its normal reproductive cycle because of calamity--as Sub-Saharan
Africa has experienced throughout the 1990s.
Hence, as {EIR's}
Paul Gallagher reported in December 1998, the United Nations Population Division was forced to
release a {1998 Revision} of its population estimates in October 1998, which revealed a collapse of population
growth in Africa. According to the {1998 Revision,} the total population in Africa had to be revised {downward}
by 30 million, relative to the 1996 estimate and its updates. Dr. Joseph Chamie, director of the UN division,
said that the average life expectancy in some nations of Africa ``is falling like a stone.''
The ``revision'' really raises the
question as to how many of the 30 million dropped had ever existed, and
calls into question the accuracy of the entire data base. The
revision, however, does correspond with reality on the ground. In the
HIV epicenters of the mid-1990s--Kenya,
Uganda, Zaire, the Central African Republic--life expectancy plummeted
by a decade or more to nearly
pre-independence levels (see {{Figures 1-5}}).
Furthermore,
in African countries hit by the HIV epidemic, death rates will soar upward immediately. This is
because HIV kills an African person, whose immune system is already weakened by protein deficiency, by malaria,
parasites, and other disease, {in a matter of months}, not years, as occurs in industrialized countries. Further, Africans
live in countries in which the International Monetary Fund has insisted that governments shut down social
services. In most Sub-Saharan countries, while up to 50% of the export earnings go to debt service, less than $5
per capita is spent on medical services. In Uganda, there is one doctor for every 27,000 persons, according to the
UNDP. Needless to say, the drugs which have proven to extend the life of the HIV-infected person in
industrialized countries are not available to the HIV-infected person in Africa. The AIDS death rate is a marker
for the overall collapse of the physical economy and consequent physical depletion of the people of the African
countries.
In most
cases, the population data bases do not register the declines in population due to wars. Since
the end of the Cold War, wars in Africa have been fomented by the British Commonwealth financial nexus and
its partners in Washington and Paris as the most efficient means for destroying the institutions of
government. Even if peace is negotiated in such wars, there is no money channeled for reconstruction of the
decimated physical and social service infrastructure of the country, making the country even more vulnerable to
new rounds of internal strife, such as in Sierra Leone.
This policy
of war for the African continent has led to millions of deaths. For example, in the East and
Central African theater, we can attain the following rough estimates of deaths caused by wars, beginning
with the 1983 launching of the civil war in southern Sudan:
1. Southern
Sudan civil war (1983-99): 2 million deaths by war, but mostly by famine caused by war,
according to the U.S. Committee for Refugees 1999 report.
2. Uganda
civil wars (1983-99): 1 million estimated deaths including the mass deaths in the Luwero Triangle
during the bush war that brought Yoweri Museveni to power in 1986 and subsequent wars in eastern, western, and
northern Uganda to the present, including 300,000 war deaths among the Acholi people of northern Uganda. In
Uganda today, 44% of the population is not expected to survive to the age of 40.
3. Rwanda, invasions and war (1990-99):
Close to 3 million. This includes 200,000 in 1990; 1 million in 1995, including 200,000 dead of cholera in the refugee camps;
another 1 million inside the country since the Rwandan Patriotic Front came to power; and another 2-300,000
killed in eastern Congo during the Zaire war of 1996-97. While war deaths generally seem to be ignored in the
``projections'' based on extrapolations of the data bases, it is noteworthy that the U.S. Census Bureau International
Data Base does register a drop in the Rwandan population from 7.721 million in 1993, to 6.682 million in 1994, and
another such decline to 5.980 million in 1995. However, also according to the IDB, the population quickly
scrambled up to 7.956 million by 1998, which is not coherent with the picture given from the ground inside the
country.
Burundi
civil wars (1993-99): Upwards of 500,000 people in continuing violence. This does not include the
unknown deaths that have occurred through the government's policy of herding the Hutu civilian population into
concentration camps, which produced epidemics of typhoid and other diseases.
Zaire-Congo,
wars of invasion (1996-99): There is no estimate for this, but 500,000 would be a minimum number
of Congolese who have died in these wars, which still continue.
This means
deaths by war over a region of Africa up to 7 million people. The ``readjustments'' downward in data
bases reflect the fact that the deaths were not registered at the time, but projections went ahead willy-nilly, as
the Malthusian view of most such statisticians prompts them to prove that population levels in Africa are
rising--despite the news to the contrary.
The death
rate is in general under-reported in Africa. For example, up until 1993, the UNDP gathered and
reported on how many children under five died in African countries each year. In general, the number represented
1% of the population. If then, this is 10 out of every 1,000 live births, the overall death rate must be
significantly higher than 10. Nevertheless, the average rate for Sub-Saharan Africa is listed at 16. Given the
HIV epidemic which is ravaging {adult} populations and given the proliferation of wars, this death rate is very
likely a gross understatement. The United States, a country at relative peace with relatively low levels of
infant mortality, has a crude death rate of 9.
Behind the
contrived data bases on Africa, it must be presumed is a cover-up of the reality that today, Africa
is a dying continent, not because of any Malthusian logic but because of a policy imposed on it throughout the
years of neo-colonialism, of constriction of its productive economies, looting of its natural resources,
and now wars designed to totally eliminate any institutions that might stand in the way of the
heightened looting and property grabs by foreign interests. It is not the logic of Malthus, but the
inexorable result of a continuation of the bankrupt financial and economic policies of the IMF and
globalization.