Deprecated: Hook custom_css_loaded is deprecated since version jetpack-13.5! Use WordPress Custom CSS instead. Jetpack no longer supports Custom CSS. Read the WordPress.org documentation to learn how to apply custom styles to your site: https://wordpress.org/documentation/article/styles-overview/#applying-custom-css in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6078

Deprecated: Constant FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Admin/Standalone.php on line 95

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Deprecated: filter_input(): Passing null to parameter #4 ($options) of type array|int is deprecated in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-content/plugins/google-site-kit/includes/Core/Util/Input.php on line 64

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php:6078) in /home2/provokerco/public_html/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
Africa Archives – Provoker Magazine https://provoker.co.zw/tag/africa/ The truth has that effect! Mon, 24 May 2021 06:51:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://i0.wp.com/provoker.co.zw/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-icon-voker.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Africa Archives – Provoker Magazine https://provoker.co.zw/tag/africa/ 32 32 152210952 The lucrative food industry. An opportunity Africans are missing out on: Strive Masiyiwa https://provoker.co.zw/the-lucrative-food-industry-an-opportunity-africans-are-missing-out-on-strive-masiyiwa/ https://provoker.co.zw/the-lucrative-food-industry-an-opportunity-africans-are-missing-out-on-strive-masiyiwa/#comments Mon, 24 May 2021 06:51:32 +0000 https://provoker.co.zw/?p=2371 A growing market for our African entrepreneurs or … for someone else __It’s up to us. By Strive Masiyiwa When I was a little boy in the 60s and first learnt to read newspapers, they were always filled with sad and often horrific stories about hunger in India and Bangladesh. It was never about Africa,… Continue reading The lucrative food industry. An opportunity Africans are missing out on: Strive Masiyiwa

The post The lucrative food industry. An opportunity Africans are missing out on: Strive Masiyiwa appeared first on Provoker Magazine.

]]>
A growing market for our African entrepreneurs or … for someone else
__It’s up to us.
By Strive Masiyiwa
When I was a little boy in the 60s and first learnt to read newspapers, they were always filled with sad and often horrific stories about hunger in India and Bangladesh. It was never about Africa, because Africa had plenty of food with countries like Nigeria producing great surpluses of things like groundnuts, cassava and palm oil.
By the time we got to the ’80s and ’90s, however, it was Africa that was suffering from massive food deficits whilst countries like India had food. I always wanted to know what happened and how could we resolve this problem?
I finally began to get the answers when I joined the board of the Rockefeller Foundation as a trustee in 2003. This is when I got to know about what became known as the “Asia Green Revolution” where a special program of scientists led by a man called Dr Norman Borlaug developed new high yielding rice seeds (nothing to do with the controversial GMO of today).
The work done by Norman Borlaug and his team saved the lives of millions of people. In 1970, Dr Borlaug was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for this work.
Looking at this example, scientists and other experts became convinced it was time for an “African Green Revolution”. My late friend Kofi Annan called for an African-led initiative to be launched to focus especially on finding solutions to increase agricultural production and support smallholder farmers.
Kofi Annan became the first Chair of the “Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa” (AGRAAlliance). A few years later, he asked me to take over the helm. The week of my final board meeting 15 years later, in 2019, two very special things happened:
First, I was awarded the Norman Borlaug World Food Prize Medallion, which I consider one of the greatest honours in my life. I was totally taken by surprise. Second, my friend Svein Tore Holsether [CEO of Yara International] and I shared the stage to announce the first winners of the inaugural Generation Africa “GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize” which we co-founded to inspire and support young entrepreneurs in the agrifood sector.
Fast forward to today: The Third Annual GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize competition is underway and applications are open until 14 June. You can find out more here: https://gogettaz.vc4a.com/about/
Judges will choose two agri-food entrepreneurs [one man and one woman] to win US$50,000 and I heard so far only 23% of the applicants are women! What!? Women feed our continent! Please share the word. And for the thousands of you still in the middle of completing your 2021 application… the clock is ticking!
Last year’s Top-12 finalists (age 18-35) were from Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Morocco, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda. In 2019 the Top-12 came from Botswana, Cameroon, DRC, Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe.
Were you one of them? I have seen some of you comment on the page from time to time.
Finalist companies included innovative agribusiness #technologies, #processes and #products like:
# black soldier fly larvae (high protein alternative) to make ice cream and animal feed
# indigenous fruit preserves for tourist and export markets
# dried fruit for local and export markets
# cassava production and processing of gluten-free snacks
# post-harvest loss technologies [solar and digital]
# digital apps to connect investors with smallholders, producers with markets [and more]
# locally processed sunflower oil
# precision agricultural drones
# urban vertical farming
# vermiposting (earthworms) using recyclable waste
# tech-enabled efficient food distribution… [and much more]
I did hear that fish and poultry farmers competed in the past few years, but so far none have made it to the finals. One key thing judges are looking for: #Innovation and potential to #CreateJobs and #Scale [expand strong sustainable agri-food businesses founded by inspiring young African entrepreneurs).
Some of these agribusinesses were really Wow! Imagine ice cream made of black soldier flies! I really wanted to taste some, but maybe another time.
Is there money in food? Of course, there is! Whatever is happening in the world, be it plague or war or recession, there will always be demand for healthy food. And we either must produce it or import it. [Especially now with COVID, that food must be as nutritious as possible!]
SOMEONE is making billions feeding the African people in our GROWING YOUNG market. [It is crazy how much our African nations spend importing food and other inputs to the food system!]
Let’s fix this.

The post The lucrative food industry. An opportunity Africans are missing out on: Strive Masiyiwa appeared first on Provoker Magazine.

]]>
https://provoker.co.zw/the-lucrative-food-industry-an-opportunity-africans-are-missing-out-on-strive-masiyiwa/feed/ 1 2371
Africans don’t realize how tremendously privileged they are: Eddie Cross https://provoker.co.zw/africans-dont-realize-how-tremendously-privileged-they-are-eddie-cross/ Thu, 13 May 2021 07:14:19 +0000 https://provoker.co.zw/?p=2227 I am only now realising how different my upbringing was in Africa to that which is the experience of the majority of global citizens. We were not well off, my extraordinary mother had a very limited education but was an intelligent and very motivated woman who held our family together when my father became an… Continue reading Africans don’t realize how tremendously privileged they are: Eddie Cross

The post Africans don’t realize how tremendously privileged they are: Eddie Cross appeared first on Provoker Magazine.

]]>
I am only now realising how different my upbringing was in Africa to that which is the experience of the majority of global citizens. We were not well off, my extraordinary mother had a very limited education but was an intelligent and very motivated woman who held our family together when my father became an alcoholic. She taught herself typing and shorthand and became a competent secretary. When dad fell off the wagon, she picked up the pieces, went out to work and rapidly became a PA to a manager of an international firm.

By Eddie Cross

With four children to raise there was never any spare cash and I was lucky to be born a white Rhodesian with all the privileges that went with that status. When I went to school, I cycled and on arrival found myself in a school where the teachers were well paid and nearly all were University educated. Being a white African there was no class distinction – we all wore uniforms, we all looked the same, we played games and wrote exams. The State funded school system for white kids in those days was on a par with the private schools in the West.

In the holidays I nearly always went out to the Esigodini Valley where my godfather owned two ranches and a small irrigation farm. There I worked on the farms, cutting hay, herding cattle, building small earth dams to conserve water and roaming in the hills that were all around us. We visited the Ndebele Kraals nearby, sat with the older men who reminisced about the days when they fought the white settlers and other tribal groups for dominance. My godfather attached a member of staff to us to make sure we were safe and did not do anything stupid. This man, taught us bush craft and we hunted baboons that were raiding the maize fields for food.

Going back to school was never easy, we had to wear shoes, be on time and help maintain and develop the school grounds. Sport was almost as important as academic studies; we played Rugby, Cricket, Hockey, Athletics and Swimming. We were required to belong to a club of some sort – Theatre, Christian Union, Debating Society. Life was hectic and every day was fully occupied. When we wrote exams they were set in Europe and graduation meant that you could get into University pretty much anywhere in the world. I also became a Boy Scout and spent most weekends in the Matopo Hills, eventually becoming Troop Leader and taking on responsibility.

I did not know it then, but it was a deeply privileged upbringing in every way. We came out of that period, well educated, physically fit with a broad knowledge of most sports and a keen sense of Nationalism. We also knew and loved the bushveld that was all around us, the wide open spaces, dry, chilly mornings in the winter months, the early rains with that unmistakable scent of the earth and water. We knew how to handle ourselves and when called upon we knew how to lead. It is no wonder that the men and women that grew up in that environment never forget and will always be homesick for Africa, no matter where they go.

Only now, as I look back do I appreciate the many other things that worked together to make us what we were, and in many cases, still are. As individuals our background taught us to be self-sufficient, enterprising and willing to take the lead. All Africans have a clear set of values – family comes first, God exists and is important in our lives in a real way, men are men and women are women. Raised in a largely patrilineal society we were proud of our masculinity and could not really understand or accept variations from the norm. Going from here into other Western nations and cultures we often feel a bit Neanderthal. Certainly very different and even the object of amusement by others.

Our Nationalism was a bit misplaced, but very real. We were proud to be Rhodesians, to be rebels in a world of conformity to societal values and norms that to us were often depraved and unhelpful. We paid little attention to the changes taking place around us and when finally, our world disintegrated in 1980 and we came to Independence with a majority government, most of us left the country of our birth, to which we had been so attached and had defended and found ourselves in foreign lands where we seldom felt at home.

For me, I took my young family to Europe on a journey of discovery in 1976. We had never travelled outside Africa and we spent 6 weeks travelling through Europe and the United Kingdom. On return, we held a family Dare and decided that we were no longer Europeans, we were Africans and that Rhodesia, soon to be Zimbabwe, was our home. We have stuck to that view and we all live, work and play here, except for two grandchildren who are studying abroad. I was very proud of my eldest granddaughter at Christmas when she told me that after graduation she was coming home from America. She will come back with a first class degree in mathematics and data management and will be able to make a contribution to building up this small African State.

What excites me about the present situation in this country is what I am calling the ‘Third Generation Revolution’. This is a generation of young people who are the grandchildren of the first generation of Zimbabweans who formed the foundation of the country before and after Independence. Their grandparents left the country after Independence and moved to other parts of the world where they settled. Then there are the generation who benefitted from the surge in educational opportunity after Independence and who left the country for further education or opportunity. They are both now coming home and are starting to make a huge impact on the country.

These are young Zimbabweans who have woken up to the fact that abroad they are ‘strangers’. They speak with an accent others do not recognise, they long for the blue skies, rolling bushveld and wild places that is Zimbabwe. They have skills and resources of all kind plus valuable experience. Coming back to Zimbabwe they have gone into farming, mining, industry and commerce. I can take you to any part of the country and you are starting to see the results of their energy and enterprise. One young couple I spoke to after they arrived from Australia, said that they had come back to give their children a chance to receive the sort of education they had received when they were growing up here.

My son is in the USA today to attend his daughter’s graduation in Michigan. During the four years she has been there studying, he has tried to get over once a year to see her and meet friends and attend conferences. One year he came back and said ‘Dad, these Americans are so patriotic, they fly flags, sing the national anthem and are so proud to be Americans. Why cannot we be like that.’ All this third generation needs, is to feel accepted and recognised for who they are, Africans who want to make a contribution. We have a way to go, but a start has been made.

America is populated by migrants who have made the USA their home, speak its language and salute its flag. In return the USA has given them dignity, opportunity and participation. It’s not magic, it’s not contrived and it has created a country that still leads the world in productivity, enterprise, science and education. If we can provide our children and their children with such a platform there is no reason why Africa cannot be the continent of the future.

The post Africans don’t realize how tremendously privileged they are: Eddie Cross appeared first on Provoker Magazine.

]]>
2227
WATCH: Zimbabwe as seen by foreign media https://provoker.co.zw/watch-zimbabwe-as-seen-by-foreign-media/ Mon, 15 Mar 2021 07:24:56 +0000 https://provoker.co.zw/?p=939 Who can relate to that feeling of happiness and pride when they hear the place they’re from mentioned in high places? Well, something like that left Zimbabweans feeling proud and recognized recently. A certain Cartoon Network show by the name, Total Drama Island decided to give this beautiful country a well-deserved feature. This feature, however,… Continue reading WATCH: Zimbabwe as seen by foreign media

The post WATCH: Zimbabwe as seen by foreign media appeared first on Provoker Magazine.

]]>
Who can relate to that feeling of happiness and pride when they hear the place they’re from mentioned in high places? Well, something like that left Zimbabweans feeling proud and recognized recently.

A certain Cartoon Network show by the name, Total Drama Island decided to give this beautiful country a well-deserved feature. This feature, however, was met with mixed emotions.

Some Zimbabweans were filled with pride and rushed to share this occurrence, others on the other hand, were appalled by this representation which they thought would portray our country as all forest and backward country. Another percentage of Zimbabweans where quick to point out that the show had placed Zimbabwe in an incorrect location on the map of Africa.

Watch the video below:

What are your sentiments in regards to this mention of our country in international media?

Let us know in the comment section below.

 

The post WATCH: Zimbabwe as seen by foreign media appeared first on Provoker Magazine.

]]>
939