Browsing articles tagged with " Burkina Faso"
Mar 15, 2010
Barak

Back to the grind

I came back from Tanzania to a Mount Kilimanjaro size pile of paperwork and have no time for witty blog posts, sadly. Aid Watch has a great analysis of the consequences of making development a top national security priority. Global Dashboard has a fantastic post on Burkina Faso. Here’s a preview:

A tribe of brilliant horsemen (which may account for the profusion of betting shops in Bobo), the Mossi repelled slave raiders and other rivals and remained intact for 400 years until their kingdom fell to the French. Captain Paul Voulet, who led the French expedition, was a real-life Kurtz figure, who stuck victims’ heads on poles, roasted children over fires, and strung up soldiers who displeased him at a height where their feet could be reached by hyenas’ hungry jaws. When his superiors tried to rein him in, he told his troops he was no longer French but a “black chief,” who would found his own empire. After he was killed, the French, embarrassed that their civilising mission in their colonies had gone awry, attributed Voulet’s activities to the maddening heat of Africa.

Brilliant!

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Founded in 2004, Democracy and Society is a biannual print journal published by the Center for Democracy and Civil Society at Georgetown University. The D&S Blog provides web-only content, including special reports and investigative series, on issues relating to democracy and development.

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