The economy of Benin remains underdeveloped and dependent on subsistence agriculture and cotton. Cotton accounts for 40% of GDP and roughly 80% of official export receipts. There is also production of textiles, palm products, and cocoa beans. Maize (corn), beans, rice, peanuts, cashews, pineapples, cassava, yams, and other various tubers are grown for local subsistence. Benin began producing a modest quantity of offshore oil in October 1982. Production ceased in recent years but exploration of new sites is ongoing. A modest fishing fleet provides fish and shrimp for local subsistence and export to Europe. Formerly government-owned commercial activities are now privatized. A French brewer acquired the former state-run brewery. Smaller businesses are privately owned by Beninese citizens, but some firms are foreign owned, primarily French and Lebanese. The private commercial and agricultural sectors remain the principal contributors to growth.
Benini/bɨˈniːn/ (formerly, Dahomey), officially the Republic of Benin, is a country in West Africa. It is bordered by Togo to the west, by Nigeria to the east and by Burkina Faso and Niger to the north. A majority of the population live on its small southern coastline on the Bight of Benin. The capital of Benin is Porto-Novo, but the seat of government is in Cotonou, the country's largest city. Benin covers an area of approximately 110,000 square kilometers (42,000 sq mi), with a population of approximately 9.05 million. Benin is a tropical, sub-Saharan nation, highly dependent on agriculture, with substantial employment and income arising from subsistence farming.
Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin...
3:02
Benin Economic Outlook
Benin Economic Outlook
Benin Economic Outlook
The economic and commercial attaché at the Benin Embassy, Mr Adegnandjou Thomas says Benin's economy continues to show signs of resilience even in the face of global uncertainties. To ensure that trade is scaled up in the country and the ECOWAS bloc, Benin is joining hands with Burkina Faso to construct a railway line that will help cut off the high transportation cost associated with roads. He said this during the celebration of Benin's 54th Independence Day in Accra.
4:07
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
1:49
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Rising sea levels have destroyed many homes, hotels, roads and harvests and threaten to engulf large areas of Benin's capital. Cotonou, which sits on alluvial sand at most four metres deep, drives most of Benin's economy, in addition to being a regional trade hub
29:42
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Deadly Chicken: How second-hand frozen chicken from Europe is poisoning the Beninese economy
How Corporate pig-farms are ruining Romania: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_whul7rHVk
Journeyman's cost of globalisation playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlGSlkijht5iOsH-UDVXxMTetNYBCfOjm
Subscribe to Journeyman for daily current affairs and world news: http://www.youtube.com/journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=68295
Benin's impoverished population survive on imported, cheap frozen chickens from Europe and the US. But relying on cast-off chickens is putting local farmers out o
3:37
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that the PDP-led government at the Federal level will do more to improve the quality of roads and other sectors of the economy in Edo State.
8:56
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Promoting the installation of a water well drilling machine to eliminate waterborne sickness that was killing many people.
Background:
Present day Benin was the site of Dahomey, a prominent West African kingdom that rose in the 15th century. The territory became a French Colony in 1872 and achieved independence on 1 August 1960, as the Republic of Benin. A succession of military governments ended in 1972 with the rise to power of Mathieu KEREKOU and the establishment of a government based on Marxist-Leninist principles. A move to representative government began in 1989. Two years later, free elections ushered in former Prime Minister Ni
45:08
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari, was on a three-day visit to Denmark's capital, Copenhagen, for a session of negotiations aimed at strengthening economic cooperation between Denmark and Benin Republic in the fields of trade and investment.
Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari was accompanied by H.E. Mrs Martine Françoise Adjouavi Dossa, Minister for Maritime Economy and Port Infrastructures, H.E. Mrs Mariam Aladji Boni Diallo, Special Adviser for Diplomatic Affairs to the Head of State, Mr Jean-Baptiste Satchivi, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Benin (CCIB) and 8-strong business delegati
2:23
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
The excerpt shows that Benin was able to keep it's industries as Richard Burton pointed out
This is just an article I found and wanted to share.
Also read "Early Kongo-Portuguese Relations: A New Interpretation" by John Thornton
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Thornton_Early_Kongo_Portuguese_Relations.pdf
page 5
"The fact that Portugal possessed more developed marine technology, firearms , and building technology--and these were the very things that Kongo most wanted from Europe--does not necessarily imply that Portugal had adecisive structural advantage over Kongo. In more fundamental ways Kongo and Portugal were more or less on
1:59
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com
This is the summary of Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series) by Christopher Allen, Michael Radu.
1:12
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin President Boni Yayi has called for a strategic dialogue to overcome the sociopolitical tension that has gripped the country. Benin has been in the thro...
0:00
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra, Ghana, the Center for Global Development (CGD) in Washington DC, and the African School of Economics (ASE) in Cotonou, Benin, are hosting a special event ‘Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?’ with candidates for the presidency of the African Development Bank on Thursday, April 16th 2015, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., in Washington, DC.
The event is a public forum where candidates, the majority of whom have confirmed their participation, will share their visions for this vital institution and face questions from expert audiences across continents. The session will be moderated by Rajesh Mir
3:50
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. In this installment of Boing Boing tv's ongoing BBtv WORLD series, I travel to the West African nation of Benin to visit the Songhaï Center, a green tech project designed to develop a new generation of "agricultural entrepreneurs," and foster economic sustainability.
Benin is nestled between Ghana, Togo, and Nigeria along the continent's midwest coast -- this shore was historically known as the "Slave Coast," and Benin was a major center in export of slave labor to the Americas. Today, Benin's people are struggling with a cultural shift from a traditional, mostly agrarian society, to a more urban, ind
Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin...
3:02
Benin Economic Outlook
Benin Economic Outlook
Benin Economic Outlook
The economic and commercial attaché at the Benin Embassy, Mr Adegnandjou Thomas says Benin's economy continues to show signs of resilience even in the face of global uncertainties. To ensure that trade is scaled up in the country and the ECOWAS bloc, Benin is joining hands with Burkina Faso to construct a railway line that will help cut off the high transportation cost associated with roads. He said this during the celebration of Benin's 54th Independence Day in Accra.
4:07
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
1:49
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Rising sea levels have destroyed many homes, hotels, roads and harvests and threaten to engulf large areas of Benin's capital. Cotonou, which sits on alluvial sand at most four metres deep, drives most of Benin's economy, in addition to being a regional trade hub
29:42
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Deadly Chicken: How second-hand frozen chicken from Europe is poisoning the Beninese economy
How Corporate pig-farms are ruining Romania: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_whul7rHVk
Journeyman's cost of globalisation playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlGSlkijht5iOsH-UDVXxMTetNYBCfOjm
Subscribe to Journeyman for daily current affairs and world news: http://www.youtube.com/journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=68295
Benin's impoverished population survive on imported, cheap frozen chickens from Europe and the US. But relying on cast-off chickens is putting local farmers out o
3:37
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that the PDP-led government at the Federal level will do more to improve the quality of roads and other sectors of the economy in Edo State.
8:56
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Promoting the installation of a water well drilling machine to eliminate waterborne sickness that was killing many people.
Background:
Present day Benin was the site of Dahomey, a prominent West African kingdom that rose in the 15th century. The territory became a French Colony in 1872 and achieved independence on 1 August 1960, as the Republic of Benin. A succession of military governments ended in 1972 with the rise to power of Mathieu KEREKOU and the establishment of a government based on Marxist-Leninist principles. A move to representative government began in 1989. Two years later, free elections ushered in former Prime Minister Ni
45:08
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari, was on a three-day visit to Denmark's capital, Copenhagen, for a session of negotiations aimed at strengthening economic cooperation between Denmark and Benin Republic in the fields of trade and investment.
Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari was accompanied by H.E. Mrs Martine Françoise Adjouavi Dossa, Minister for Maritime Economy and Port Infrastructures, H.E. Mrs Mariam Aladji Boni Diallo, Special Adviser for Diplomatic Affairs to the Head of State, Mr Jean-Baptiste Satchivi, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Benin (CCIB) and 8-strong business delegati
2:23
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
The excerpt shows that Benin was able to keep it's industries as Richard Burton pointed out
This is just an article I found and wanted to share.
Also read "Early Kongo-Portuguese Relations: A New Interpretation" by John Thornton
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Thornton_Early_Kongo_Portuguese_Relations.pdf
page 5
"The fact that Portugal possessed more developed marine technology, firearms , and building technology--and these were the very things that Kongo most wanted from Europe--does not necessarily imply that Portugal had adecisive structural advantage over Kongo. In more fundamental ways Kongo and Portugal were more or less on
1:59
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com
This is the summary of Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series) by Christopher Allen, Michael Radu.
1:12
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin President Boni Yayi has called for a strategic dialogue to overcome the sociopolitical tension that has gripped the country. Benin has been in the thro...
0:00
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra, Ghana, the Center for Global Development (CGD) in Washington DC, and the African School of Economics (ASE) in Cotonou, Benin, are hosting a special event ‘Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?’ with candidates for the presidency of the African Development Bank on Thursday, April 16th 2015, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., in Washington, DC.
The event is a public forum where candidates, the majority of whom have confirmed their participation, will share their visions for this vital institution and face questions from expert audiences across continents. The session will be moderated by Rajesh Mir
3:50
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. In this installment of Boing Boing tv's ongoing BBtv WORLD series, I travel to the West African nation of Benin to visit the Songhaï Center, a green tech project designed to develop a new generation of "agricultural entrepreneurs," and foster economic sustainability.
Benin is nestled between Ghana, Togo, and Nigeria along the continent's midwest coast -- this shore was historically known as the "Slave Coast," and Benin was a major center in export of slave labor to the Americas. Today, Benin's people are struggling with a cultural shift from a traditional, mostly agrarian society, to a more urban, ind
6:13
Decay of Benin rise of Dahomey Trans-Atlantic Slave trade part 2
Decay of Benin rise of Dahomey Trans-Atlantic Slave trade part 2
Decay of Benin rise of Dahomey Trans-Atlantic Slave trade part 2
Great Kingdom of Benin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdVIoaTq-5Q
One thing to point out again the article from Robin Law again Page 21
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Law_Historiography_of_the_Rise_of_Dahomey.pdf
"W.E.B. Dub Bois asserted that the evidence showed the supersession in West Africa of early coastal cultures characterized by city democracy and developed craft industries, by despotic militaristic empires such as Dahomey, and also Asante.)"
Dahomey Economy
http://stmarys.ca/~wmills/course316/7Dahomey.html
"- Dahomey had a monetary system: cowry shells were the basic currency, but trade goods were used also—guns, b
18:41
Global Roundtable - GFDD and H. E. Jean-Francis R. Zinsou (Permanent Representative of Benin)
Global Roundtable - GFDD and H. E. Jean-Francis R. Zinsou (Permanent Representative of Benin)
Global Roundtable - GFDD and H. E. Jean-Francis R. Zinsou (Permanent Representative of Benin)
GFDD/FUNGLODE hosts Global Roundtable at the United Nations General Assembly
New York, 4/19/2011
On April 16, GFDD/FUNGLODE convened its fourth Global Roundtable at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, in close association with the UN Association of the DR (UNA-DR), who was organizing its fifth New York Model United Nations taking place April 16 - 21, 2011.
The Roundtable presented the Permanent Representative of Benin to the United Nations, His Excellency Jean-Francis R. Zinsou, who also serves as co-facilitator for the consultations on the organization of United Nations Conference of Youth in 2011. This special session
0:33
Drilling Company in Benin
Drilling Company in Benin
Drilling Company in Benin
We are a fast growing indigenous company in the Geology and Mining Sector of the economy. Since we started we have been working hard on the improvement of our services by acquiring necessary experience to serve better the developmental needs of our country.
We are resolved to continue to improve our services for the Geological, water resources and Mining industry in Nigeria
65:24
Africa 2013 - Africa 2063 From Fragility to Stability
Africa 2013 - Africa 2063 From Fragility to Stability
Africa 2013 - Africa 2063 From Fragility to Stability
http://www.weforum.org/ Africa 2063: From Fragility to Stability As African economies transform over the next 50 years, how will political and geopolitical t...
2012! China! China! Will for the first time fall in their economy because God will not allow them to support Russia. China made his mind to support Russia, f...
4:49
Elephant-blogging in Benin with Xeni (BBtv WORLD: West Africa)
Elephant-blogging in Benin with Xeni (BBtv WORLD: West Africa)
Elephant-blogging in Benin with Xeni (BBtv WORLD: West Africa)
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. Today's Boing Boing tv is an installment of our ongoing BBtv WORLD series, in which we bring you first-person glimpses of life around the globe. Today: an ambient exploration of the creatures rustling around in a West African wildlife preserve at dawn.
I traveled to Benin not long ago, and I shot this video on a small handheld digital camcorder. This episode of our daily show is a little experiment in trying to convey what this place feels like, first-person, without too many words.
The Pendjari Biosphere lies in Benin's remote rural northwest, along the border of Burkina Faso. Despite poaching and
4:45
A Village in Porto-Novo: Working Women
A Village in Porto-Novo: Working Women
A Village in Porto-Novo: Working Women
One of the most incredible projects I witnessed on my trip in Benin. A village of working women who sing while they work in Porto-Novo, creating medicine for...
5:58
VOA news for Sunday, February 8th, 2015
VOA news for Sunday, February 8th, 2015
VOA news for Sunday, February 8th, 2015
VOA news for Sunday, February 8th, 2015
Thanks to http://gandalf.ddo.jp/ for audio and text
From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Vincent Bruce reporting. The stage is set for renewed Ukraine-Russia discussions on Sunday.
The U.S. State Department says a French-German plan to end the fighting in eastern Ukraine is based on September's failed cease-fire but with more details on timing.
French President François Hollande has described the plan as "one of the last chances" to end the fighting in Ukraine.
In Munich at an international security conference Saturday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said it is unclear if the plan will succeed.
She
4:44
African Cashew Alliance (ACA) World Cashew Festival & Expo 2012, Cotonou, Benin
African Cashew Alliance (ACA) World Cashew Festival & Expo 2012, Cotonou, Benin
African Cashew Alliance (ACA) World Cashew Festival & Expo 2012, Cotonou, Benin
The African Cashew initiative (ACi) actively supports the African Cashew Alliance (ACA) in the organization and implementation of their Annual Cashew Conference where cashew farmers, processors, traders, exporters, services providers, retailers, equipment manufacturers, bankers, and government representatives convene to shape tomorrow's cashew industry. Each annual World Cashew Festival & Expo is a unique platform from which to do business, exchange practices, and learn from experts from around the world. The World Cashew Expo offers many opportunities to meet with equipment manufacturers and service providers. The African cashew sector offer
Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin...
Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin...
The economic and commercial attaché at the Benin Embassy, Mr Adegnandjou Thomas says Benin's economy continues to show signs of resilience even in the face of global uncertainties. To ensure that trade is scaled up in the country and the ECOWAS bloc, Benin is joining hands with Burkina Faso to construct a railway line that will help cut off the high transportation cost associated with roads. He said this during the celebration of Benin's 54th Independence Day in Accra.
The economic and commercial attaché at the Benin Embassy, Mr Adegnandjou Thomas says Benin's economy continues to show signs of resilience even in the face of global uncertainties. To ensure that trade is scaled up in the country and the ECOWAS bloc, Benin is joining hands with Burkina Faso to construct a railway line that will help cut off the high transportation cost associated with roads. He said this during the celebration of Benin's 54th Independence Day in Accra.
published:06 Aug 2014
views:57
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
Rising sea levels have destroyed many homes, hotels, roads and harvests and threaten to engulf large areas of Benin's capital. Cotonou, which sits on alluvial sand at most four metres deep, drives most of Benin's economy, in addition to being a regional trade hub
Rising sea levels have destroyed many homes, hotels, roads and harvests and threaten to engulf large areas of Benin's capital. Cotonou, which sits on alluvial sand at most four metres deep, drives most of Benin's economy, in addition to being a regional trade hub
Deadly Chicken: How second-hand frozen chicken from Europe is poisoning the Beninese economy
How Corporate pig-farms are ruining Romania: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_whul7rHVk
Journeyman's cost of globalisation playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlGSlkijht5iOsH-UDVXxMTetNYBCfOjm
Subscribe to Journeyman for daily current affairs and world news: http://www.youtube.com/journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=68295
Benin's impoverished population survive on imported, cheap frozen chickens from Europe and the US. But relying on cast-off chickens is putting local farmers out of work and posing serious health risks.
In Benin, 150,000 tonnes of foreign poultry passes through the main port every year. For the countries of origin, it is a convenient way to offload tough old hens. While for the people of Benin, the cheap and widely available chicken is a welcome source of meat. "Laying hens are a bit tough for European tastes", says importer Kenneth Adiho, "but we love them". However, the imported meat has dealt a heavy blow to local farmers. Once a profession for young entrepreneurs, Agriculture is now doomed. "The importing of frozen chicken is killing the youth and they will react by flocking to the Western world", predicts one out-of-work farmer. In a country where nearly 50% are under 15 this could have serious implications. Moreover, defrosted, exposed to sunlight, and then refrozen, the poultry risks being infected by bacteria that can cause diseases like salmonella. There is yet to be a national survey on the dangers of the meat and in the markets sanitation inspections rarely take place.
Wild Angle - Ref 6369
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.
Deadly Chicken: How second-hand frozen chicken from Europe is poisoning the Beninese economy
How Corporate pig-farms are ruining Romania: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_whul7rHVk
Journeyman's cost of globalisation playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlGSlkijht5iOsH-UDVXxMTetNYBCfOjm
Subscribe to Journeyman for daily current affairs and world news: http://www.youtube.com/journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=68295
Benin's impoverished population survive on imported, cheap frozen chickens from Europe and the US. But relying on cast-off chickens is putting local farmers out of work and posing serious health risks.
In Benin, 150,000 tonnes of foreign poultry passes through the main port every year. For the countries of origin, it is a convenient way to offload tough old hens. While for the people of Benin, the cheap and widely available chicken is a welcome source of meat. "Laying hens are a bit tough for European tastes", says importer Kenneth Adiho, "but we love them". However, the imported meat has dealt a heavy blow to local farmers. Once a profession for young entrepreneurs, Agriculture is now doomed. "The importing of frozen chicken is killing the youth and they will react by flocking to the Western world", predicts one out-of-work farmer. In a country where nearly 50% are under 15 this could have serious implications. Moreover, defrosted, exposed to sunlight, and then refrozen, the poultry risks being infected by bacteria that can cause diseases like salmonella. There is yet to be a national survey on the dangers of the meat and in the markets sanitation inspections rarely take place.
Wild Angle - Ref 6369
Journeyman Pictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.
published:23 Feb 2015
views:245
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that the PDP-led government at the Federal level will do more to improve the quality of roads and other sectors of the economy in Edo State.
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that the PDP-led government at the Federal level will do more to improve the quality of roads and other sectors of the economy in Edo State.
published:27 Sep 2014
views:5623
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Promoting the installation of a water well drilling machine to eliminate waterborne sickness that was killing many people.
Background:
Present day Benin was the site of Dahomey, a prominent West African kingdom that rose in the 15th century. The territory became a French Colony in 1872 and achieved independence on 1 August 1960, as the Republic of Benin. A succession of military governments ended in 1972 with the rise to power of Mathieu KEREKOU and the establishment of a government based on Marxist-Leninist principles. A move to representative government began in 1989. Two years later, free elections ushered in former Prime Minister Nicephore SOGLO as president, marking the first successful transfer of power in Africa from a dictatorship to a democracy. KEREKOU was returned to power by elections held in 1996 and 2001, though some irregularities were alleged. KEREKOU stepped down at the end of his second term in 2006 and was succeeded by Thomas YAYI Boni, a political outsider and independent. YAYI has begun a high profile fight against corruption and has strongly promoted accelerating Benin's economic growth.
Economy - overview:
The economy of Benin remains underdeveloped and dependent on subsistence agriculture, cotton production, and regional trade. Growth in real output has averaged around 4% in the past three years, but rapid population growth has offset much of this increase. Inflation has subsided over the past several years. In order to raise growth, Benin plans to attract more foreign investment, place more emphasis on tourism, facilitate the development of new food processing systems and agricultural products, and encourage new information and communication technology. Specific projects to improve the business climate by reforms to the land tenure system, the commercial justice system, and the financial sector were included in Benin's $307 million Millennium Challenge Account grant signed in February 2006. The 2001 privatization policy continues in telecommunications, water, electricity, and agriculture though the government annulled the privatization of Benin's state cotton company in November 2007 after the discovery of irregularities in the bidding process. The Paris Club and bilateral creditors have eased the external debt situation, with Benin benefiting from a G-8 debt reduction announced in July 2005, while pressing for more rapid structural reforms. An insufficient electrical supply continues to adversely affect Benin's economic growth though the government recently has taken steps to increase domestic power production.
Source: cia world factbook cia.gov
Promoting the installation of a water well drilling machine to eliminate waterborne sickness that was killing many people.
Background:
Present day Benin was the site of Dahomey, a prominent West African kingdom that rose in the 15th century. The territory became a French Colony in 1872 and achieved independence on 1 August 1960, as the Republic of Benin. A succession of military governments ended in 1972 with the rise to power of Mathieu KEREKOU and the establishment of a government based on Marxist-Leninist principles. A move to representative government began in 1989. Two years later, free elections ushered in former Prime Minister Nicephore SOGLO as president, marking the first successful transfer of power in Africa from a dictatorship to a democracy. KEREKOU was returned to power by elections held in 1996 and 2001, though some irregularities were alleged. KEREKOU stepped down at the end of his second term in 2006 and was succeeded by Thomas YAYI Boni, a political outsider and independent. YAYI has begun a high profile fight against corruption and has strongly promoted accelerating Benin's economic growth.
Economy - overview:
The economy of Benin remains underdeveloped and dependent on subsistence agriculture, cotton production, and regional trade. Growth in real output has averaged around 4% in the past three years, but rapid population growth has offset much of this increase. Inflation has subsided over the past several years. In order to raise growth, Benin plans to attract more foreign investment, place more emphasis on tourism, facilitate the development of new food processing systems and agricultural products, and encourage new information and communication technology. Specific projects to improve the business climate by reforms to the land tenure system, the commercial justice system, and the financial sector were included in Benin's $307 million Millennium Challenge Account grant signed in February 2006. The 2001 privatization policy continues in telecommunications, water, electricity, and agriculture though the government annulled the privatization of Benin's state cotton company in November 2007 after the discovery of irregularities in the bidding process. The Paris Club and bilateral creditors have eased the external debt situation, with Benin benefiting from a G-8 debt reduction announced in July 2005, while pressing for more rapid structural reforms. An insufficient electrical supply continues to adversely affect Benin's economic growth though the government recently has taken steps to increase domestic power production.
Source: cia world factbook cia.gov
published:27 Sep 2007
views:11080
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari, was on a three-day visit to Denmark's capital, Copenhagen, for a session of negotiations aimed at strengthening economic cooperation between Denmark and Benin Republic in the fields of trade and investment.
Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari was accompanied by H.E. Mrs Martine Françoise Adjouavi Dossa, Minister for Maritime Economy and Port Infrastructures, H.E. Mrs Mariam Aladji Boni Diallo, Special Adviser for Diplomatic Affairs to the Head of State, Mr Jean-Baptiste Satchivi, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Benin (CCIB) and 8-strong business delegation.Read more on : www.afroscandic.com
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari, was on a three-day visit to Denmark's capital, Copenhagen, for a session of negotiations aimed at strengthening economic cooperation between Denmark and Benin Republic in the fields of trade and investment.
Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari was accompanied by H.E. Mrs Martine Françoise Adjouavi Dossa, Minister for Maritime Economy and Port Infrastructures, H.E. Mrs Mariam Aladji Boni Diallo, Special Adviser for Diplomatic Affairs to the Head of State, Mr Jean-Baptiste Satchivi, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Benin (CCIB) and 8-strong business delegation.Read more on : www.afroscandic.com
published:12 Jun 2014
views:60
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
The excerpt shows that Benin was able to keep it's industries as Richard Burton pointed out
This is just an article I found and wanted to share.
Also read "Early Kongo-Portuguese Relations: A New Interpretation" by John Thornton
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Thornton_Early_Kongo_Portuguese_Relations.pdf
page 5
"The fact that Portugal possessed more developed marine technology, firearms , and building technology--and these were the very things that Kongo most wanted from Europe--does not necessarily imply that Portugal had adecisive structural advantage over Kongo. In more fundamental ways Kongo and Portugal were more or less on the same economic level"
"The Slave Trade, Depopulation and Human Sacrifice in Benin History" James D. Graham
http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/cea_0008-0055_1965_num_5_18_3035#
322-323
"That this "falling off in the trade was severly felt by the people of Bénin," was demonstrated by the Oba's request, in 1838, that Moffat and Smith settle "that palaver" with the king of England. Although Moffat interpreted the Oba's request as a référence to British interférence with the slave trade, it is more reasonable to assume that the Oba was actually troubled by the general "falling off" in all trade, including ivory and palm oil, which was explained by Captain Owen.
Richard Burton observed, in 1862, that it was "a hopeless task to restore commerce to Bénin." Since the Bini wove their own cotton cloth and brewed their own wine, Burton thought that they "seemed to care little for the suspension of trade: it became painfully évident that they could stand the ordeal better than we could." Indeed, Oba Adolo accepted the abolition of the slave trade "as a. fait accompli, and never even alludes to its revival." Burton also reported that the factors at Gwato were unscrupulous, and he recommended that their factories be abandoned and razed to the ground. Apparently, his suggestion was followed, for Gallwey, in 1893, said that there had been no factories at Gwato "until very recently. " Palm oil, agreed Burton and Gallwey, was then the primary export. The latter also noted that the Itsekiri "do their best to obstruct" direct trade with Bénin proper, and that the inland waterways leading to Gwato were very dangerous because of snags, rapid current, and sunken trees.
An overall view of the period, between 1486-1897, yields the conclusion that the European slave trade was seldom, if ever, of considérable importance to Bénin proper."
The bellow looks into the economy of a slave trading society (Dahomey). This needs more investigation especially the question how did they get hooked on the slave trade. I actually see guns as mostly as tools of the trade (slave trade) so guns were purchased with the aim of capturing more slaves and buying other goods
"Dahomey and the Slave Trade: Reflections of the Historiography of the Rise of Dahomey" pages 24-25
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Law_Historiography_of_the_Rise_of_Dahomey.pdf
"calculation by Patrick Manning (1982) would raise the share of the Atlantic trade in the national income to 15 percent, and both sets of figures must be regarded as having an essentially illustrative rather than a probative value. Assessment of the importance of the Atlantic trade must also, of course, be based upon qualitative as well as on quantitative considerations, and account needs to be taken of the crucial role played for the Dahomean state not only by imported firearms (whose importance Peuket tends to discount) but also by imported luxury items, which could be distributed to attract and secure the allegiance of followers, and by the cowry shells which served as currency in local markets. The importance of imported goods in royal largesse was already clear in the 1720s, when Bulfinch Lamb noted that the king of Dahomey gives Booges [cowries] like dirt, and Brandy like water. The importance of cowry shells should especially be stressed: in the second half of the seventeenth century, it appears that between a third and a half of the value of imports into the Slave Coast was normally in cowries. It is somewhat ironic that Peukert points to the existence of a flourishing local exchange economy in Dahomey as part of his argument for the downgrading of the significance of overseas trade. But the flourishing local trade, lubricated by a currency of imported cowry shells, was evidently, in large measure, itself a consequence of the booming Atlantic trade"
Saint Mary's University:
http://stmarys.ca/~wmills/course316/7Dahomey.html
"- Dahomey had a monetary system: cowry shells were the basic currency, but trade goods were used also—guns, bolts of cloth etc.
- Europeans tried to take advantage of this currency; they brought so many cowry shells that the shells lost value (inflation). As a result, European trade goods became the basic currency used in the purchase of slaves"
The excerpt shows that Benin was able to keep it's industries as Richard Burton pointed out
This is just an article I found and wanted to share.
Also read "Early Kongo-Portuguese Relations: A New Interpretation" by John Thornton
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Thornton_Early_Kongo_Portuguese_Relations.pdf
page 5
"The fact that Portugal possessed more developed marine technology, firearms , and building technology--and these were the very things that Kongo most wanted from Europe--does not necessarily imply that Portugal had adecisive structural advantage over Kongo. In more fundamental ways Kongo and Portugal were more or less on the same economic level"
"The Slave Trade, Depopulation and Human Sacrifice in Benin History" James D. Graham
http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/cea_0008-0055_1965_num_5_18_3035#
322-323
"That this "falling off in the trade was severly felt by the people of Bénin," was demonstrated by the Oba's request, in 1838, that Moffat and Smith settle "that palaver" with the king of England. Although Moffat interpreted the Oba's request as a référence to British interférence with the slave trade, it is more reasonable to assume that the Oba was actually troubled by the general "falling off" in all trade, including ivory and palm oil, which was explained by Captain Owen.
Richard Burton observed, in 1862, that it was "a hopeless task to restore commerce to Bénin." Since the Bini wove their own cotton cloth and brewed their own wine, Burton thought that they "seemed to care little for the suspension of trade: it became painfully évident that they could stand the ordeal better than we could." Indeed, Oba Adolo accepted the abolition of the slave trade "as a. fait accompli, and never even alludes to its revival." Burton also reported that the factors at Gwato were unscrupulous, and he recommended that their factories be abandoned and razed to the ground. Apparently, his suggestion was followed, for Gallwey, in 1893, said that there had been no factories at Gwato "until very recently. " Palm oil, agreed Burton and Gallwey, was then the primary export. The latter also noted that the Itsekiri "do their best to obstruct" direct trade with Bénin proper, and that the inland waterways leading to Gwato were very dangerous because of snags, rapid current, and sunken trees.
An overall view of the period, between 1486-1897, yields the conclusion that the European slave trade was seldom, if ever, of considérable importance to Bénin proper."
The bellow looks into the economy of a slave trading society (Dahomey). This needs more investigation especially the question how did they get hooked on the slave trade. I actually see guns as mostly as tools of the trade (slave trade) so guns were purchased with the aim of capturing more slaves and buying other goods
"Dahomey and the Slave Trade: Reflections of the Historiography of the Rise of Dahomey" pages 24-25
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Law_Historiography_of_the_Rise_of_Dahomey.pdf
"calculation by Patrick Manning (1982) would raise the share of the Atlantic trade in the national income to 15 percent, and both sets of figures must be regarded as having an essentially illustrative rather than a probative value. Assessment of the importance of the Atlantic trade must also, of course, be based upon qualitative as well as on quantitative considerations, and account needs to be taken of the crucial role played for the Dahomean state not only by imported firearms (whose importance Peuket tends to discount) but also by imported luxury items, which could be distributed to attract and secure the allegiance of followers, and by the cowry shells which served as currency in local markets. The importance of imported goods in royal largesse was already clear in the 1720s, when Bulfinch Lamb noted that the king of Dahomey gives Booges [cowries] like dirt, and Brandy like water. The importance of cowry shells should especially be stressed: in the second half of the seventeenth century, it appears that between a third and a half of the value of imports into the Slave Coast was normally in cowries. It is somewhat ironic that Peukert points to the existence of a flourishing local exchange economy in Dahomey as part of his argument for the downgrading of the significance of overseas trade. But the flourishing local trade, lubricated by a currency of imported cowry shells, was evidently, in large measure, itself a consequence of the booming Atlantic trade"
Saint Mary's University:
http://stmarys.ca/~wmills/course316/7Dahomey.html
"- Dahomey had a monetary system: cowry shells were the basic currency, but trade goods were used also—guns, bolts of cloth etc.
- Europeans tried to take advantage of this currency; they brought so many cowry shells that the shells lost value (inflation). As a result, European trade goods became the basic currency used in the purchase of slaves"
published:13 Aug 2009
views:702
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com
This is the summary of Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series) by Christopher Allen, Michael Radu.
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com
This is the summary of Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series) by Christopher Allen, Michael Radu.
Benin President Boni Yayi has called for a strategic dialogue to overcome the sociopolitical tension that has gripped the country. Benin has been in the thro...
Benin President Boni Yayi has called for a strategic dialogue to overcome the sociopolitical tension that has gripped the country. Benin has been in the thro...
The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra, Ghana, the Center for Global Development (CGD) in Washington DC, and the African School of Economics (ASE) in Cotonou, Benin, are hosting a special event ‘Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?’ with candidates for the presidency of the African Development Bank on Thursday, April 16th 2015, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., in Washington, DC.
The event is a public forum where candidates, the majority of whom have confirmed their participation, will share their visions for this vital institution and face questions from expert audiences across continents. The session will be moderated by Rajesh Mirchandani, former BBC anchor and now CGD Senior Director of Communications and Policy Outreach. The discussion will focus on key issues for the future of the institution, such as governance, portfolio, and modernization of the Bank.
We expect that this unique gathering will provide valuable insights into the candidates in advance of the May 28th election. It will also be webcast live around the world, with co-hosted events in Ghana and Benin.
The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra, Ghana, the Center for Global Development (CGD) in Washington DC, and the African School of Economics (ASE) in Cotonou, Benin, are hosting a special event ‘Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?’ with candidates for the presidency of the African Development Bank on Thursday, April 16th 2015, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., in Washington, DC.
The event is a public forum where candidates, the majority of whom have confirmed their participation, will share their visions for this vital institution and face questions from expert audiences across continents. The session will be moderated by Rajesh Mirchandani, former BBC anchor and now CGD Senior Director of Communications and Policy Outreach. The discussion will focus on key issues for the future of the institution, such as governance, portfolio, and modernization of the Bank.
We expect that this unique gathering will provide valuable insights into the candidates in advance of the May 28th election. It will also be webcast live around the world, with co-hosted events in Ghana and Benin.
published:14 Apr 2015
views:0
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. In this installment of Boing Boing tv's ongoing BBtv WORLD series, I travel to the West African nation of Benin to visit the Songhaï Center, a green tech project designed to develop a new generation of "agricultural entrepreneurs," and foster economic sustainability.
Benin is nestled between Ghana, Togo, and Nigeria along the continent's midwest coast -- this shore was historically known as the "Slave Coast," and Benin was a major center in export of slave labor to the Americas. Today, Benin's people are struggling with a cultural shift from a traditional, mostly agrarian society, to a more urban, industrialized economy -- and the largely impoverished country depends on foreign aid.
The Songhaï Center was founded in the mid-'80s by Father Godfrey Nzamujo, a Dominican priest and Nigerian native, on a few acres of swampland granted by Benin's former president. What began as an experiment in small-scale sustainable development to fight poverty has since become a popular institution, and a symbol of Africa's potential for self-determination and prosperity.
Aid creates dependence, but small businesses foster independence, the group's logic goes -- and unlike other anti-poverty projects, this one exports more than it imports: specialty food and beverage products produced here (cashew butter, cookies, fruit beverages) are sold and shipped to France and elsewhere around the world.
In this episode, we walk through the main Songhaï Center in Porto Novo, a coastal town near the Nigerian border, and we witness a variety of projects in action -- "integrated farming, biomass gasification, microenterprise and IT for rural communities." Here, agricultural and technical pursuits merge in uniquely African ways.
We see women hulling cashew nuts; mango soda whooshing into bottles in a soda bottling factory; barnyard critters (including the furry and tasty bush critters known as "sugar cane rats"); people sifting maize flour and baking fresh bread for sale; workers harvesting manioc, papayas, and giant mushrooms; and buzzing activity in the adjacent internet "telecentre."
Each of those parts interlock to form a massive, carefully-engineered, green tech puzzle: scrap metal is welded into parts that would cost too much to buy from overseas. Insects grown on scraps from the restaurant feed fish cultivated in the aquaculture area; water hyacinths at the edge of those pools help filter "black water" in the sewage system; solar panels power the internet cafe; coconut husks discarded in food production serve as a base on which to cultivate giant mushrooms. One area's waste becomes another component's fuel input, and the resulting products cost less than they would through contemporary, Western means.
There are 6 Songhaï Centers throughout Benin, and plans for opening more tech/agriculture hubs in Nigeria, Gabon, Congo, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea. They offer voice over internet and wifi at current sites in Benin, and plan to expand into rural telephone and ISP services, as the project grows.
-- Xeni Jardin
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. In this installment of Boing Boing tv's ongoing BBtv WORLD series, I travel to the West African nation of Benin to visit the Songhaï Center, a green tech project designed to develop a new generation of "agricultural entrepreneurs," and foster economic sustainability.
Benin is nestled between Ghana, Togo, and Nigeria along the continent's midwest coast -- this shore was historically known as the "Slave Coast," and Benin was a major center in export of slave labor to the Americas. Today, Benin's people are struggling with a cultural shift from a traditional, mostly agrarian society, to a more urban, industrialized economy -- and the largely impoverished country depends on foreign aid.
The Songhaï Center was founded in the mid-'80s by Father Godfrey Nzamujo, a Dominican priest and Nigerian native, on a few acres of swampland granted by Benin's former president. What began as an experiment in small-scale sustainable development to fight poverty has since become a popular institution, and a symbol of Africa's potential for self-determination and prosperity.
Aid creates dependence, but small businesses foster independence, the group's logic goes -- and unlike other anti-poverty projects, this one exports more than it imports: specialty food and beverage products produced here (cashew butter, cookies, fruit beverages) are sold and shipped to France and elsewhere around the world.
In this episode, we walk through the main Songhaï Center in Porto Novo, a coastal town near the Nigerian border, and we witness a variety of projects in action -- "integrated farming, biomass gasification, microenterprise and IT for rural communities." Here, agricultural and technical pursuits merge in uniquely African ways.
We see women hulling cashew nuts; mango soda whooshing into bottles in a soda bottling factory; barnyard critters (including the furry and tasty bush critters known as "sugar cane rats"); people sifting maize flour and baking fresh bread for sale; workers harvesting manioc, papayas, and giant mushrooms; and buzzing activity in the adjacent internet "telecentre."
Each of those parts interlock to form a massive, carefully-engineered, green tech puzzle: scrap metal is welded into parts that would cost too much to buy from overseas. Insects grown on scraps from the restaurant feed fish cultivated in the aquaculture area; water hyacinths at the edge of those pools help filter "black water" in the sewage system; solar panels power the internet cafe; coconut husks discarded in food production serve as a base on which to cultivate giant mushrooms. One area's waste becomes another component's fuel input, and the resulting products cost less than they would through contemporary, Western means.
There are 6 Songhaï Centers throughout Benin, and plans for opening more tech/agriculture hubs in Nigeria, Gabon, Congo, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea. They offer voice over internet and wifi at current sites in Benin, and plan to expand into rural telephone and ISP services, as the project grows.
-- Xeni Jardin
published:25 Sep 2008
views:10160
Decay of Benin rise of Dahomey Trans-Atlantic Slave trade part 2
Great Kingdom of Benin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdVIoaTq-5Q
One thing to point out again the article from Robin Law again Page 21
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Law_Historiography_of_the_Rise_of_Dahomey.pdf
"W.E.B. Dub Bois asserted that the evidence showed the supersession in West Africa of early coastal cultures characterized by city democracy and developed craft industries, by despotic militaristic empires such as Dahomey, and also Asante.)"
Dahomey Economy
http://stmarys.ca/~wmills/course316/7Dahomey.html
"- Dahomey had a monetary system: cowry shells were the basic currency, but trade goods were used also—guns, bolts of cloth etc.
- Europeans tried to take advantage of this currency; they brought so many cowry shells that the shells lost value (inflation). As a result, European trade goods became the basic currency used in the purchase of slaves....
- all trade with Europeans was a royal monopoly and guarded jealously by successive kings; kings never allowed Europeans to bypass and trade directly with people in the kingdom. As a military, predatory state, the costs of government and the military were high; thus,the king needed all the revenue from taxes and the profits of trade that he could get.
- Europeans and their influence were confined to one port on the coast—Whydah."
Wonders of the African World by Henry Louis Gates page 217
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0375709487/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_sr_2?pf_rd_p=304485901&pf;_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf;_rd_t=201&pf;_rd_i=B0000DG013&pf;_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf;_rd_r=0YH0JQ8VJ4CT28F7TKN9
The damaging effects of the slave trade were seen in the paralysis of courtly politics. Until 1670, King Tefizon of Allada opposed the unrestricted European trade in slaves. He had warned both the Dutch and the French that he wanted neither their ships nor their merchandise at his ports. At the same time, however, he faced opposition from sections of his court, and rebellion smoldered in his provinces. Jakin, a major port, had already broken away, hoping to monopolize trade with the Europeans. No sooner had it been brought back into the fold than Ouidah asserted its independence. The English arrived in Ouidah in 1681; the Dutch in 1682; and the Brandenburgers in 1684. There were numerous Portuguese and Brazilians living there. In 1704, the mélange of resident Europeans unilaterally declared Ouidah a free port and in 1708 enthroned King Huffon, then only a thirteen year old boy. The growing commerce in slaves rested in the hands of a few hereditary groups that themselves continually split into competing lawless factions. This chaos seemed to be spreading to Abomey
The African Slave Trade by Basil Davidson page 235-236
http://www.amazon.com/African-Slave-Trade-Basil-Davidson/dp/0316174386/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid;=1249864609&sr;=1-1
The Dutch accounts show that these wars were generally to Benins advantage up to the middle of the seventeenth century. But after that a steep decline set in. Earlier wars of conquest were now giving way to wars for slaves, and the fabric of Benin society seems also to have suffered from this. In 1700 the well-informed Dutch agent at Elmina, William Bosman, was writing home to Holland that Benin no longer deserved the name of city. Formerly this village was very thick and close-built, he told his employers in Amsterdam, but now the Houses stand like poor mens corn, widely distant from each other. By this time, Fage adds in a modern comment, the continual warfare was destroying the prosperity and even the structure of the state. Large areas of the country had become depopulated and uncultivated. The armies returned with fewer and fewer slaves and sometimes destroyed each other in conflicts for what little booty there was to be found.
The decay in Bini state power in any case continued, and fresh ways of manipulating or using that power at the center evidently failed to reverse the trend. The Atlantic trade could do nothing to help, but it seems that it did less to harm them in some other regions. War-captives were sold to the maritime traders who continued to visit the Benin rive, and possibly others were obtained by purchase from neighbors. But there is no evidence, Ryder tells us, that Benin ever organized a great slave-trading network similar to that which supplied the eastern delta of the Niger river, or indeed that Benin ever engaged in systematic raiding for captives. Ryder quotes an evidently characteristic case for 1798, when English ships bid for a total of nearly 20,000 captives in the eastern delta as against a mere thousand in the Benin river. Benin either could not or would not become a slave-trading state on the grand scale. If Benin continued to decay, it was from failure to carry through those modernizing adjustments which could have released new energies. Instead, a local priesthood acquired the power of something like a theocratic tyranny, and, with this, progress turned back upon itself.
Great Kingdom of Benin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdVIoaTq-5Q
One thing to point out again the article from Robin Law again Page 21
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Law_Historiography_of_the_Rise_of_Dahomey.pdf
"W.E.B. Dub Bois asserted that the evidence showed the supersession in West Africa of early coastal cultures characterized by city democracy and developed craft industries, by despotic militaristic empires such as Dahomey, and also Asante.)"
Dahomey Economy
http://stmarys.ca/~wmills/course316/7Dahomey.html
"- Dahomey had a monetary system: cowry shells were the basic currency, but trade goods were used also—guns, bolts of cloth etc.
- Europeans tried to take advantage of this currency; they brought so many cowry shells that the shells lost value (inflation). As a result, European trade goods became the basic currency used in the purchase of slaves....
- all trade with Europeans was a royal monopoly and guarded jealously by successive kings; kings never allowed Europeans to bypass and trade directly with people in the kingdom. As a military, predatory state, the costs of government and the military were high; thus,the king needed all the revenue from taxes and the profits of trade that he could get.
- Europeans and their influence were confined to one port on the coast—Whydah."
Wonders of the African World by Henry Louis Gates page 217
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0375709487/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_sr_2?pf_rd_p=304485901&pf;_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf;_rd_t=201&pf;_rd_i=B0000DG013&pf;_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf;_rd_r=0YH0JQ8VJ4CT28F7TKN9
The damaging effects of the slave trade were seen in the paralysis of courtly politics. Until 1670, King Tefizon of Allada opposed the unrestricted European trade in slaves. He had warned both the Dutch and the French that he wanted neither their ships nor their merchandise at his ports. At the same time, however, he faced opposition from sections of his court, and rebellion smoldered in his provinces. Jakin, a major port, had already broken away, hoping to monopolize trade with the Europeans. No sooner had it been brought back into the fold than Ouidah asserted its independence. The English arrived in Ouidah in 1681; the Dutch in 1682; and the Brandenburgers in 1684. There were numerous Portuguese and Brazilians living there. In 1704, the mélange of resident Europeans unilaterally declared Ouidah a free port and in 1708 enthroned King Huffon, then only a thirteen year old boy. The growing commerce in slaves rested in the hands of a few hereditary groups that themselves continually split into competing lawless factions. This chaos seemed to be spreading to Abomey
The African Slave Trade by Basil Davidson page 235-236
http://www.amazon.com/African-Slave-Trade-Basil-Davidson/dp/0316174386/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid;=1249864609&sr;=1-1
The Dutch accounts show that these wars were generally to Benins advantage up to the middle of the seventeenth century. But after that a steep decline set in. Earlier wars of conquest were now giving way to wars for slaves, and the fabric of Benin society seems also to have suffered from this. In 1700 the well-informed Dutch agent at Elmina, William Bosman, was writing home to Holland that Benin no longer deserved the name of city. Formerly this village was very thick and close-built, he told his employers in Amsterdam, but now the Houses stand like poor mens corn, widely distant from each other. By this time, Fage adds in a modern comment, the continual warfare was destroying the prosperity and even the structure of the state. Large areas of the country had become depopulated and uncultivated. The armies returned with fewer and fewer slaves and sometimes destroyed each other in conflicts for what little booty there was to be found.
The decay in Bini state power in any case continued, and fresh ways of manipulating or using that power at the center evidently failed to reverse the trend. The Atlantic trade could do nothing to help, but it seems that it did less to harm them in some other regions. War-captives were sold to the maritime traders who continued to visit the Benin rive, and possibly others were obtained by purchase from neighbors. But there is no evidence, Ryder tells us, that Benin ever organized a great slave-trading network similar to that which supplied the eastern delta of the Niger river, or indeed that Benin ever engaged in systematic raiding for captives. Ryder quotes an evidently characteristic case for 1798, when English ships bid for a total of nearly 20,000 captives in the eastern delta as against a mere thousand in the Benin river. Benin either could not or would not become a slave-trading state on the grand scale. If Benin continued to decay, it was from failure to carry through those modernizing adjustments which could have released new energies. Instead, a local priesthood acquired the power of something like a theocratic tyranny, and, with this, progress turned back upon itself.
published:10 Aug 2009
views:7843
Global Roundtable - GFDD and H. E. Jean-Francis R. Zinsou (Permanent Representative of Benin)
GFDD/FUNGLODE hosts Global Roundtable at the United Nations General Assembly
New York, 4/19/2011
On April 16, GFDD/FUNGLODE convened its fourth Global Roundtable at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, in close association with the UN Association of the DR (UNA-DR), who was organizing its fifth New York Model United Nations taking place April 16 - 21, 2011.
The Roundtable presented the Permanent Representative of Benin to the United Nations, His Excellency Jean-Francis R. Zinsou, who also serves as co-facilitator for the consultations on the organization of United Nations Conference of Youth in 2011. This special session focused on important youth initiatives at the UN, with an emphasis on encouraging young people to dedicate themselves to taking positive steps towards achieving many of the youth-related UN Millennium Development Goals.
The Ambassador first spoke about Benin, one of the strongest democracies in the African continent, and a nation fully committed to the MDG''s. Benin, like the DR, represents one of the pilot countries in the UN MDG program.
Two months ago, Benin''s President Boni Yayi was re-elected in a landslide victory for a second term in office. He immediately announced a number of popular measures including free and compulsory basic education including the establishment of 6,000 new classrooms creating employment for 20,000 teachers. He also introduced free maternal child health benefits, such as malaria treatment.
To stimulate the economy and take positive steps to eradicate poverty, President Yayi also introduced micro-credit initiatives. He has placed emphasis on the importance of stability and a sound legal system as a foundational framework for development and for attracting foreign investment, particularly in the growth area of ICTs and Benin's tourism industry.
Benin recently opened up to the outside world with the launch of a satellite TV station broadcasting Benin's national programs in the Americas. Not only has this allowed Benin nationals living outside the country to have more access to information about their homeland, but it is also expected that this new access will be beneficial both in terms of trade and economic development.
Following the discussion, Ambassador Zinsou, in his capacity as co-facilitator on the Conference On Youth, then took questions from young individuals representing the Dominican Model United Nations. He explained that one of the major achievements of the UN has been to bring youth-related issues to the forefront in addition to the considerable progress made in the areas of health and education. With reference to the future, he highlighted the challenges presented by climate change, natural disasters and the effect both have on young people in Benin and around the world.
The UN Conference on Youth takes place in June, 2011.
About the Roundtable
GFDD Global Roundtable is a new initiative providing a valuable forum for discussion, analysis, and exchange of ideas from distinguished members of the international community in an effort to spread the news, knowledge and understanding of other countries, global issues and work of different United Nations bodies to its audience in the Dominican Republic, the US and around the world. It is made possible with the partnership with South-South News.
GFDD/FUNGLODE hosts Global Roundtable at the United Nations General Assembly
New York, 4/19/2011
On April 16, GFDD/FUNGLODE convened its fourth Global Roundtable at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, in close association with the UN Association of the DR (UNA-DR), who was organizing its fifth New York Model United Nations taking place April 16 - 21, 2011.
The Roundtable presented the Permanent Representative of Benin to the United Nations, His Excellency Jean-Francis R. Zinsou, who also serves as co-facilitator for the consultations on the organization of United Nations Conference of Youth in 2011. This special session focused on important youth initiatives at the UN, with an emphasis on encouraging young people to dedicate themselves to taking positive steps towards achieving many of the youth-related UN Millennium Development Goals.
The Ambassador first spoke about Benin, one of the strongest democracies in the African continent, and a nation fully committed to the MDG''s. Benin, like the DR, represents one of the pilot countries in the UN MDG program.
Two months ago, Benin''s President Boni Yayi was re-elected in a landslide victory for a second term in office. He immediately announced a number of popular measures including free and compulsory basic education including the establishment of 6,000 new classrooms creating employment for 20,000 teachers. He also introduced free maternal child health benefits, such as malaria treatment.
To stimulate the economy and take positive steps to eradicate poverty, President Yayi also introduced micro-credit initiatives. He has placed emphasis on the importance of stability and a sound legal system as a foundational framework for development and for attracting foreign investment, particularly in the growth area of ICTs and Benin's tourism industry.
Benin recently opened up to the outside world with the launch of a satellite TV station broadcasting Benin's national programs in the Americas. Not only has this allowed Benin nationals living outside the country to have more access to information about their homeland, but it is also expected that this new access will be beneficial both in terms of trade and economic development.
Following the discussion, Ambassador Zinsou, in his capacity as co-facilitator on the Conference On Youth, then took questions from young individuals representing the Dominican Model United Nations. He explained that one of the major achievements of the UN has been to bring youth-related issues to the forefront in addition to the considerable progress made in the areas of health and education. With reference to the future, he highlighted the challenges presented by climate change, natural disasters and the effect both have on young people in Benin and around the world.
The UN Conference on Youth takes place in June, 2011.
About the Roundtable
GFDD Global Roundtable is a new initiative providing a valuable forum for discussion, analysis, and exchange of ideas from distinguished members of the international community in an effort to spread the news, knowledge and understanding of other countries, global issues and work of different United Nations bodies to its audience in the Dominican Republic, the US and around the world. It is made possible with the partnership with South-South News.
We are a fast growing indigenous company in the Geology and Mining Sector of the economy. Since we started we have been working hard on the improvement of our services by acquiring necessary experience to serve better the developmental needs of our country.
We are resolved to continue to improve our services for the Geological, water resources and Mining industry in Nigeria
We are a fast growing indigenous company in the Geology and Mining Sector of the economy. Since we started we have been working hard on the improvement of our services by acquiring necessary experience to serve better the developmental needs of our country.
We are resolved to continue to improve our services for the Geological, water resources and Mining industry in Nigeria
published:03 Apr 2014
views:10
Africa 2013 - Africa 2063 From Fragility to Stability
http://www.weforum.org/ Africa 2063: From Fragility to Stability As African economies transform over the next 50 years, how will political and geopolitical t...
http://www.weforum.org/ Africa 2063: From Fragility to Stability As African economies transform over the next 50 years, how will political and geopolitical t...
2012! China! China! Will for the first time fall in their economy because God will not allow them to support Russia. China made his mind to support Russia, f...
2012! China! China! Will for the first time fall in their economy because God will not allow them to support Russia. China made his mind to support Russia, f...
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. Today's Boing Boing tv is an installment of our ongoing BBtv WORLD series, in which we bring you first-person glimpses of life around the globe. Today: an ambient exploration of the creatures rustling around in a West African wildlife preserve at dawn.
I traveled to Benin not long ago, and I shot this video on a small handheld digital camcorder. This episode of our daily show is a little experiment in trying to convey what this place feels like, first-person, without too many words.
The Pendjari Biosphere lies in Benin's remote rural northwest, along the border of Burkina Faso. Despite poaching and environmental damage, it's still home to a diverse number of species -- elephants, lions, monkeys, cheetah, and around 300 species of birds. We traveled here during the dry season, when animal spotting is easiest. Here is what we saw at dawn (the time of day when critters all come out to the watering holes and rivers).
Poaching is still a big problem in this area, and organized trophy hunting for foreign tourists is still legal and in demand here (mostly visitors from France; Benin is a former French colony and French is the official language). Lion hunts are a lucrative trade in this extremely poor region, where most people are subsistence farmers.
But eco-tourism and less-invasive safari experiences are becoming more important to the local economy here, and offer a more sustainable future.
Note: don't miss the epic baboon ball-grab at 0:35, and the mama elephant ripping tree branches off and getting ready to kill us around 1:50. We were too close to her kids, and we were having a hard time leaving quickly. Do not taunt happy-fun elephant.
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. Today's Boing Boing tv is an installment of our ongoing BBtv WORLD series, in which we bring you first-person glimpses of life around the globe. Today: an ambient exploration of the creatures rustling around in a West African wildlife preserve at dawn.
I traveled to Benin not long ago, and I shot this video on a small handheld digital camcorder. This episode of our daily show is a little experiment in trying to convey what this place feels like, first-person, without too many words.
The Pendjari Biosphere lies in Benin's remote rural northwest, along the border of Burkina Faso. Despite poaching and environmental damage, it's still home to a diverse number of species -- elephants, lions, monkeys, cheetah, and around 300 species of birds. We traveled here during the dry season, when animal spotting is easiest. Here is what we saw at dawn (the time of day when critters all come out to the watering holes and rivers).
Poaching is still a big problem in this area, and organized trophy hunting for foreign tourists is still legal and in demand here (mostly visitors from France; Benin is a former French colony and French is the official language). Lion hunts are a lucrative trade in this extremely poor region, where most people are subsistence farmers.
But eco-tourism and less-invasive safari experiences are becoming more important to the local economy here, and offer a more sustainable future.
Note: don't miss the epic baboon ball-grab at 0:35, and the mama elephant ripping tree branches off and getting ready to kill us around 1:50. We were too close to her kids, and we were having a hard time leaving quickly. Do not taunt happy-fun elephant.
One of the most incredible projects I witnessed on my trip in Benin. A village of working women who sing while they work in Porto-Novo, creating medicine for...
One of the most incredible projects I witnessed on my trip in Benin. A village of working women who sing while they work in Porto-Novo, creating medicine for...
VOA news for Sunday, February 8th, 2015
Thanks to http://gandalf.ddo.jp/ for audio and text
From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Vincent Bruce reporting. The stage is set for renewed Ukraine-Russia discussions on Sunday.
The U.S. State Department says a French-German plan to end the fighting in eastern Ukraine is based on September's failed cease-fire but with more details on timing.
French President François Hollande has described the plan as "one of the last chances" to end the fighting in Ukraine.
In Munich at an international security conference Saturday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said it is unclear if the plan will succeed.
She also voiced opposition to the idea of Western arms deliveries to Ukraine, saying more weapons will not resolve the conflict. But [the U.S. official denied] a U.S. official denied there was any rift between the United States and Europe on the possibility of supplying arms to Ukrainian forces.
Sunday, French President François Hollande, German Chancellor Merkel and Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko will hold 4-way peace talks by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
French sources say Saturday's talks will focus the reviving a tattered peace deal signed in September that has since been discarded by both sides.
Ukraine insists any new accord must honor cease-fire boundaries agreed on in September and can not include territory gained by rebels in recent weeks of heavy fighting.
Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko: "We have a basis for the whole negotiation. It's the Minsk agreement. I mean Minsk protocol, Minsk memorandum. We have a(n) absolutely clear distance from which we should withdraw the heavy artillery, mortar, tanks and other military technique.”
Turkey's intelligence service chief, 1 of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's closest allies, has resigned to run in parliamentary elections in June.
The resignation of Hakan Fidan was reported Saturday.
This is VOA news.
Jordanian fighter jets struck Islamic State targets for a third straight day Saturday as the militants' claim that a Jordanian airstrike killed an American hostage remained unconfirmed.
Jordan launched the raids to avenge the killing of a Jordanian pilot the Islamic State group captured in Syria in December.
Both Jordan and the United Arab Emirates are members of the U.S.-led coalition attacking the militants in their captured territory in Iraq and Syria.
The family of Kayla Mueller, a supposedly killed American hostage, released a statement Friday, saying they were still hopeful that she is alive.
The majority leader in Kenya's parliament, Adel Duale, has called for an investigation into the killing of a Kenyan lawmaker shot early Saturday in Nairobi along with his 2 bodyguards and a driver.
Parliament leader Adel Duale described the shooting of George Muchai of the Kabete party as heinous and barbaric. A police officer said the killing looked like an execution-style hit.
Muchai was returning from a family gathering when gunmen attacked his car.
Thousands of Yemenis took to the streets Saturday to protest the Shiite rebel takeover of the country.
Yemen's Gulf neighbors denounced the Shiite power grab. Yemen's Gulf neighbors, the 6-nation Gulf Cooperation Council led by Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and the [Arab] United Arab Emirates, labeled the Houthi rebels' actions an unacceptable "escalation.”
Ali Al-Yazidi, leader of the Nasseri political party, said his organization rejects the declaration by the Houthi militia Friday.
Rebel leader Abdel-Malak al-Houthi defended the takeover in a speech Saturday, saying it filled a political "vacuum" and was in the interest of the Yemeni people.
U.S. President Barack Obama says with the right policies, the U.S. economy can continue to grow to 1 where those who work hard can get ahead.
In his weekly address Saturday, Mr. Obama said the $4 trillion spending proposal he sent to Congress Monday is built on middle-class economics.
"It helps families afford childcare, health care, college, paid leave at work, homeownership, and saving for retirement, and it could put $1000s of dollars back into the pockets of a working family each year.”
The President said he will work with anyone, Republican or Democrat, who is willing to "give working families more security in a time of constant economic change.”
Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Niger have announced plans to assist Nigeria in their fight against the Islamic extremist group, Boko Haram.
Delegates from the 4 West African nations revealed their plan at the end of 3 days of talks in Cameroon Saturday. Experts from the African Union and United Nations also participated.
More on these stories at our website voanews.com. I'm Vincent Bruce in Washington.
That's the latest world news from VOA.
VOA news for Sunday, February 8th, 2015
Thanks to http://gandalf.ddo.jp/ for audio and text
From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Vincent Bruce reporting. The stage is set for renewed Ukraine-Russia discussions on Sunday.
The U.S. State Department says a French-German plan to end the fighting in eastern Ukraine is based on September's failed cease-fire but with more details on timing.
French President François Hollande has described the plan as "one of the last chances" to end the fighting in Ukraine.
In Munich at an international security conference Saturday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said it is unclear if the plan will succeed.
She also voiced opposition to the idea of Western arms deliveries to Ukraine, saying more weapons will not resolve the conflict. But [the U.S. official denied] a U.S. official denied there was any rift between the United States and Europe on the possibility of supplying arms to Ukrainian forces.
Sunday, French President François Hollande, German Chancellor Merkel and Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko will hold 4-way peace talks by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
French sources say Saturday's talks will focus the reviving a tattered peace deal signed in September that has since been discarded by both sides.
Ukraine insists any new accord must honor cease-fire boundaries agreed on in September and can not include territory gained by rebels in recent weeks of heavy fighting.
Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko: "We have a basis for the whole negotiation. It's the Minsk agreement. I mean Minsk protocol, Minsk memorandum. We have a(n) absolutely clear distance from which we should withdraw the heavy artillery, mortar, tanks and other military technique.”
Turkey's intelligence service chief, 1 of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's closest allies, has resigned to run in parliamentary elections in June.
The resignation of Hakan Fidan was reported Saturday.
This is VOA news.
Jordanian fighter jets struck Islamic State targets for a third straight day Saturday as the militants' claim that a Jordanian airstrike killed an American hostage remained unconfirmed.
Jordan launched the raids to avenge the killing of a Jordanian pilot the Islamic State group captured in Syria in December.
Both Jordan and the United Arab Emirates are members of the U.S.-led coalition attacking the militants in their captured territory in Iraq and Syria.
The family of Kayla Mueller, a supposedly killed American hostage, released a statement Friday, saying they were still hopeful that she is alive.
The majority leader in Kenya's parliament, Adel Duale, has called for an investigation into the killing of a Kenyan lawmaker shot early Saturday in Nairobi along with his 2 bodyguards and a driver.
Parliament leader Adel Duale described the shooting of George Muchai of the Kabete party as heinous and barbaric. A police officer said the killing looked like an execution-style hit.
Muchai was returning from a family gathering when gunmen attacked his car.
Thousands of Yemenis took to the streets Saturday to protest the Shiite rebel takeover of the country.
Yemen's Gulf neighbors denounced the Shiite power grab. Yemen's Gulf neighbors, the 6-nation Gulf Cooperation Council led by Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and the [Arab] United Arab Emirates, labeled the Houthi rebels' actions an unacceptable "escalation.”
Ali Al-Yazidi, leader of the Nasseri political party, said his organization rejects the declaration by the Houthi militia Friday.
Rebel leader Abdel-Malak al-Houthi defended the takeover in a speech Saturday, saying it filled a political "vacuum" and was in the interest of the Yemeni people.
U.S. President Barack Obama says with the right policies, the U.S. economy can continue to grow to 1 where those who work hard can get ahead.
In his weekly address Saturday, Mr. Obama said the $4 trillion spending proposal he sent to Congress Monday is built on middle-class economics.
"It helps families afford childcare, health care, college, paid leave at work, homeownership, and saving for retirement, and it could put $1000s of dollars back into the pockets of a working family each year.”
The President said he will work with anyone, Republican or Democrat, who is willing to "give working families more security in a time of constant economic change.”
Benin, Cameroon, Chad, Niger have announced plans to assist Nigeria in their fight against the Islamic extremist group, Boko Haram.
Delegates from the 4 West African nations revealed their plan at the end of 3 days of talks in Cameroon Saturday. Experts from the African Union and United Nations also participated.
More on these stories at our website voanews.com. I'm Vincent Bruce in Washington.
That's the latest world news from VOA.
published:08 Feb 2015
views:11
African Cashew Alliance (ACA) World Cashew Festival & Expo 2012, Cotonou, Benin
The African Cashew initiative (ACi) actively supports the African Cashew Alliance (ACA) in the organization and implementation of their Annual Cashew Conference where cashew farmers, processors, traders, exporters, services providers, retailers, equipment manufacturers, bankers, and government representatives convene to shape tomorrow's cashew industry. Each annual World Cashew Festival & Expo is a unique platform from which to do business, exchange practices, and learn from experts from around the world. The World Cashew Expo offers many opportunities to meet with equipment manufacturers and service providers. The African cashew sector offers a huge business potential to be tapped by local and foreign investors.
The African Cashew initiative (ACi) constitutes a new era of multi-stakeholder partnership in development cooperation. The initiative is jointly funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), as well as several private and public entities. With GIZ in the lead, Fairmatch Support (FMS) and TechnoServe (TNS) are implementing and following the project activities.
The African Cashew initiative (ACi) actively supports the African Cashew Alliance (ACA) in the organization and implementation of their Annual Cashew Conference where cashew farmers, processors, traders, exporters, services providers, retailers, equipment manufacturers, bankers, and government representatives convene to shape tomorrow's cashew industry. Each annual World Cashew Festival & Expo is a unique platform from which to do business, exchange practices, and learn from experts from around the world. The World Cashew Expo offers many opportunities to meet with equipment manufacturers and service providers. The African cashew sector offers a huge business potential to be tapped by local and foreign investors.
The African Cashew initiative (ACi) constitutes a new era of multi-stakeholder partnership in development cooperation. The initiative is jointly funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), as well as several private and public entities. With GIZ in the lead, Fairmatch Support (FMS) and TechnoServe (TNS) are implementing and following the project activities.
Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin - Country Profile Benin - Republic of Benin...
The economic and commercial attaché at the Benin Embassy, Mr Adegnandjou Thomas says Benin...
published:06 Aug 2014
Benin Economic Outlook
Benin Economic Outlook
The economic and commercial attaché at the Benin Embassy, Mr Adegnandjou Thomas says Benin's economy continues to show signs of resilience even in the face of global uncertainties. To ensure that trade is scaled up in the country and the ECOWAS bloc, Benin is joining hands with Burkina Faso to construct a railway line that will help cut off the high transportation cost associated with roads. He said this during the celebration of Benin's 54th Independence Day in Accra.
published:06 Aug 2014
views:57
4:07
Idriss Daouda, Minister of Economy and Finance, Benin
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Rising sea levels have destroyed many homes, hotels, roads and harvests and threaten to en...
published:10 Mar 2015
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Coastal Erosion Threatens Economic Activities in Benin
Rising sea levels have destroyed many homes, hotels, roads and harvests and threaten to engulf large areas of Benin's capital. Cotonou, which sits on alluvial sand at most four metres deep, drives most of Benin's economy, in addition to being a regional trade hub
published:10 Mar 2015
views:42
29:42
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Deadly Chicken: How second-hand frozen chicken from Europe is poisoning the Beninese econo...
published:23 Feb 2015
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Europe's Cast Off Chickens Harming Benin
Deadly Chicken: How second-hand frozen chicken from Europe is poisoning the Beninese economy
How Corporate pig-farms are ruining Romania: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_whul7rHVk
Journeyman's cost of globalisation playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlGSlkijht5iOsH-UDVXxMTetNYBCfOjm
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Benin's impoverished population survive on imported, cheap frozen chickens from Europe and the US. But relying on cast-off chickens is putting local farmers out of work and posing serious health risks.
In Benin, 150,000 tonnes of foreign poultry passes through the main port every year. For the countries of origin, it is a convenient way to offload tough old hens. While for the people of Benin, the cheap and widely available chicken is a welcome source of meat. "Laying hens are a bit tough for European tastes", says importer Kenneth Adiho, "but we love them". However, the imported meat has dealt a heavy blow to local farmers. Once a profession for young entrepreneurs, Agriculture is now doomed. "The importing of frozen chicken is killing the youth and they will react by flocking to the Western world", predicts one out-of-work farmer. In a country where nearly 50% are under 15 this could have serious implications. Moreover, defrosted, exposed to sunlight, and then refrozen, the poultry risks being infected by bacteria that can cause diseases like salmonella. There is yet to be a national survey on the dangers of the meat and in the markets sanitation inspections rarely take place.
Wild Angle - Ref 6369
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published:23 Feb 2015
views:245
3:37
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that the PDP-led government at the Federal level w...
published:27 Sep 2014
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan pays courtesy call on Oba of Benin
President Goodluck Jonathan has assured that the PDP-led government at the Federal level will do more to improve the quality of roads and other sectors of the economy in Edo State.
published:27 Sep 2014
views:5623
8:56
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Promoting the installation of a water well drilling machine to eliminate waterborne sickne...
published:27 Sep 2007
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Benin, Africa - Fresh Water Well Project Short Documentary
Promoting the installation of a water well drilling machine to eliminate waterborne sickness that was killing many people.
Background:
Present day Benin was the site of Dahomey, a prominent West African kingdom that rose in the 15th century. The territory became a French Colony in 1872 and achieved independence on 1 August 1960, as the Republic of Benin. A succession of military governments ended in 1972 with the rise to power of Mathieu KEREKOU and the establishment of a government based on Marxist-Leninist principles. A move to representative government began in 1989. Two years later, free elections ushered in former Prime Minister Nicephore SOGLO as president, marking the first successful transfer of power in Africa from a dictatorship to a democracy. KEREKOU was returned to power by elections held in 1996 and 2001, though some irregularities were alleged. KEREKOU stepped down at the end of his second term in 2006 and was succeeded by Thomas YAYI Boni, a political outsider and independent. YAYI has begun a high profile fight against corruption and has strongly promoted accelerating Benin's economic growth.
Economy - overview:
The economy of Benin remains underdeveloped and dependent on subsistence agriculture, cotton production, and regional trade. Growth in real output has averaged around 4% in the past three years, but rapid population growth has offset much of this increase. Inflation has subsided over the past several years. In order to raise growth, Benin plans to attract more foreign investment, place more emphasis on tourism, facilitate the development of new food processing systems and agricultural products, and encourage new information and communication technology. Specific projects to improve the business climate by reforms to the land tenure system, the commercial justice system, and the financial sector were included in Benin's $307 million Millennium Challenge Account grant signed in February 2006. The 2001 privatization policy continues in telecommunications, water, electricity, and agriculture though the government annulled the privatization of Benin's state cotton company in November 2007 after the discovery of irregularities in the bidding process. The Paris Club and bilateral creditors have eased the external debt situation, with Benin benefiting from a G-8 debt reduction announced in July 2005, while pressing for more rapid structural reforms. An insufficient electrical supply continues to adversely affect Benin's economic growth though the government recently has taken steps to increase domestic power production.
Source: cia world factbook cia.gov
published:27 Sep 2007
views:11080
45:08
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari, was on a thr...
published:12 Jun 2014
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari
Benin Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs, H.E. Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari, was on a three-day visit to Denmark's capital, Copenhagen, for a session of negotiations aimed at strengthening economic cooperation between Denmark and Benin Republic in the fields of trade and investment.
Dr. Nassirou Bako-Arifari was accompanied by H.E. Mrs Martine Françoise Adjouavi Dossa, Minister for Maritime Economy and Port Infrastructures, H.E. Mrs Mariam Aladji Boni Diallo, Special Adviser for Diplomatic Affairs to the Head of State, Mr Jean-Baptiste Satchivi, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Benin (CCIB) and 8-strong business delegation.Read more on : www.afroscandic.com
published:12 Jun 2014
views:60
2:23
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
The excerpt shows that Benin was able to keep it's industries as Richard Burton pointed ou...
published:13 Aug 2009
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
Interesting article - Benin was never a big player in the slave trade
The excerpt shows that Benin was able to keep it's industries as Richard Burton pointed out
This is just an article I found and wanted to share.
Also read "Early Kongo-Portuguese Relations: A New Interpretation" by John Thornton
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Thornton_Early_Kongo_Portuguese_Relations.pdf
page 5
"The fact that Portugal possessed more developed marine technology, firearms , and building technology--and these were the very things that Kongo most wanted from Europe--does not necessarily imply that Portugal had adecisive structural advantage over Kongo. In more fundamental ways Kongo and Portugal were more or less on the same economic level"
"The Slave Trade, Depopulation and Human Sacrifice in Benin History" James D. Graham
http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/cea_0008-0055_1965_num_5_18_3035#
322-323
"That this "falling off in the trade was severly felt by the people of Bénin," was demonstrated by the Oba's request, in 1838, that Moffat and Smith settle "that palaver" with the king of England. Although Moffat interpreted the Oba's request as a référence to British interférence with the slave trade, it is more reasonable to assume that the Oba was actually troubled by the general "falling off" in all trade, including ivory and palm oil, which was explained by Captain Owen.
Richard Burton observed, in 1862, that it was "a hopeless task to restore commerce to Bénin." Since the Bini wove their own cotton cloth and brewed their own wine, Burton thought that they "seemed to care little for the suspension of trade: it became painfully évident that they could stand the ordeal better than we could." Indeed, Oba Adolo accepted the abolition of the slave trade "as a. fait accompli, and never even alludes to its revival." Burton also reported that the factors at Gwato were unscrupulous, and he recommended that their factories be abandoned and razed to the ground. Apparently, his suggestion was followed, for Gallwey, in 1893, said that there had been no factories at Gwato "until very recently. " Palm oil, agreed Burton and Gallwey, was then the primary export. The latter also noted that the Itsekiri "do their best to obstruct" direct trade with Bénin proper, and that the inland waterways leading to Gwato were very dangerous because of snags, rapid current, and sunken trees.
An overall view of the period, between 1486-1897, yields the conclusion that the European slave trade was seldom, if ever, of considérable importance to Bénin proper."
The bellow looks into the economy of a slave trading society (Dahomey). This needs more investigation especially the question how did they get hooked on the slave trade. I actually see guns as mostly as tools of the trade (slave trade) so guns were purchased with the aim of capturing more slaves and buying other goods
"Dahomey and the Slave Trade: Reflections of the Historiography of the Rise of Dahomey" pages 24-25
http://www.fiu.edu/~ogundira/Law_Historiography_of_the_Rise_of_Dahomey.pdf
"calculation by Patrick Manning (1982) would raise the share of the Atlantic trade in the national income to 15 percent, and both sets of figures must be regarded as having an essentially illustrative rather than a probative value. Assessment of the importance of the Atlantic trade must also, of course, be based upon qualitative as well as on quantitative considerations, and account needs to be taken of the crucial role played for the Dahomean state not only by imported firearms (whose importance Peuket tends to discount) but also by imported luxury items, which could be distributed to attract and secure the allegiance of followers, and by the cowry shells which served as currency in local markets. The importance of imported goods in royal largesse was already clear in the 1720s, when Bulfinch Lamb noted that the king of Dahomey gives Booges [cowries] like dirt, and Brandy like water. The importance of cowry shells should especially be stressed: in the second half of the seventeenth century, it appears that between a third and a half of the value of imports into the Slave Coast was normally in cowries. It is somewhat ironic that Peukert points to the existence of a flourishing local exchange economy in Dahomey as part of his argument for the downgrading of the significance of overseas trade. But the flourishing local trade, lubricated by a currency of imported cowry shells, was evidently, in large measure, itself a consequence of the booming Atlantic trade"
Saint Mary's University:
http://stmarys.ca/~wmills/course316/7Dahomey.html
"- Dahomey had a monetary system: cowry shells were the basic currency, but trade goods were used also—guns, bolts of cloth etc.
- Europeans tried to take advantage of this currency; they brought so many cowry shells that the shells lost value (inflation). As a result, European trade goods became the basic currency used in the purchase of slaves"
published:13 Aug 2009
views:702
1:59
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com
This is the summary of Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Poli...
published:23 Oct 2012
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
History Book Review: Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regim...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com
This is the summary of Benin the Congo Burkina Faso: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series) by Christopher Allen, Michael Radu.
published:23 Oct 2012
views:69
1:12
Benin Labour Dispute
Benin President Boni Yayi has called for a strategic dialogue to overcome the sociopolitic...
Benin President Boni Yayi has called for a strategic dialogue to overcome the sociopolitical tension that has gripped the country. Benin has been in the thro...
The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra, Ghana, the Center for Global Development...
published:14 Apr 2015
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?
The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) in Accra, Ghana, the Center for Global Development (CGD) in Washington DC, and the African School of Economics (ASE) in Cotonou, Benin, are hosting a special event ‘Who Will Lead the African Development Bank?’ with candidates for the presidency of the African Development Bank on Thursday, April 16th 2015, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., in Washington, DC.
The event is a public forum where candidates, the majority of whom have confirmed their participation, will share their visions for this vital institution and face questions from expert audiences across continents. The session will be moderated by Rajesh Mirchandani, former BBC anchor and now CGD Senior Director of Communications and Policy Outreach. The discussion will focus on key issues for the future of the institution, such as governance, portfolio, and modernization of the Bank.
We expect that this unique gathering will provide valuable insights into the candidates in advance of the May 28th election. It will also be webcast live around the world, with co-hosted events in Ghana and Benin.
published:14 Apr 2015
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BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. In this installment of Boing Boing tv's ongoing BBt...
published:25 Sep 2008
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv World: Green tech and internet in West Africa
BBtv online: http://tv.boingboing.net. In this installment of Boing Boing tv's ongoing BBtv WORLD series, I travel to the West African nation of Benin to visit the Songhaï Center, a green tech project designed to develop a new generation of "agricultural entrepreneurs," and foster economic sustainability.
Benin is nestled between Ghana, Togo, and Nigeria along the continent's midwest coast -- this shore was historically known as the "Slave Coast," and Benin was a major center in export of slave labor to the Americas. Today, Benin's people are struggling with a cultural shift from a traditional, mostly agrarian society, to a more urban, industrialized economy -- and the largely impoverished country depends on foreign aid.
The Songhaï Center was founded in the mid-'80s by Father Godfrey Nzamujo, a Dominican priest and Nigerian native, on a few acres of swampland granted by Benin's former president. What began as an experiment in small-scale sustainable development to fight poverty has since become a popular institution, and a symbol of Africa's potential for self-determination and prosperity.
Aid creates dependence, but small businesses foster independence, the group's logic goes -- and unlike other anti-poverty projects, this one exports more than it imports: specialty food and beverage products produced here (cashew butter, cookies, fruit beverages) are sold and shipped to France and elsewhere around the world.
In this episode, we walk through the main Songhaï Center in Porto Novo, a coastal town near the Nigerian border, and we witness a variety of projects in action -- "integrated farming, biomass gasification, microenterprise and IT for rural communities." Here, agricultural and technical pursuits merge in uniquely African ways.
We see women hulling cashew nuts; mango soda whooshing into bottles in a soda bottling factory; barnyard critters (including the furry and tasty bush critters known as "sugar cane rats"); people sifting maize flour and baking fresh bread for sale; workers harvesting manioc, papayas, and giant mushrooms; and buzzing activity in the adjacent internet "telecentre."
Each of those parts interlock to form a massive, carefully-engineered, green tech puzzle: scrap metal is welded into parts that would cost too much to buy from overseas. Insects grown on scraps from the restaurant feed fish cultivated in the aquaculture area; water hyacinths at the edge of those pools help filter "black water" in the sewage system; solar panels power the internet cafe; coconut husks discarded in food production serve as a base on which to cultivate giant mushrooms. One area's waste becomes another component's fuel input, and the resulting products cost less than they would through contemporary, Western means.
There are 6 Songhaï Centers throughout Benin, and plans for opening more tech/agriculture hubs in Nigeria, Gabon, Congo, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea. They offer voice over internet and wifi at current sites in Benin, and plan to expand into rural telephone and ISP services, as the project grows.
-- Xeni Jardin
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