Alphabetical           State by State
 Finance Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Finance
 Advice
 Banking
 Bankruptcy
 Bonds
 Chats and Forums
 Conventions and Conferences
 Corporate Profiles and Reports
 Currency
 Earnings Calendars
 Exchanges
 Financial Services
 Financing
 Futures and Options
 Hard Assets
 Information Media
 Initial Public Offerings
 Insurance
 Investing
 Investment Models
 Investment Picks
 Motley Fool
 MSN MoneyCentral
 News and Media
 Organizations
 Reference and Guides
 Retirement Planning
 Small-Cap Investing
 Socially Responsible Investing
 Technical Analysis
 Usenet
 Venture Capital
 Web Directories
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Rich-Poor Divide Grows in Equatorial Guinea's Capital  
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 1:07 PM

With rising oil prices, oil exporters like the lightly-populated central African country of Equatorial Guinea, are awash with new revenue....


With rising oil prices, oil exporters like the lightly-populated central African country of Equatorial Guinea, are awash with new revenue. Here, a new modern capital called Malabo II is being built, but many living in nearby slums without piped water or electricity feel left out. VOA's Nico Colombant reports on the growing divide between rich and poor in sub-Saharan Africa's third biggest oil producer.

Workers slowly pave Malabo II
Workers slowly pave Malabo II
On a hill overlooking the capital on the island of Bioko, construction workers dig into asphalt they are rearranging for a road that leads to a new bridge, next to a new stadium, conference center, government buildings, parliament and presidential palace.

But in a slum not far away, a woman is angry because the water pipe she usually accesses behind her shed is not working for a third straight day.

Clothes pile up in a muddy heap. Children run naked.

The woman refuses to give her name or a full interview.

She says it is obvious she has nothing at all. "Nothing, nothing," she repeats.

People are afraid to speak here. When giving accreditation to foreign journalists, officials at the Information and Tourism Ministry say slums are off limits, and that only tourist areas can be photographed.

Residents have no running water
Residents have no running water
The overall population here is estimated between 500,000 and one million, with most people still living in poverty, even though the country has one of the world's highest per-capita incomes.

A ruling party spokesman said foreigners like to exaggerate problems. He did not want to be recorded, but he explained he was very proud of all the roads that are being built across Equatorial Guinea.

The National Director of the Central African States Bank, Mariola Bindang Obiang, agreed to an interview. But she refused to give the percentage of money at the bank that comes from Equatorial Guinea.

Central Banker Mariola Bindang Obiang
Central Banker Mariola Bindang Obiang
"Equatorial Guinea has a very important percentage of the resources within the pool right now," she said. "But in terms of percentage, it is not wise for me to go ahead and speak about percentages."

The Equatorial Guinea fund is believed to represent more than half the total in the bank, when it was just a fraction of a percent before the oil boom started in the mid-1990s.

The bank serves the six central African countries that form the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa; the Central African Republic, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, and the Republic of the Congo.

Obiang is more comfortable speaking about the government's long-term plan for development.

Contrast of two Malabos
Contrast of two Malabos
"The big challenge actually is how the oil revenue can get to everybody," she explained. " I think that is why the government had the conference that it had in Bata last year in November to make the development strategy for Equatorial Guinea up to 2020. I mean that document, the economic policy the government is going to follow, is very well described. The purpose of that is trying to get all sectors of the economy to get the resources that are created by the oil sector."

She says since the oil sector brings cash, but not very many jobs, the government has to figure out how to target more labor-intensive sectors for investment.

"What we will do now is see, since the conference took place in Bata, up to the following year, how what is described in this document will be implemented in the different sectors of the economy," she said. "I think in that way the revenues that are being produced in the oil sector will get to the rest of the population."

At a recent political rally in Malabo, the opposition complained that a small minority in power, starting with long-time President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, controls most of the oil wealth.

Most struggle to get by
Most struggle to get by
The opposition complains that government development programs are geared too much toward vanity projects, like preparing summits and sports events, rather than bringing water, education, and better health to the poorest areas.

But the ruling party won 99 out of 100 parliament seats and most seats in municipal bodies as well in recent elections, meaning the opposition has virtually no say or control on where and how the new oil money is being spent.

One foreign diplomat also complained that decisions on how to spend revenue are very state driven and not market-oriented.

Finance
Get Stock Quote: Enter Symbol(s)

Symbol Lookup
My Portfolio
Our Privacy Vow 
  • Financial Home

  • Thousands of Protesters Rally in Northern Japan Against G8 Summit

  • World Oil Prices Ease From Record Highs

  • US Economy Loses More Jobs in June  

  • Analysts: End to Rising Oil Prices Not in Sight  

  • Argonne National Laboratory Works on Alternative Fuel Technology  

  • Economy Putting Squeeze on Retirees  

  • US Economy Loses Jobs for Sixth Straight Month

  • UN: 50 Million More People Hungry Due to High Food Prices

  • Oil Prices Soar to Record High of Nearly $146 a Barrel

  • Zimbabwe Central Bank Seen Constrained In Money-Printing Operations  

  • Group in Kenya Makes Objects of Beauty Out of Trash  

  • Report: Unemployment to Rise in OECD Countries

  • Millions of Truckers in India Begin Strike  

  • US Stocks Gain in Opening Trading

  • Iranian Oil Minister says Attack on Iran Will Impact Oil Prices

  • British Truckers Converge on Parliament in Latest Fuel Cost Protest

  • Top Sustainable Energy Prize Awarded for Energy-Efficient Stove

  • Bush Administration Cites 'Executive Privilege' in Environmental Decisions

  • Natural Disasters Raise Health Concerns  

  • Worldwide Whaling Body Meeting in Chile

  • US Supreme Court Rejects Environmentalists' Challenge to Border Fence

  • Australia, Japan Clash at International Whale Summit  

  • At California Organic Farm, Seeking Enlightenment Through Organic Gardening  

  • Florida Land Deal Will Boost Everglades Restoration  

  • Individual 'Carbon Footprints' Can Be Measured on the Web  

  • British PM Calls for Wind Power; Increasing Global Focus on Alternative Energy

  • Independent Groups Warn Olympics Exacerbating Beijing's Water Crisis  

  • Hungary Opens Eastern Europe's First Sun-Powered Conference Center  

  • India Unveils National Plan to Deal With Threat of Global Warming  

  • Kenyan Honey Project Helps Raise Income