29, March 2020
Manu Dibango and Cameroon political hostility: No credible public statement from President Paul Biya, or from the Ministry of Culture 0
African jazz has lost another of its best-known icons.
Emmanuel N’Djoké Dibango, popularly known as Manu Dibango, was, like Hugh Masekela who died last year, a global star of Afro-jazz and funk.
The saxophonist Dibango leaves a huge legacy spanning more than 60 years of musical production that will continue to echo in global music. His brand of Afro-jazz drew enormously from makossa, a genre of popular music invented in the 1950s in Cameroon’s major economic and cultural centre, Douala. The music blended Afro-Cuban rumba and local musical forms such as assiko and ambasse bey with other styles such as the Congolese soukous.
Tellingly, one of Dibango’s most successful albums is titled Soul Makossa (1972), with a title song that has been repeatedly sampled (though most often unacknowledged) by stars ranging from Michael Jackson to Rihanna, Kanye West and A Tribe Called Quest. This one track alone has been referenced by so many globally famed artists that it has infused the pop culture zeitgeist from dance floors to catwalks at various times over the decades.
Dibango’s work has resonated with so many of his peers and audience because of its eclectic and ecumenical character. The richness of its multiple sources of inspirations across a wide range of traditions was only enhanced by Dibango’s deft ability to combine and recompose them into new symphonies and rhythms.
In an interview in 2018 for Quincy Jones’ Qwest TV, he spoke about his life and musical journey, moving between jazz, rumba, funk, and reggae, crossing paths with Sidney Bechet, Quincy Jones, Herbie Hancock, Bob Marley and Mohamed Ali along the way.
In Africa, Dibango’s appeal as an artist stemmed not only from his great talent, but also his simple ability to work with artists across a wide range of generations and backgrounds to advance African music and social causes on the continent. He famously led a humanitarian effort to raise money for the fight against famine in Ethiopia through a number of initiatives, including a charity record, Tam-Tam for Ethiopia (Drum for Ethiopia) in 1985.
Resilience
Dibango was an avid collaborator in African musical production, working with contemporaries like Cameroon’s Francis Bebey, the DRC’s Joseph Kabasele, Nigeria’s Fela Kuti and South Africa’s Masekela. He also produced music with notable figures among the younger generation like the DRC’s Papa Wemba, Mali’s Salif Keita and Senegal’s Youssou N’dour.
Personally, I have been drawn to how Dibango’s brand of music speaks to the political aesthetics of everyday life in authoritarian settings, much like Kuti’s. This includes a resilient capacity to laugh and be joyful, a determined refusal to capitulate to violent oppression. This is what Kuti described as “suffering and smiling”.
Dibango’s music was not directly about political commentary in its lyrics, except for a few songs like Ah! Freak Sans Fric (Africa Without Money). The song bemoaned a continent impoverished despite its natural wealth. But in its poetry of everyday life on the continent, Dibango’s music addressed the aesthetic, ethical, political, economic, material and even the psychological states of Africa in the wake of the multiple crises that people have had to live through.
Political hostility
Born in 1933, Dibango left Cameroon in his teens to undertake high school studies in Paris. From this moment on, his life as a world journeyman and musical joy maker began. He aptly defined himself as a “Negropolitan”, an African of the world.
He never really returned to Cameroon. His occasional efforts to initiate cultural projects to promote music in the country were frequently frustrated by the political establishment.
As Francis Nyamnjoh and Jude Fokwang, two notable Cameroonian anthropologists, wrote in their seminal study of Cameroonian music and the repressive order in the country, Manu Dibango’s genre of makossa brought world fame to Cameroon’s popular music,but his efforts to win recognition for music as art and musicians as artists met with repeated frustrations by politicians.
There was therefore no love lost between the musician and the authorities in the country of his birth. No surprise, then, that there was no credible public statement from either the president of Cameroon, Paul Biya, or from the country’s Ministry of Culture in the days after the announcement of the death of this cultural icon.
No leading national authority had called for the public to honour Manu Dibango’s memory and to recognise his cultural contributions to uplifting the national spirit of joy and resilience in the face of everyday hardships that Cameroonians endure.
This stands in stark contrast to the global outpouring of grief and celebration of this cultural genius at the news of his demise. Dibango was an object of “Cameroonian and African pride”, as N’dour puts it.
Dibango gave his life’s work to the entire continent of Africa and the rest of the world, producing soul-reaching musical sensations with mind-boggling energy in his music. It is perhaps only just that it is the entire continent and the rest of the world that have been quick to sense his demise as our collective loss.
Dibango passed away in Paris after contracting COVID-19. He was 86 years old.
Culled from The Conversation
29, March 2020
World’s coronavirus infections pass 660,000 0
Cases of coronavirus infection in the world have surpassed 660,000, while the epidemic has yet to reach its peak in the worst-hit countries of Europe and has just begun in the world’s poorest continent, Africa.
Data compiled by the Johns Hopkins University also showed that the number of people who have died of the disease caused by the coronavirus had reached 30,883 as of Sunday — two-thirds of them having been reported in Europe.
The following is the latest on how the pandemic has been affecting the world in the past 24 hours:
New Zealand registers 1st death
New Zealand confirmed its first death from the virus on Saturday, according to Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield, who said the victim had been a woman in her 70s.
The number of infected people in New Zealand also rose by 63 to a total of 514, Bloomfield said.
Over 2,600 confirmed infected in Africa
The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Saturday that the COVID-19 disease had now spread to dozens of countries in Africa.
The number of confirmed cases has reached 2,650, along with 49 deaths in the region, according to Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
He said that the WHO stood ready to support all countries in the combat against the pandemic.
Ghebreyesus said nations with weaker health systems had to act aggressively to contain the outbreak and prevent community transmissions.
Africa has become a main concern for the organization since the virus began to spread across the world due to the continent’s strained medical systems and lack of necessary infrastructure.
China reports 5 deaths
China, which was the first country to report the disease in December last year and the first epicenter of the virus, has now reported only five new deaths and 45 new confirmed infections in the 24 hours through midnight Saturday.
All the deaths were in Hubei Province, where the virus first emerged, according to the National Health Commission.
All but one of the new cases were people who were infected abroad, it added.
China has so far reported a total of 81,439 cases of COVID-19 along with 3,300 deaths.
The commission said some 477 people had been discharged from hospitals on Saturday. A total number of 75,448 people have recovered from the disease in China.
South Korea reports 105 more cases
South Korea reported another 105 cases, bringing the country’s total so far to 9,583, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
It also confirmed eight more deaths, bringing the total fatalities to 152.
Japan in ‘critical stage,’ Abe vows ‘powerful’ aid package
Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe promised an unprecedented aid package on Saturday as cases of COVID-19 in the country climbed to more than 1,500, with 52 deaths, according to the public broadcaster NHK.
The figure excludes those from a cruise ship quarantined in the country since last month.
“We are in a critical stage,” said the prime minister of the world’s third-biggest economy. “We need to be ready for a long-term battle.”
“The pandemic is inflicting extremely big damage to Japan’s economy,” Abe said. “We’ll deploy a huge, powerful package that will include a full range of fiscal, monetary, and tax measures.”
Though the details of the package have not been finalized, Abe said it “will exceed that [package] compiled in response to the global financial crisis of 2008, which was worth a total 528 billion dollars.”
He made the announcement as health officials confirmed a further 60 cases in the capital, Tokyo, on Saturday. They also announced 57 new cases at a center for the disabled in Chiba Prefecture, near Tokyo, according to the NHK.
Canada enforces new travel restrictions
On the other side of the world, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced new restrictions on Saturday.
He said that people who were showing symptoms of the disease would be blocked from domestic flights or inter-city passenger trains.
Trudeau said his government was giving new tools to airlines and railways to enforce the restrictions from Monday.
Trudeau’s wife has herself been infected and is receiving treatment.
The latest travel restrictions in Canada were announced as the country’s confirmed cases reached 5,153, and the deaths 55.
Italy’s death toll passes 10,000, peak approaching
Italy, the world’s worst-hit nation, is now reporting an overall death toll of over 10,000.
Officials announced on Saturday that 889 more people had died of COVID-19 in the previous 24 hours.
The figure was the second highest daily tally since the epidemic emerged in Italy five weeks ago.
Italy’s total fatalities now stand at 10,023.
The number of people diagnosed with the new viral illness also rose by about 6,000 to 92,472, officials said Saturday.
Italy has imposed severe restrictions on movement, including a national lockdown.
“Without these measures, we would be seeing far worse numbers and our health service would be in a far more dramatic state,” said Angelo Borelli, the head of Italy’s Civil Protection Agency. “We would have been in an unsustainable situation.”
According to the Higher Health Institute (ISS), the peak of the epidemic in Italy is approaching.
“We have seen an apparent reduction in the infection curve since March 20 but we are not yet in a downward phase,” ISS President Silvio Brusaferro told the Italian press agency ANSA.
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has approved a new package of 4.7 billion euros (5.24 billion dollars) to help those worst hit sections of the population.
He has also urged the European Union (EU) to launch a “recovery bond” to help fund the member states’ response to the outbreak, saying a failure to tackle the emergency would be a “tragic mistake” for the union.
Spain toughens lockdown
Spain, the second worst-hit nation in Europe, announced stricter lockdown measures on Saturday that will force all non-essential workers to stay at home for the next two weeks.
Health officials said Saturday that 832 people had died of the disease in the last 24 hours.
The new fatalities brought the overall number of the deaths in Spain to 5,982.
The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 also reached 73,235, officials said.
Health emergency chief Fernando Simon said the nation was short of intensive care unit beds as the epidemic appeared to be reaching its peak in some areas.
“We continue to have a major problem with ICU saturation,” said Simon.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said that the new restrictions would allow the country “to reduce the number of infected people to a much greater extent.”
Workers would receive their usual salaries but would have to make up lost hours at a later date, he added.
Sanchez also urged Brussels to act and called for a “united economic and social strategy.”
He said the EU should “issue reconstruction bonds to deal with coronavirus.”
“We do not understand why the eurozone, which shares a currency, does not share fiscal policy,” Sanchez said.
Germany’s cases pass 52,500
Germany’s confirmed cases of COVID-19 have risen to 52,547, and 389 people have died of the disease as of Sunday, statistics from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases showed Sunday.
The number of infections rose by 3,965, while the death toll climbed by 64.
The institute said that the data did not represent the complete picture as it had not received any readings from the regional states of Baden-Wuerttemberg, Hesse, and Saarland.
Greece reports over 1,000 cases
Greek health authorities confirmed 95 new cases of COVID-19 on Saturday.
Greece’s updated total is now 1,061.
Thirty two people have so far died of the disease in Greece, according to Health Ministry official Sotiris Tsiodras.
Greece has imposed a curfew until early April and has closed its borders to non-EU nationals, as well as to people from Italy and Spain.
Development Minister Adonis Georgiadis said earlier on Saturday that the restrictions would be extended beyond April 6, without providing further details.
Source: Presstv