Africa's newspapers accuse G8 leaders in Genoa of humbug and
imposing "global apartheid". But they also call on Africa to
help herself.
Kenya's Daily Nation says G8 leaders go through this annual
ritual and "promise a mountain but habitually deliver a
molehill".

[Globalisation] is dictated by the rich nations, making the
poor countries, once again, sitting ducks for the might of the
multinationals

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Zimbabwe's Daily News
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At last year's summit, the G8 came out
"with beautiful, self-righteous do-good resolutions which made them
feel nice and caring, but poor countries... are even poorer than they
were," the paper says.
It calls the G8 a club of "opulent idlers" who barricaded
themselves from demonstrators protesting the dark side of globalisation.
The writer draws parallels between African countries and Kenyan
street families. "Everyone talks of the need to ... alleviate their
poverty, but nobody wants to get anywhere near them."
Appropriate noises
Another Daily Nation commentary describes the G8 as a "choir of
hypocrisy and humbug" who had "built a steel cage behind which
they will issue high-sounding humbug, a word of which they will not
mean" .

Spurred on by self-interest, some countries dish out billions
of dollars each year on subsidies that blunt the competitive
edge of African exports

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The Star, South Africa
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It says the G8 will make all the
"appropriate noises about poverty". But to safeguard the
economic interests of their people, G8 leaders will "refuse to see
that the concentration of riches in a few countries and the deprivation
of the majority... is a recipe for disorder".
The commentary warns that the result was the mass migration of
Africans to Western nations and the burgeoning trade in trafficking
human beings.
Those who do not head for the West, "sit back in impotent,
eloquent fury and look at the oily smiles of well-fed middle aged men
mouthing platitudes".
Global apartheid
In South Africa, The Star comments: "Spurred on by
self-interest, some countries dish out hundreds of billions of dollars
each year on subsidies that blunt the competitive edge of African
exports into their markets."
The paper singles out the Prime Minister Tony Blair as one of the
less selfish members of the global elite.

The fever of profit burns those making profit and those losing
it

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Libya's Al-Shams
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South Africa's Business Day says
the important question is whether the G8 will respond to the world's
majority "or whether it is merely a vehicle for exercising minority
rule within a system of global apartheid".
Zimbabwe's Daily News says globalisation is dictated by the
rich nations, "making the poor countries, once again, sitting ducks
for the might of the multinationals".
But "What would Zimbabwe do if its debt was cancelled?"
questions the paper. "Buy more arms for the army? More jet fighters
for the air force? Or repair all the dilapidated school buildings in the
rural areas?"
In Algeria's El Moudjahid, Tahar Mohamed writes that the
problems imposed on the planet by globalisation are felt mostly in
Africa "because it is most fragile and vulnerable to globalisation
trends".
The paper says the participation of the five African leaders in the
talks would challenge the international community on the situation. The
Africa Recovery initiative tabled by five African leaders in Genoa
"should ensure that Africa is no longer marginalised and in the
danger zone".
In Egypt Jamal Zayda writing for Al-Ahram challenges leaders
to understand what globalisation is about. "They welcome it, sign
it shyly, and yet they do nothing to protect themselves against being
burnt with its fire."
Libya's Al-Shams says Muammar Gaddafi had predicted
anti-capitalism protests when he wrote about the revolution in 1969.
"Is it not time for the this world to come back to its
senses?" the editor writes. "The fever of profit burns those
making profit and those losing it," the commentary concludes.
BBC Monitoring, based
in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information
from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150
countries in more than 70 languages.