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PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - It's 5:00 p.m. on a Friday and a man looking rather
like a
motorcyclist from the future is sitting in a hotel lobby soothing a cough with
a cup of
black coffee.
Over the last two hours, he has met with Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika,
the
Ivory Coast's prime minister, Affi N'Guessan, and Ambassador Mamadou Seck of
Senegal. Upstairs, a summit on U.S.-African trade upstairs is winding down.
Such is the life of Bono, frontman for rock band U2 and one of the most powerful
activists for poor African countries. Bono, 41, has campaigned for Africa since
U2
played the 1985 Live Aid relief concert, organized by friend and fellow Irishman
Bob
Geldof. In 1999, Bono began lobbying world leaders for Jubilee 2000, now Drop
the
Debt, an umbrella organization of development and religious groups.
Their agenda is debt cancellation for the world's poorest countries. It has
24 million
signatories from more than 60 countries.
"Certain types of poverty are structural rather than calamity," Bono
told reporters after
the meetings with the Africans last week. "There's the calamity of famine,
but then
there's the structural problem of pushing billions in dollars to African nation
states for
geopolitical reasons during the Cold War and expecting their grandchildren to
pay that
money back whilst they can't educate their citizens, feed them, or give them
any health
care."
Following Live Aid, Bono and his wife Ali worked at an Ethiopian relief camp
for a
month. Activism helps him remember. "We had experiences there that you
could never
forget," he said. "But you go back to work and your life and you do
forget."
Remembering brings him to lobby world leaders. Pope John Paul II donned the
singer's
sunglasses during a 1999 meeting. At a gathering of finance ministers in Washington,
Bono grabbed the mike and crooned, "Well it's one for the money,"
the opening of "Blue
Suede Shoes," the song Elvis Presley made famous.
In Philadelphia, Bono wore light blue spectacles and black from top to his
spongy shoes.
"I don't have to be formal, I can just be who I am because I represent
a rather informal
collective," he said.
Informalities aside, Bono targets the most serious of issues. Drop the Debt
calculates
that African countries spend around $13.5 billion a year repaying debts to rich
countries,
more than double what they spend on health care and as much as they need to
effectively
combat the AIDS pandemic sweeping the continent. Sub-Saharan Africa owes Western
banks more than $200 billion, according to the International Monetary Fund.
That's
dangerous, especially in a post-Sept. 11 world, Bono said.
AFRICA AT RISK "We've just seen in a torturous way what happens when one
country,
like Afghanistan, is left to implode," Bono said. "God help us if
the (sub-Saharan) continent
of Africa is left to follow its present trajectory -- which is 40 million AIDS
orphans in the next
10 years," he said, citing U.S. Agency for International Development figures.
"Because he's so intellectually brilliant he has a depth of understanding
of the issues, and
he can enter into arenas with politicians and decision makers and bring his
message," said
Dr. Paul Zeitz, director of the Global AIDS Alliance, a group allied with Drop
the Debt.
Bono pointed out that even in a better-off country like Botswana, 35 percent
of the
population has HIV, a number confirmed by UNAIDS. "Imagine you're in a
crowded room,
in a bar, in a hotel lobby and 35 percent of the people are HIV positive. In
Africa at the
moment, that means a death sentence, because they don't have access to the anti-retro
virals that we have."
"Now imagine how they feel with the death sentence on their heads and
the knowledge that
they don't have access to those drugs. It doesn't take a great leap to imagine
they are easy
prey to the kind of fanatics and fundamentalist groups like al Qaeda."
He borrowed a line Algeria's Bouteflika used in his luncheon address at the
summit earlier
that afternoon: "It is no longer possible to be an island of prosperity
in a sea of despair."
Realizing the complexity of African poverty, Drop the Debt is expanding its
agenda to include
AIDS, trade and intellectual property issues. Drop the Debt and AIDS groups
set up booths
at U2's shows and fans send 2,000 letters a week to the White House calling
for debt relief,
aid and trade for Africa, said Jamie Drummond, global campaign director of Oxfam,
a British
relief organization, and a friend of Bono.
In 1996, the World Bank and International Monetary Fund identified countries
eligible for
easing of debt under their Highly Indebted Poor Countries program. Drop the
Debt aims to
speed the process along. So far, three countries -- Uganda, Mozambique and Bolivia
--have
qualified for full debt relief and 20 others are in various stages of completion.
Drop the Debt's members also listen to the ideas of African leaders, especially
the New
African Initiative (NAI), which has been the talk of the summit in Philadelphia.
"We lobby
African leaders as much as the G8," said Drummond.
South African President Thabo Mbeki, Nigeria's Olusegun Obasanjo, Senegal's
Abdoulaye
Wade, and Bouteflika modeled NAI on the U.S. Marshall Plan that helped get Europe
back
on its feet after World War Two. It plans to tackle debt and AIDS with help
from wealthy
nations.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder have
backed
NAI's blueprint.
Bono hopes the G8 group of wealthy nations agrees to a comprehensive package
of aid to
Africa by summer 2002, their next meeting, to be held in Canada. In the end,
Bono said, debt
cancellation is not the only answer. "We need to let the poorest nations
in the world trade with
us," Bono said.
With that he was off for a sound check at the First Union Center before U2
played for 21,000
fans.