Sunday, July 6, 2014

Small Business Disaster Preparedness

http://emergencysafety.blogspot.ca/2014/05/small-business-disaster-preparedness.html?m=1

Friday, 30 May 2014
Small Business Disaster Preparedness

RCAF CC-150 delivering relief supplies during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Photo credit: US Navy


Disasters do not discriminate. When they hit, they do not identify what buildings or communities to hit.
It whacks everybody or sometimes just locations without prejudiced. But we continue to see the lack of preparedness by small and medium size businesses being undertaken and investing their time to understand what's involved. Gone are the days when this was only for the big multinational companies to worry about.
Company's with as few as 5 part-time employees need to be ready for risk any contingencies that disasters bring.
Everything from ensuring their employees are safe to how to recover.
Management after the event occurs needs to be understood - before it strikes. Being prepared to ride out a disaster can solve all these issues and improve their ability to recover quickly.
This is not a hypothetical scenario. It is a proven fact. Nor does not require a lot of capital investment if approached with common sense. Education and practice critical to successful outcomes and recovery. The cavalry is not always available or coming over the hill to support your recovery needs in your businesses time frames.
Improvising, Adapting and Overcoming at the last minute is not wise nor safe and leads to increased risk of a businesses ability to recover.  
Businesses no longer have excuses or reasons why they cannot be prepared for a crisis or disaster. Small business owners feel the consequences and exposure to a disaster far more than large enterprise and multinationals, with a lot more to lose in not being prepared. Thankfully, there are solutions to help reduce exposure to the risk of catastrophic business failure.  
There are effective ways to implement a disaster management plan with resources and education programs available in most countries with small incremental associated costs.

Accountability

It starts by building a preparedness plan.
It does not have to be overly complex and nor does it need to follow the rigors or standards of a big corporation or government agency.  The plan needs to be written down, duplicated and understood by everyone associated with it.
It has to have  a detailed and laid out operational components that identify direction, control, development (over time), along with maintenance and status of your firms operations.
From there, it requires an overview of your facilities and infrastructure and what types of vulnerabilities they could be exposed too.
Know your employees and their background.
They are often part of your team that can help solve problems.
This is accomplished by creating a preparedness plan based on emergency response requirements before and during a disaster in the development process that begins with discussions and questions that need to be asked internally.
Doing so builds the outline for a plan and thus, steps to recovery. Flood disasters are very different than Tornado's or large fires.
Plan for those that are most likely to hit your business, big and small.
Plan for the worst and practice during advisories warnings that are considered to have a minor or low impact. Restaurant owners often have no idea of how simple disaster strategies can incorporated in preparing a training and disaster response plans.
Such business owners can start by testing how evacuation procedures work by offering a special evening with patrons asked to participate with discount coupons on their meals to see what does and does not work. Small industrial workshops can have local fire department support during evacuation tests to help identify gaps by simply asking them to show up and observe often at no charge if planned in advance during their routine patrols.

Mitigation

Insurance does not solve all a businesses requirements in how you gets back into service after a disaster. It is one of hundreds of steps that will be required. It is a proven fact that if prepared and developed properly, a company's ability to get back on its feet is 50 to 80% more likely to make a successful recovery by having a thorough preparedness plan in place.  In fact, the more prepared a business is with a plan, the more likely it qualifies to receive a discount on insurance premiums.
Read the fine print of your insurance policy and have a discussion with your carrier about mitigation and preparedness options and how it could save money that could be invested in any upgrades required. In some Provinces and States such discounts will not be available in all areas such as identified flood plains.
But this should not deter you from implementing a resilience and mitigation plan if you want to get back into business quickly. Business owners can make significant changes to their management plan without impacting their daily operations.
Disaster preparedness can become as easy as breathing if implemented with the right knowledge and tools.

River Murray flood Mannum, Australia 1956
Photo credit: State Library: Southern Australia

Risk

Risk and exposure to crisis and disaster events will vary, from isolated violence, industrial accidents to catastrophic storms. Each one has a level of risk that needs to be assessed and prepared for. If you have a large part-time staff, a thorough and detailed understanding is required of their abilities. This can be identified through analysis of your plan to determine needs and outcomes desired. If you have employees out in the field, risk surveys are required to take into account physical and management elements are low and high risk and ensuring each employee understands expectations and responsibilities.

It will identify what employees are capable of and weaknesses that are in need of further evaluation. In past surveys of employees who work out in the field they often do not even know who to call in case of emergency if their head office is no longer able to be reached. Nor do they understand what they should do next and understand their vulnerabilities. We tend to literately freeze and become incapable of deciding what to do next.

It should be no surprise the majority think they are on their own and each person decides for themselves what they are going to do next - if anything.

These results has been found in small and large organizations all over the world and yes, in places that have been repeatedly hit by natural disasters such as hurricanes, typhoons and tornadoes.

The failure generally starts with the lack of knowledge in creating a plan and preparing for its use by practicing it so that gaps can be identified and corrected. No longer is there the excuse for not knowing or working with government agencies in preparing a disaster management plan as many local, regional and national emergency response agencies have made information freely available.

Emergency preparedness plans can vary from as little as 10 pages up to 80 based on the complexity and size of the business. But none of the elements are exceeding difficult to write or practice and ensuring all employees are aware and capable of carrying out disaster assignments.


DDRS HA/DR Smart Phone App

Communications

Telling your employees to just go home is not enough. In some cases, that can prove fatal and nor does it necessarily absolve the company's responsibility of ensuring their safety stops as soon as they exit the firm's doors. Gone are the days where a small businesses simply kept on file the employee's basic information and a contact number in case of emergency if an event occurs.
Today, employers preparedness planning needs to be elevated to a whole new level. With availability of social media, SMS and other communications options, the level dialogue and options available expands a company's options. You can use Twitter and lock the account to be private and accessible to employees only for private communications on updates and status reports - for free.
The same goes for Facebook, by setting up a company group page with the same restrictions. These are just some of the ways company's can develop emergency action planning and procedures.
Photo Credit: FEMA

Planning

Some small business owners tend to be hands on and micromanage every detail of their company. During a disaster this can often compound problems and increase risks that do not have to occur. Wherever possible, delegation is a critical step to review. A business owner does need need to undertake every responsibility or be accountable all on their own, especially if they have managers of their operations that are trained in various duties required.
By creating an emergency management team, the owner can resolve most issues as they unfold and enhance the safety of not only all employees but the ability to recover after an incident occurs. Far too often, a business owner who tries to do it all on their own will suffer more by doing so. In some cases, small businesses that only have 2 or 3 employees can reach out with other nearby businesses to create the framework and response plan that helps everyone far more effectively than if operating independently.
This is particularly true of small town business centers that often have only 5 to 10 tenants that comprise in total, 20 to 40 employees on site during each shift. By banding together, resources could be shared and pooled for most emergency contingencies along with expertise and responsibilities. If a plan is put into place and practiced.
Photo Credit: FEMA

Preparedness

Preparedness planning only works if all risks are identified. In doing so, all situation variables and contingencies can be prepared for. Small business owners often assume, failing identify levels of risk using historical patterns and lessons learned of the past.
By doing, a proper mitigation plan can be developed with known costs that shore up identified weaknesses. This step supports the next phase of requirements, response options.
Too frequently, businesses tend to rely upon information from media sources that are - literately - 30 second long sound bytes. 10 inches of rain at X and potential flooding at Z.
Not nearly enough information to know what response plan should be enabled. If past historical events are reviewed, then a sense of what could occur can be understood.
Attribution: Peter Baeklund

Situation awareness is vital to coordinating and implementing a disaster plan. Doing an analysis exposes what challenges were experienced helps identify evacuation routes and potential flash points of delay and infrastructure vulnerabilities should be taken into account. It won't cost the company other than its research time to understand what the risks (and outcomes) were and develop response plans accordingly.
Does the company know what roads are identified as city recommended evacuation routes or where these routes are relative to where employees live? Most, if not all business owners do not have it documented anywhere and the potential impact it may have on operations. This is one of several areas of concern that small businesses need to recognize and rectify.
Knowing where hospitals are may sound reasonably easy to remember. But what about shelters, food stores, alternative fuel supply locations. In the past, small business owners had a tendency to wing it on the fly on a case by case basis.
Given how hard it is to build, maintain and restore a business, many are now recognizing the need for change in mindset and follow through.

Photo Credit: Australia Emergency Management

Advanced warning - makes a difference

In some cases, the crisis is known in advance with sufficient time to take action to save lives and property. How well this is understood varies around the world.
Attitudes will vary based on culture, demographics, social policy and the surrounding communities infrastructure. By reviewing your community's composition, businesses can take into account possible delays, infrastructure weaknesses and change how what one plan works in city XYZ will have to be modified to work in their own.
Ultimately, how an emergency response plan is carried out will only be as effective relative to the investments and its management is carried out. Those that have maintained important paper documents in duplicate, back up critical company data on systems at different locations, and understand risk management will increase their odds of recovery.
Preparing and planning often collide when the moment of truth arrives, to act or not.
No longer is it just a matter of putting plywood over windows, but planning and activating services such as transportation, spare fuel, water, medications and knowing the company's employees vulnerabilities and supporting their needs. During hurricane and typhoon seasons the level of advance warning is increasing not just by hours, but days with high levels of accuracy as to the storms intensity and path.
The same is becoming true of annual spring thaws that are the cause of severe flooding in many parts of the world. Satellites with specialized sensors track ground saturation levels enabling advanced warning, sometimes days in advance.
Some events are not as easy to give 24+ hour warning as in the case of the recent Balkan Floods that hit Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia in eastern Europe. Even the winter floods that started in December of last year and hit southern England surprised meteorologist as to the length and power of the storms that hammered the country for three straight months. Warnings varied week to week on predicted flood levels.
The  flash flood which hit Toronto in the summer of 2013 hit so fast that there was barely 8 hours notice.
Calgary Alberta's floods warnings were issued 3 days in advance of their impact on the city, yet many businesses were caught unprepared, caught flat footed and wound up losing everything as a result. The city is still making repairs. Many small businesses permanently closed. In such scenarios, the costs of inaction were significant. It can and does happen in your company's backyard.



Last line of defense, not your first. Photo Credit: FEMA

Recovery

Creating a sound preparedness plan that is practiced and understood, recovery will be easier to manage and get the company back on its feet.
It becomes a less stressful environment, allowing for sound judgement and decision making to proceed with recovery efforts. Not only will many hours not be wasted but weeks in delays can be avoided.
This cannot be assured all the time. As we have pointed out in other editorials, some events bring utter devastation making recovery a very long term process regardless of how well prepared the company planned and carried out proper steps. Nonetheless, the time will be shorter than others that did nothing at all.
Some argue that the economics do not make it practical to prepare for such events. In many parts of the world that probably holds more than a grain of truth, but it does not mean it should be ignored.
Small businesses that understand the risks and results and want to be in business afterwards will review choices that should be made. Setting aside funds for a rainy day works just prudently for a business as it does for individuals and families.


Downtown of Lacombe, Alberta Red River Flood 2013
Photo Credit: City Gov't of Lacombe

Cost of not preparing

The costs do not have to be astronomical and nor do businesses have be burdened all by themselves as mentioned earlier. Purchasing used equipment such as generators, shelters, storage tanks, and secondary storage facilities can be reduced through effective planning and shared cost with other small businesses.
As is often the case, many  employees may have established networks of resources that can be used to support the company's needs - so long as they are aware of their availability and open the dialogue to examine their potential use in advance of an incoming disaster event. In doing so, action steps can be taken immediately before and afterwards in their usage, reducing the level of chaos and unknown management challenges.


Share the cost of contracting tractor - trailer units to store your inventory with other business owners. By planning ahead there can be significant dividends for those that cannot afford inventory insurance. Photo Credit: Wikipedia


Small businesses can survive a disaster. It takes time and energy to implement an effective strategy and plan. It does not take millions of dollars and can be carried out by most business owners and managers if the right tools and education programs are acquired. 
Technology, knowledge and training can deliver remarkable results allowing an organization to fully recover.

Available online resources:
·                        Ready.gov
·                        Public Safety Canada
·                        City of London (U.K.) Business Continuity Guide
·                        Australia Emergency Management Institute
·                        New Zealand Civil Defence Business Continuity Guide (pdf file)
·                        Red Cross International



Saturday, July 5, 2014

St Kitts-Nevis opens Cuban embassy, calls for US to end trade embargo

It's about time.

http://www.caribbean360.com/news/st-kitts-nevis-opens-cuban-embassy-calls-for-us-to-end-trade-embargo

Caribbean360


St Kitts-Nevis opens Cuban embassy, calls for US to end trade embargo



Havana-Cuba-740
HAVANA CUBA
BASSETERRE, St. Kitts, Friday July 4, 2014, CMC – St. kitts-Nevis has opened an embassy in Cuba and has called on the United States to end its decade old trade and economic embargo against the only Communist country in the Caribbean.
A government statement said that Foreign Affairs Minister Patrice Nisbett told delegates to the opening of the embassy that Basseterre would continue to support the annual United Nations General Assembly vote calling on Washington to remove the embargo placed on the island when Fidel Casyro assumed power 50 years ago.
“We continue to avail ourselves of every opportunity and in every forum to appeal to the United States of America to bring to an immediate end its unfair treatment of the Cuban people who continue to suffer unreasonably as a result of the decades old embargo. Cuba is our neighbour.
“Cuba is our friend and we shall continue to exploit all possible means of speaking on their behalf in the international community on this issue,” said Nisbett.
The St. Kitts-Nevis government has noted that the majority of countries within this hemisphere has supported Cuba in its quest for “normal and constructive relations” with all nations around the world.
The United States and a handful of countries have consistently voted against ending the embargo.

Friday, July 4, 2014

Why Business Schools Fail to Produce Innovators

https://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140703142145-12357314-why-business-schools-fail-to-produce-innovators?trk=tod-home-art-list-large_0


Eric J. Romero, PhD: Professional Speaker

>>>>>>>>>>>> Unconventional Leadership Badass <<< Rebel, Innovate & Win! >>>

Why Business Schools Fail to Produce Innovators

What do Ted Turner, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Jobs, Richard Branson, Tony Hsieh, Herb Kelleher, Walt Disney, Anna Wintour, George Lucas, Guy Laliberté, Jeff Bezos, and many otherunconventional leaders have in common? 
They didn’t attend business school. In fact, many didn’t even attend or finish university. It’s no accident that innovative ideas seldom come from business schools. Business schools are built to create bureaucratic, risk averse managers who can’t think outside the box. In fact, business schools do much to create and perpetuate The Box!
How can this be? 
Business professors all over the world teach the same old ideas the same old way…boring PowerPoint lectures! They often use slides provided by textbook publishers, so everyone uses the same slides. These poor souls are incapable of adding any value to their boring lectures; no insights or original ideas. The result is no new ideas are taught. There is no incentive to innovate teaching.
Professors are not rewarded for being relevant to practicing managers. If a professor were to publish a best selling leadership book, he or she would not be rewarded. Only peer-reviewed academic journal articles count. Most business schools focus on publishing research that no one reads. Here is a sample of papers presented at the 2014 Academy of Management conference:
  • The linearity of Words and Oppressions of Linearity: Mapping, Dreaming and Imagining of Workplaces
  • Becoming an Intellectual Shaman: Tackling Big Ideas Around Social, Ecological, and Economic Issues
  • Wordplays of the Self: Narrative, Discourse, Power and the Hard Work of Identity
  • Being There/Being Them: Stages of Entry, Exit, and In-Between in Organizational Ethnography
Tens of thousand of dollars were spent to produce and present these …THINGS! It’s not surprising that executives don’t attend academic conferences; nor do they read irrelevant academic articles or books. It’s almost impossible for faculty focused on such nonsense to be good teachers. Even when they research relevant issues, they often choose subjects already understood (ex. motivation), so their research provides no value to anyone. 
Business professors are so clueless when it comes to the real business world, they seldom get paid for their ideas in terms of consulting and speaking.
Soaring Tuition, So What?
The focus on research also results in unsustainable economics. To support the research fantasy, schools spend enormous sums sending faculty to academic conferences (aka, vacations). Additionally, the more research professors do, the less they teach, which means more faculty must be hired to teach. Keep in mind that business faculty are some of the most expensive instructors at universities, and many only teach 3 or 2 courses per semester. 
Small classes also increase expenses in a similar manner; more professors must be hired. Classes are made smaller, not to improve teaching (which it doesn’t), but to make it easier for professors to teach and grade … so classes get smaller and smaller and smaller. Add to this the lavish 3+ months of paid vacation and periodic sabbaticals (one whole year of paid vacation), and it’s no surprise university education is so expensive. 
However, no matter how much tuition they charge, it’s still not enough to cover their ridiculous costs.
If tuition goes up much faster than inflation and students have tens of thousands in debt plus no job, professors don’t care. To make this Rube Goldberg system work, business schools resort to a combination of begging and Ponzi scheme financing (they call it “fund raising”) to meet their ever increasing spending. 
Could you imagine any company asking for donations from former customers (alumni), foundations, government, etc. to fund its current operating costs? That would be called INSANITY, but this is just what business schools do every day!
The Easy Life
Universities exist for professors, not students. They are built for professors to have a nice, easy and safe job. In fact, except in very rare cases, professors with tenure cannot be fired. That’s right, tenured professors have a job for life, no matter how bad they teach. If what they teach and research has nothing to do with the real world, that is ok … they live in an academic make believe world that is well insulated from reality. 
Their self-serving approach extends into every aspect of operations. At any store or restaurant, the best parking is reserved for customers. 
At universities, the faculty, who happen to be employees, reserve the best parking for themselves. Despite paying tens of thousands of dollars for the privilege of attending college, students get the worst parking … plus they have to pay for parking too! 
Do businesses close for 3 months per year, plus take a few more weeks off for spring and winter breaks? 
Of course not … businesses are built to serve their customers. Universities take all this time off, plus all holidays everyone else gets. Who cares if students need to graduate and start working, let them wait. If that isn't enough, most professors only teach 9 hours per week. 
At research universities, it is even less, 6 or 3 hours per week. Some professors, if they are really good at publishing useless research, rarely teach, if at all.
For over 16 years I have witnessed all this silliness. I have taught business courses at the executive, PhD, masters and undergraduate levels at universities in the United States, Brazil, France, Peru, Thailand, Singapore, Portugal, Mexico, India, Switzerland, China, Estonia, Sweden, Puerto Rico, Indonesia, and Germany. As AVP for Research at AACSB (business school accrediting body), I learned much about the business education industry; in particular how commoditized it is. 
Not only are schools mostly the same, but they are designed to produce conventional thinking managers (not leaders) who are incapable of innovation. My years of freelance teaching around the world has confirmed this fact. Stay tuned for my proposal for a school of leadership that will produce innovative leaders.


Eric J. Romero, PhD is an Unconventional Leadership Badass. For over 15 years, Eric has helped managers become unconventional leaders. Eric partners with leaders to help them create competitive advantage based on creativity, flexibility and risk-taking so they can innovate and win. Eric has written over 35 articles and presented his ideas around the world. 
Originally from New York City, his presentations are delivered with a sense of humor, 100% unedited honesty and street smarts. 
For more information go towww.CompeteOutsideTheBox.com.

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Four Ways to Build a Bee-Friendly Neighborhood

If you've got that acre of land, no problem in establishing one bee hive.  

What a way to get your kids involved in a family project.  Another chore that benefits the family (honey), and gets them started in the environment.  "Suit them up!".

I've always felt that local honey was the best remedy for allergies from trees, and other plants.




http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/four-ways-to-build-a-bee-friendly-neighborhood?utm_source=YTW&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=20140703

YES! Magazine

Four Ways to Build a Bee-Friendly Neighborhood

Concerned neighbors are a common bane of urban beekeepers. But there are ways to sweeten the deal for them.

This article originally appeared at MotherEarthNews.com.
Bee on a Sunflower
Editor's note: If you're thinking about setting up your own beehives, there are a few problems that can come up. One of the most common among urban beekeepers is resistance from neighbors—the folks next door may be afraid of your bees, or they may be in the habit of regularly dousing their yards with pesticides.
As beekeeper Lindsay Williamson of North Carolina wrote on herblog at MotherEarthNews.com, "When I first got into beekeeping, I worried a lot about neighbors and how they might react. Being a beginner, I worried that the bees might give them a reason to get upset."
Now Williamson offers four sweet tips that will turn apprehensive neighbors into your hives' personal cheerleading team.


1. Set your hives up early

One of the best tips I received while attending bee school was to set my hives up a month or two before I would install my bees. This allows an opportunity for nervous neighbors to voice their concerns, while giving you the opportunity to start a conversation about bees and assure them there is absolutely no threat (there aren't even bees in those hives yet!). You can even give them a look at a hive and explain how it works. After all this, they probably won't even notice when the actual bees arrive.

2. Educate your neighbors about bees if they ask

I was pleasantly surprised to realize that most of my neighbors weren’t afraid of the bees as much as they were curious. At this point, most people have heard at least a little something about the plight of the bees and are interested in learning more. It’s a good idea to keep an extra veil and pair of gloves around if you can, and invite curious neighbors to get a closer look.

3. Ask for their cooperation

So many people are so used to spraying fertilizer, weed killer, pesticides, etc., that they don’t think or know about the harm it can do to people, animals and pollinators like bees. In fact, where I live, (much to my frustration) some people seem to consider regularly dousing their grass in chemicals to be an essential quality if you’re to be considered a good neighbor.

Unfortunately, there’s nothing you can do to make the person next door stop using harmful chemicals. But you can have a friendly conversation with them asking them to give you a 24-hour heads-up if they’re planning to spray something or get a regular visit from the exterminator (shudder). Chances are, if you ask kindly and explain that it will give you a chance to close your bees up for a day (which has to be done the night before) they’ll happily agree and it might even get them thinking about their lawn care practices without you having been confrontational, rude or preachy.

4. Give them honey

This is a very important step in having bee-friendly neighbors! A free jar of honey every so often goes a long way in making your neighbors feel positive and possibly even somewhat invested in the health and success of your hives. Everybody loves honey and it’s the best way to thank a friendly neighbor for their help and cooperation. After all, you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.
For more practical beekeeping tips, check out Beekeeping Basics at MotherEarthNews.com.

Lindsay Williamson wrote this article for MotherEarthNews.com, where it originally appeared.
Read More

Boko Haram in prespective. Washington Diplomat: Ex-Envoy Sounded Alarm on Nigeria Long Before #BringBackOurGirls

http://www.washdiplomat.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10614:ex-envoy-sounded-alarm-on-nigeria-long-before-bringbackourgirls&catid=1520&Itemid=428





A WORLD OF NEWS AND PERSPECTIVE
Thursday, July 3, 2014



Ex-Envoy Sounded Alarm on Nigeria Long Before #BringBackOurGirls

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This spring, as news of the abduction of nearly 300 Nigerian schoolgirls by the radical Islamic group Boko Haram spread throughout the world, many Americans were riveted by the sensational story and finally woke up to the carnage that has bedeviled Africa’s most populous country for years.
A1.powi.campbell.headshot.story
Photo: Council on Foreign Relations
Eventually, every major U.S. news network covered the brazenly frightening kidnapping and a new hashtag, #BringBackOurGirls, exploded across social media, attracting the attention of celebrities, members of Congress and even first lady Michelle Obama.
Fast forward three months.
The Nigerian schoolgirls — abducted in protest of their “Western” education and threatened to be sold off for as little as $12 — are still missing. Nigerian officials have issued conflicting accounts on efforts to rescue the girls, only reinforcing impressions of the government’s impotence and incompetence.
Meanwhile, Boko Haram, in its ongoing campaign to impose strict Islamic Sharia law on the country, has escalated its murderous rampages, slaughtering hundreds in early June after its members posed as a Nigerian military unit sent to protect villagers. Reports have also surfaced of at least two other mass kidnappings of girls (and boys) since April. Other spectacular attacks have reached deep into the capital of Abuja, far from the group’s stomping ground in the northeast. In all, Boko Haram has killed at least 4,000 people in the last four years, Christians and Muslims alike, and driven over half a million more from their homes.
Boko Haram’s reign of terror no longer dominates global newscasts, but American officials and African experts continue to pay close attention to the Islamic group that threatens the stability of Africa’s largest economy.
John Campbell, who served as U.S. ambassador to Nigeria from 2004 to 2007, is among the world’s foremost experts on Nigeria and has been sounding the alarm about its problems for years. Campbell’s 2010 book “Nigeria: Dancing on the Brink,” reprinted last year, explores the country’s precarious political state, as well as the radical Islamic violence plaguing the country’s northern sections. Now a senior fellow for Africa policy studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, Campbell told The Diplomat in an interview at CFR’s downtown office that Boko Haram wants to create a breakaway Islamic state in the religiously mixed country of 170 million people where Muslims make up the majority in the north while Christians dominate the south.
Although Boko Haram — whose name, loosely translated from the Hausa dialect, means “Western education is forbidden” — is comprised of Islamic radicals, its agenda is different than other anti-Western jihadist groups such as al-Qaeda or the Taliban. In fact, some experts say the highly splintered group is inspired as much by opportunistic banditry and local grievances as it is by religious ideology.
“Boko Haram is a product of uniquely Nigerian factors and its focus is on the destruction of the Nigerian government,” Campbell explained. “It doesn’t have an international focus and it is not part of an international jihad. But its rhetoric is becoming increasingly anti-American, particularly as we are more and more associated with the Jonathan government.”
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has drawn intense criticism for his handling of the crisis. He refused to acknowledge the schoolgirl kidnappings for weeks (while his wife ordered the arrest of protesters pleading for the girls’ return) — a symptom of the president’s longstanding reluctance to forcefully confront Boko Haram.
A1.powi.campbell.story
Photo: UN Photo
A rally in Lagos calls for the return of nearly 300 Nigerian schoolgirls abducted in April by the extremist group Boko Haram, which has terrorized northern Nigeria in its campaign to impose strict Islamic Sharia law on the country.
That reticence stems in part from the country’s delicate, ethnically dictated political balance. The presidency traditionally alternates between a Christian and a Muslim to keep religious rivalries in check. Jonathan, a Christian southerner, took power in 2010 after the death of his Muslim predecessor. Some say he’s breaking this informal gentleman’s agreement by running for re-election in 2015.
As a result, even though he declared a state of emergency in the north, Jonathan has seemed hesitant to wage open war against Boko Haram, perhaps for fear of alienating the region’s Muslim majority. Some segments of Nigeria’s security forces, whose political loyalties are dubious, may even want to see Jonathan fail.
Whatever the case, the military’s reputation is not much better than the president’s. After the schoolgirl kidnappings, reports surfaced that the military knew about the attack in advance but did nothing to stop it. Other news reports indicate that some members have provided arms and information to Boko Haram. The Nigerian armed forces have long been criticized for being too disorganized, disinterested, ill equipped and corrupt to confront the extremist group. Some blame the military’s heavy-handed campaign of retribution, including arbitrary detentions and “disappearances,” for fueling the insurgency in the north.
This record of human rights abuses has kept the United States from cooperating with Nigeria’s army more closely in the past. But the recent violence seems to have changed the calculus. President Obama has deployed a group of U.S. officials to aid in the search for the missing schoolgirls, along with drones to patrol northeastern Nigeria, a move Campbell likened to searching for a needle in a haystack.
“Don’t hold your breath on what surveillance cameras can actually find,” he warned of the heavily forested terrain. “The territory involved is larger than all the New England states combined.”
And despite the global outrage, Campbell said the world’s last remaining superpower is highly unlikely to send American troops to Nigeria.
“Can you imagine the level of support for that after Afghanistan or Iraq?” he asked, instead suggesting that the United States engage in intelligence sharing and military training.
“What I would like to do is try to build [support] for targeted humanitarian assistance in the north. The number of internally displaced citizens is very large. A governor of a northern state told me he had 2 million of them in his state. Now that would be an extremely soft number but clearly there are a lot of displaced citizens,” Campbell said.
“We are quite good at humanitarian assistance through medicine, and in terms of countering the narrative that the United States is at war with Islam, those bags of beans that say, ‘These are a gift from the U.S.,’ that helps and we’re good at it.”
Nigeria could use the help. Even though it recently overtook South Africa as the continent’s largest economy after a statistical re-evaluation, Nigeria has been chronically mismanaged since its independence in 1960. It has failed to spread its oil windfall to the bulk of its people, notably in the undeveloped north. In fact, poverty has actually increased despite steady GDP growth, with more than 60 percent of the population living on less than $1 dollar a day as of 2010. Boko Haram gained a foothold by denouncing the rampant corruption that has fueled resentment in the north, where male unemployment exceeds 50 percent.
The Obama administration has no intention of sending boots into this cauldron of economic disparity and ethnic strife. Likewise, President Jonathan refuses to consider foreign troops on his soil.
But some very influential Americans contend more should be done.
“If they knew where they were, I certainly would send in U.S. troops to rescue them, in a New York minute, without permission of the host country,” Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said shortly after the girls were abducted.
That prompted a sharp rebuke from Nigeria’s ambassador in Washington, Adebowale Ibidapo Adefuye,who advised McCain’s “well-paid staff to brief him properly on Nigeria and accord our country as well as the office of the president the respect they deserve.”
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UN Photo / Mark Garten
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan holds a press conference at U.N. headquarters in New York in 2011. Some Nigerians have criticized Jonathan for what they say is a weak response to the barrage of terrorist attacks perpetrated by Boko Haram in recent years.
Hillary Clinton has also come under fire because as secretary of state, she refused to place Boko Haram on the State Department’s list of foreign terrorist organizations after the group bombed the U.N. headquarters in Abuja in 2011.
But Johnnie Carson, assistant secretary for African affairs at the time, defended the decision, saying such a listing would’ve conferred legitimacy on Boko Haram, possibly sparked retaliation against Western interests, and diverted attention from the homegrown nature of the group’s complaints.
The State Department did eventually list Boko Haram and an offshoot group as terrorist organizations under John Kerry. The listing allows Washington to freeze members’ assets, impose travel bans and prohibit Americans from offering them material support.
Campbell said the criticism of Clinton was unwarranted and that he still opposes the listing, which has done little to quell the violence thus far.
“It was not remotely justified,” Campbell said. “I along with some 20 others who watch Nigeria quite closely sent a letter to Secretary Clinton that Boko Haram not be so designated. The reasons we advanced are still every bit as relevant now as they were then. It’s water over the dam … but I continue to think the designation is a mistake and in the future what it may do is deprive us of a diplomatic instrument.
“The ability of Americans out of government to enter into any kind of dialogue with some part of Boko Haram is depriving us of a potential tool,” Campbell said. “Officially that [listing] made sense, but there are times when it is useful for private American citizens to be able to talk to these people.”
Campbell said there are other reasons why the designation is counterproductive.
“Its primary provisions are almost entirely irrelevant,” he argued. “It denies visas to members of the group. Boko Haramites are hardly lining up at embassies to get visas to come to the United States. It also blocks the transfer of assets from the U.S. to the designated organization. Boko Haram doesn’t have any assets in the United States. The Nigerian-American community in the U.S. is overwhelmingly southern and Christian, so it’s not going to be sending remittances to Boko Haram. It’s irrelevant, but it makes people feel good.
“It is extremely limited in scope,” Campbell added. “It was originally designed for Middle Eastern groups like Hamas and that just doesn’t fit.”
The former diplomat said it’s important to distinguish between Boko Haram and other Islamic terrorist groups.
“They use the same rhetoric and they have essentially the same abstract goal, which is the achievement of God’s kingdom on earth through justice for the poor by means of Sharia,” Campbell said. “The difference is al-Qaeda in its various iterations is part of an international movement with an international focus and the U.S. is the great Satan.
“Boko Haram’s focus is on Nigeria but that could change the more we are associated with the Jonathan government’s struggle against them,” Campbell added.
The group has long viewed American values as corrupting influences, in particular education but also democracy, which it considers un-Islamic.
“The syllogism works this way,” Campbell explained. “Western education promotes secularism. Secularism is a foundation of the Nigerian state. The Nigerian state is utterly corrupt and exploits the poor, therefore the Nigerian state is anti-Islamic and so the destruction of Western education is an Islamic goal for which any means is justified, including slitting the throats of 59 adolescent boys or kidnapping 200 girls,” he said, referring to a February ambush on a boarding school in which the male students were massacred. In that attack, the girls were spared and told to leave school and get husbands. A few months later, another set of girls was not so lucky.
“It’s perfectly logical — the girls were brought together to take high school exams,” Campbell said of the April kidnappings. “That’s Western education.”
Some observers say the source of Boko Haram’s rage — education — could also be its downfall, if the government addressed the marginalization that has made the north fertile recruiting ground for the group. Isobel Coleman and Sigrid von Wendel, writing in Foreign Affairs, point out that despite its oil wealth,Nigeria has the “ignominious distinction of spending less on education as a percentage of [gross national income] than every other nation on earth, except Myanmar.”
“Abuja has long relied on indiscriminate force to fight Boko Haram, which has only resulted in massivecivilian casualties, fueled popular distrust of government forces, and left vulnerable villagers feeling trapped between radical extremists who favor no-holds-barred violence and an ineffective, even disinterested government that is also willing to resort to brutality,” they wrote, urging the government to tackle underlying socio-economic issues such as unemployment, illiteracy and insecurity. 
Campbell said the brazen kidnapping is a testament to Boko Haram’s support in northern Nigeria — a popularity that is often downplayed by the government — as well as its relative sophistication.
“You’re talking about more than 200 girls all dressed uniformly,” he pointed out. “That means Boko Haram has the ability to move around more than 200 girls, dress them, feed them and provide some kind of shelter. This implies a logistical and support train, which is more than a bunch of thugs running around,” he said, noting that they had access to military uniforms and transport for the girls.
Boko Haram’s ability to blend into the population may also be hampering efforts to rescue the girls, who may have been broken up into smaller groups.
Campbell said that Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram’s leader, has shown signs of political savvy, despite his out-of-touch rants and doubts over how much control he exerts over Boko Haram’s disparate cells.
“Shekau knows how to push buttons. What he is now saying is, ‘You can have your girls back if you release all of our operatives that are in jail,’” Campbell said. “No government can really do that, but suddenly he seems, if not reasonable, then he is at least opening up an avenue of hope. It’s quite clever. He knows exactly what he is doing.”
But while Shekau may know how to push political buttons, there is no indication Boko Haram is prepared to govern.
“They seek the destruction of the Nigerian state and its replacement by a purely Islamic state,” Campbell said. “They are a movement; they are not a political group. Their goal is not a political program; it’s a kind of religious aspiration.
“They don’t have 12-point program to address poverty in the north,” Campbell continued. “It’s all about God. That is one of the reasons they are so very difficult to deal with. You can’t buy them off, which is the traditional way of doing things.”


About the Author

Michael Coleman is a contributing writer for The Washington Diplomat.

Disaster Risk Reduction. Effective Law and Regulation

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The aim of this report is to support legislators, public administrators, DRR and development practitioners and advocates to prepare and implement effective disaster risk management (DRM) legal frameworks for their country's needs, drawing on examples and experience from other countries. The report considers both legislative provisions and stakeholder views on implementation. Its four objectives are to: (i) present examples of DRR legal provisions...

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