EAC's stand on secondhand clothes has nothing to do with inferiority complex

RE: “Cagua: EAC should remain firm and reject US blackmail” (The New Times, July 25). Frankly speaking, I think our reactions are often guided by fanaticism against the West and all that comes from there.

Thursday, July 27, 2017
Second hand clothes and bags on display in Biryogo market, Kigali. File.

Editor,

RE: "Cagua: EAC should remain firm and reject US blackmail” (The New Times, July 25). Frankly speaking, I think our reactions are often guided by fanaticism against the West and all that comes from there. For the moment, our developing countries would lose much in banning cagua than keeping it for a while. As somebody said, our choice should be guided and determined by dispassionate calculation.

Keeping cagua in our developing countries does no harm to our still-nascent industries which must of course be strengthened. It should always be borne in mind that the majority of the populations in our countries do not have sufficient means to buy brand-new clothes.

We should therefore keep cagua for a while until our countries are able to ensure the development of the textile industry that is able to market affordable textile products for the population.  

By the way, secondhand clothes sold in Africa are not meant to dehumanise Africans. I have seen the same secondhand clothes being sold in Western countries. It seems to me that some of us cannot yet get rid of this complex of inferiority with respect to the West.

John Peter

**********************

I find you the perfect proof of what we have been saying about indoctrinated Africans (starting with the name that has nothing African at all about it) and continuing all the way to the opinions you espouse. You are a living illustration of exactly what Frantz Fanon, Bob Marley and Bantu Biko warned about alienated blacks, the need to emancipate the colonised from mental slavery, and the most potent weapon of the oppressor being the mind of the oppressed.

And kindly don’t project your inferiority complex on those of us who hold our agaciro as something more than just a word.

On your muddled thinking that we should keep cagua until we have been able to develop a local textile industry, you seem to be unable to understand a simple fact of crops being unable to thrive in the presence of weeds which throttle their growth.

There is no way a domestic textile garment industry can emerge, grow and thrive in the presence of such rubbish being dumped on our local markets. A bit of clearing of your thought processes would help you no end.

Mwene Kalinda