Why African Diaspora is Attracting New Attention

by MUNA WAHOME

Nairobi — The freezing January weather in southern Maryland on the east coast of the United States could not be more different from that of Igboland in eastern Nigeria. But for years, that has not put off Clement Igbokwe, a former financial analyst turned grocer.

For the record, he is no ordinary grocer. He specialises in everything members of the African and Caribbean diasporas in his area might want. That includes stocking stuff that can only be sourced from specific African countries.

For Kenyans, that includes the Unilever food seasoning Royco that largely defines the peculiar culinary habits of Kenyans in all corners of the world.

For Nigerians, it is the soft drink Fanta — in a glass bottle and sourced directly from Nigeria!

Denizens of other countries are pampered with dried fish and chicken and baby food Cerelac straight from the home country.

But it is not just Africans abroad who are patronising the likes of Mr Igbokwe. Financial solutions providers and other business interests are stalking the African diaspora for their dollars, widely acknowledged in central bank reports on capital accounts.

The facade of his grandly named J & J International Food Store is covered by signs of money transfer firms Western Union and the Kiswahili-featuring latest addition, Kenya’s own innovation, Safaricom.

The two money transfer firms linked up a month ago, adding to Safaricom’s own transfer system aimed at the Kenyan diaspora in the United Kingdom.

“We have seen only a few Kenyans coming to use the service, but I believe that is because it is new,” said the Nigerian trader, one of over 400,000 Western Union agents in 200 countries. He volunteers that the money transfer business has been a big boon as Africans come in to shop as well as send money home.

Collectively Africans from sub-Saharan Africa transferred over $11 billion home (2007 World Bank numbers), and an African Development Bank study showed in a number countries surveyed, this accounted for between 9 and 25 per cent of their home countries’ GDPs.

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