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This is a vivid personal history of an international business
career. "A Venture in Africa" takes the reader through the twists
and turns of doing business with African states and leaders in the
turbulent 1970s and later. Drawing on his long experience of modern
Africa and international business, Sardanis portrays the crises,
disasters and personalities he has encountered in the continent. He
shows how the old Africa of corruption, despotism and nepotism is
being replaced by a new Africa in which a rising generation of
business leaders is emerging - with practical technical and
professional skills and free from the post-colonial mentality. A
hugely intriguing and entertaining story which shows that Africa,
despite the bad press, presents an immensely important and a rich
source of commercial opportunities for the successful businessman.
On 24 October 1964, the Republic of Zambia was formed, replacing
the territory which had formerly been known as Northern Rhodesia.
Fifty years on, Andrew Sardanis provides a sympathetic but critical
insider's account of Zambia, from independence to the present. He
paints a stark picture of Northern Rhodesia at decolonisation and
the problems of the incoming government, presented with an immense
uphill task of rebuilding the infrastructure of government and
administration - civil service, law, local government and economic
development. Sardanis was a minister at the heart of the government
and later a highly successful entrepreneur. As a friend and
colleague of many of the most prominent names in post-independence
Zambia - from the presidencies of founding leader Kenneth Kaunda to
the incumbent Michael Sata - he uses his unique eyewitness
experience to provide an inside view of a country in transition. He
looks at the highs and lows of Zambia's political development: a
purposeful beginning followed by many blunders; confusion, at times
bordering on chaos, interspersed with flashes of sensible action
and good work.This book provides a detailed examination of the
major events in Zambia's history since independence and their
effect on the country's development and progress, based on
Sardanis's in-depth knowledge of Zambia and its people and the
inner workings of its government.
'Africa is a lost cause'. This is a cynical view held widely in the
West, in much of the world and even in Africa. Many people in the
old European colonial powers - and not only the dwindling band of
'old Africa hands' who served in the colonies - are in despair,
lamenting maladministration, corruption, civil and inter-state
wars, poverty, famine and the seemingly unstoppable march of AIDS.
And all in a great continent with abundant human and natural
resources. The other side of the coin is that hope is beginning to
dawn as Africa's plight is recognised by the Africans themselves
and its vital strategic, political and economic importance in the
age of globalisation is gaining universal appreciation. An 'African
renaissance' may seem far-fetched but there is perhaps light at the
end of the tunnel. This is the backdrop against which Andrew
Sardanis' fascinating story is set. It begins with his work as a
journalist in Cyprus - on the receiving end of British colonialism
- and moves to Northern Rhodesia where he played a leading role as
an international businessman and in the politics of independence
leading to the new nation of Zambia. He was at the heart of
Zambia's political and business development, and always a
sympathetic but critical observer and adviser, both in government
and in business, also a close but objective friend of leaders
including Kenneth Kaunda.
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