Industrialising Africa

On the other hand, the self-styled progressive goodism cries out against so-called mass deportations because they are actions that are very difficult to carry out. It is another matter to return to their countries of origin those people, human beings, who have broken the law, who do not respect the rules of coexistence and who only create problems and seek to take advantage of a situation that provokes different emotions and is used for electoral calculations.
When real experts, who know the reality of a continent with such diverse countries, tribes, traditions, cultures and religions, speak, they agree that one of the key elements for dealing with the phenomenon of immigration with certain guarantees is the need to industrialise these African countries. Each one with the resources and raw materials of its territory that allow for its own economic and social development, solvent institutions, and without the economic and commercial dependence on colonialism that they currently suffer.
Economic activity capable of creating jobs of sufficient quality and continuity to accommodate as many of the population as possible in each place depends to a large extent on being able to install and operate industries in the corresponding sectors.
The vast majority of African immigrants reflect the youth of societies that are increasingly aware of the need for education and training in order to have any hope of breaking the diabolical loop of misery caused by the lack of opportunities, by the scourge of drought, because their options in primary sectors such as agriculture, fishing, minerals, energy, among others, are limited because these products first pass through the circuit that serves to swell the GDP of foreign European, Chinese, Russian or American powers.
The harsh reality for many Africans is that they are forced to migrate from rural to urban areas in their countries. There, the lack of opportunities, the economic crisis in their countries, with corrupt governments in many cases that put the country in debt without converting this heavy burden of the present and future into public benefits, or conflicts of all kinds generated by the control of power and money, provoke the need and desire to achieve a dignified life in developed countries. Before, they did not know all the details of life in other places. Now with the internet on their mobiles they are aware that there are others who enjoy a very attractive level of development and comfort.
For all of them, it is essential to industrialise Africa.