"Digital Colonialism": U.S. Demands to Access Africans' Data Raise Privacy, Sovereignty Concerns [View all]
Frank Ssekamwa says the United States presented his country with an impossible choice. If it accepted the terms of a new health agreement, Uganda would have to give the U.S. access to the data of millions of his fellow citizens a decision he worries would make their personal information more vulnerable to breaches and possible exploitation.
But if it refused, the East African nation would likely lose out on more than a billion dollars to address HIV, malaria, tuberculosis and other illnesses, even as its people face ongoing threats from Ebola and other deadly infectious diseases.
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Across Africa, countries have faced similar dilemmas as the U.S. has held a series of closed-door negotiations in which lifesaving aid has been conditioned on access to citizens health data. The negotiations come in the wake of the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development, which in contrast with the new contracts provided billions of dollars in aid with few strings attached. Officials in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Ghana have been so outraged by the demands that they rejected the initial deals.
The demand to access health data is central to the Trump administrations new America First Global Health Strategy, an openly transactional approach that seeks to leverage the desperate need for medical treatments abroad. Aid will now be given in a way that directly benefits the American people and directly promotes our national interest, Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated in September.
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-state-department-africa-uganda-aid-medical-data-privacy
Blackmail. By the US government.