By PETER MUTUA
In Summary
- Children in family businesses should be prepared for life and all its twists and turns.
- Leaders of Family Business should not imagine that wealth and power will endure through all circumstances.
- Leaders should focus on moulding character, setting attitudes and establishing good behaviour in their children.
The sight of three-year-old Alan Kurdi’s body washed
up on a Turkish beach stunned the world into acknowledging that there
was a refugee crisis of mammoth proportions in the Middle East.
It was not that migrants had not died before; more than
2,600 are known to have died crossing the Mediterranean trying to get to
Europe and other destinations.
The shock was that Alan – unlike the other
“anonymous” individuals referred to collectively as migrants (or
refugees when recipient countries were being generous) – was a real
person, not a statistic. He could have been a child in any European
household.
His limp body brought the enormity of the crisis
home to Europe and triggered a number of reactions that will greatly
benefit other refugees.
What may be lost as the world deals with this
catastrophe is that even though the refugees are desperate in their
attempts to get to Europe, a large number of them are from previously
successful professional and business backgrounds. They are now in
destitution because of the collapse of their home countries’ social,
political and economic structures.
In 2010, Libya had an income per capita of more
than $14,100 and in one momentous year, experienced an unprecedented 104
per cent growth in GDP. The country’s population was well fed, decently
housed and enjoyed some of Africa’s best infrastructure.
Without a doubt, numerous family businesses
flourished financially in this environment even though there may have
been discontent with Muammar Gadaffi’s extended rule. There were few, if
any, people crossing the borders in search of opportunities abroad
during Libya’s period of prosperity.
All this changed in August 2011 during the Arab
Spring when Gadaffi was overthrown and later killed in an uprising.
These events led to Libya’s economic freefall and the tragic
consequences on countries near and far.
No comments:
Post a Comment