This is the 900th edition of The EastAfrican (Africa Review sister publication). It is also my 900th column. I have written 900 columns, although only 899 got published on time. There was one I filed from a freshly reunified Germany in 1996.
Those days the big technology was the fax machine. The column came through to Nation Centre alright, but fell under the table.
It was published somewhere else in the paper next issue, so at least it saw the light of day eventually.
Reflecting on this period, there is probably no better place to start measuring how the world and East Africa have changed than to look at the technology.
We have two daughters, one whom just went to college — and neither of them knows what a fax machine is!
When my first column appeared in November 1994, East Africa didn’t have a single mobile phone service. It also had only one independent FM station, if my reading is accurate: Sanyu FM in Uganda had been launched in June of that year.
Today you can’t turn a corner in East Africa without stepping on an FM station or presenter.
There were two big stories in East Africa then. The genocide in Rwanda had just “ended” a few months back, and the world was still too horrified to come to terms with the fact that nearly one million people had been butchered there.
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