C.O.OKIDl1 I welcome the opportunity to prepare a Foreword to the book
on Environmental Policy and Law in Africa, edited by Kevin R. Gray and
Beatrice Chaytor. It is a pleasure to do that because the book is a
contribution to the cause of capacity building for development and
implementation of environmental law in Africa, a goal towards which I
have had an undivided focus over the last two decades. There is still
some belief in and outside Africa that for developing countries in
general, and Africa in particular, development and implementation of
environmental law is not a priority. This belief prevails strongly in
many quarters of the industrialised countries. In fact, the view is held
either out of blatant ignorance or by some renegade industrialists who
fail to appreciate Michael Royston's 1979 thesis that Pollution
Prevention Pays.2 That group, for obvious reasons, must have their
correspondent counterparts in Africa to provide hope that industries
rejected as derelict in the West or inoperable due to rigorous
environmental regulation, can find homes to which they can escape and
dump their polluting industries.