Abstract

Misha Belkindas, IAOS President Elect, Managing Director of ODW Consulting and former manager of DECDG of World Bank spoke to the outgoing Director of Statistics at the AfDB, Dr Leyeka Charles Lufumpa about his three decades career at this institution.
But first let us get some of what his colleagues say about him
Dr. Lyeke Charles Lufumpa.
Interview with Dr. Lyeke Charles Lufumpa by Misha Belkindas
Misha Belkindas:Charles, how did you come to the fraternity of official statistics? Is AfDB statistics department the first place you worked in statistics or was something else before? And what did you do (studies, work) before you started your carrier in official statistics?
Misha Belkindas:We met first time more than 20 years ago, I believe“plotting” capacity building program together – AfDB and World Bank. Any reflection on the partnership?
Misha Belkindas:During your tenure many good things happened in statistics on the African continent – which project you like most and consider a success and which project you consider a failure?
One other key success I can cite is the work we have done in revolutionizing data management and dissemination systems across Africa through our Africa Information Highway initiative. Through this initiative, we have been able to provide all African countries and sub-regional organizations live data links for their own data management and dissemination needs and to facilitate seamless exchange of data with other partners. In this regard, the partnership with the IMF has done a lot to make many African countries adhere to the enhanced General Data Dissemination Standards of the IMF – a feat that has in turn helped to ensure the availability of more timely and quality data for decision making by economic actors. In other words, this has helped to put critical data for decision making at the fingertips of policy makers and millions of other data users.
As for failures, I think it’s the realization that despite the hard work we have put in and the successes we have scored, there is still so much to do to build effective statistical capacity in Africa, particularly in the fragile or transition states. The statistical challenges in Africa are still enormous and we need to stay the course if we are to make headway in sustaining the improvements that we are beginning to see in the African statistical landscape. I am heartened, however, to see the determination of colleagues in NSOs and partner institutions who are ever ready to soldier on and build on the current successes.
Misha Belkindas:Charles, how did you succeed in forging partnerships with regional and international organizations to deliver aid in statistics?
Misha Belkindas:How well you think you and your organization served your main clients – national statistical systems?
Misha Belkindas;Charles, how did you navigate internal Bank’s bureaucracy securing and disbursing funds?
Misha Belkindas:SDG’s and now COVID puts tremendous pressure on national statistical systems. Charles, do you have any advise to NSO, donors and to your current organization – AfDB?
Misha Belkindas:Plans for the immediate future in addition to relieving stress from you current job?
Misha Belkindas:Anything else you would like to tell what did not ask.
Misha Belkindas:was nice to talk to you Charles. As you know there is a world outside AfDB and you got to enjoy it. But I am sure you will feel the urge to get back to the fraternity and do good work on the ground. Good luck.
Testimonies by six of his peers from the African statistics family
Let us hear the full text from his colleagues which matches almost word for word of what this achiever on the statistical front in Africa says but with extraordinary humility an ordinary mortal can muster.
My first contact with Dr. Lufumpa was about the latter half of the 90s through my compatriot who was his colleague at the AfDB at that time. He was at the head of the statistics team at the Bank. His description of him was pleasant and dedicated.
In year 2000, a team of Consultants carried out the evaluation of the Addis Ababa Plan of Action (AAPA) for Statistical Development in Africa and the Evaluation Report was circulated to all stakeholders including the AfDB. Charles Lufumpa used that report to chart out a statistical agenda to support the AfDB.
This was followed by another programme, the International Comparison Programme for Africa (ICP-Africa) as part of the global programme which was brought to AfDB for execution of the African component. He thought that the Statistics Structure of the ECA was better suited to lead that programme. As at the time, the Statistics function couldn’t even be recognized within the ECA. This programme was brought back to the AfDB Statistics Unit and Charles took on the challenge of building a Division for Statistics of about 20 professionals in Statistics/Economics and implemented the ICP-Africa and making the African component most elaborate in the global endeavor. This programme in Africa took along with it the overall improvement of the Price Statistics and GDP compilation in Africa. That programme and its successors were huge successes.
Coming out of the ICP-Africa, under Charles management, in collaboration with the remnants of the ECA Statistics, a bold step was undertaken for the development of Reference Regional Strategic Framework (RRSF) for Statistical capacity building in Africa was prepared. This framework guided the development of African Statistics. (Under this framework was the development of strategies).
It was at the presentation and launch of the RRSF document that one of its recommendations indicated that AfDB would coordinate the implementation of the Framework which caught the eyes of the newly appointed Executive Secretary of the UN-ECA who then wondered why AfDB and not the Statistics function at the ECA? The simple answer was that the structure at UN-ECA was too weak to accomplish this task. It was he, the ES, Janney Abdoulie (2005–2012) that resolved to elevate the Statistics function with the establishment of the Africa Center for Statistics (ACS) and with committed support of Charles’ department of Statistics to enable the Center thrive. Charles extended his support to all other structures, programmes in African Statistics, including Statistics structures at the Regional Economic Communities in Africa, Statistical Training Centers in Africa; ASSD, African Union Statistics Unit. Dr. Lufumpa was not interested in having to compete with others on these various initiatives but more focused on collaboration and building all these essential structures and programmes.
His Statistics department served the countries of Africa in supporting their strategies for statistical development through the design of National Strategies for the Development of Statistics (NSDSs) including the development of a guide manual for doing the work. Another programme, initiated in his department was the compilation of Country Statistical Profiles which had helped establish African Information Highway.
Charles has a pleasant disposition, he is calm and thoughtful and always helpful and busy building bridges, never focusing on himself but on programmes of immense overall benefits to the region. He is a very decent personality, always putting across his views without any drama. A team player as well as an effective leader-indeed a transformational leader who got the work done.
My wish is that as he retires, he is not tired plus being in good health and will join the group of African Statistics Elders to continue with his powerful contributions. The African Statistics Community wishes him happiness plus abundant full life.
Dr. Charles Lufumpa has been at the forefront of the efforts and initiatives aimed at the development of the African Statistical System in the last 25 years or so. He provided a lot of insight, leadership and stewardship to processes of establishing and rollout of a new and innovative statistical architecture for Africa. This came on the heels of adoption in 2007 of the Reference Regional Strategic Framework for Statistical Capacity Building in Africa by the African Statistical Community and the Conference of African Ministers for Finance, Planning and Economic Development. The architecture involved, inter alia, upgrading the Statistics Division at the African Development Bank (AfDB) to a full-fledged Statistics Department; establishment of the African Centre for Statistics at the UN Economic Commission for Africa and a Statistics Unit at the African Union Commission; and establishment of the African Statistical Coordination Committee that brought together pan-African institutions plus the African Capacity Building Foundation and Regional Economic Communities. With this architecture in place, a number of consequential continental statistical initiatives were embarked upon, a lot of them with funding from AfDB. They included, among others, initiatives on the African component of the International Comparison Programme, African Group on Statistical Training, Africa Information Highway, Africa Infrastructure Knowledge Programme, Gender Statistics programme, Civil Registration & Vital Statistics Programme, Agricultural Statistics programme, African Symposium on Statistical Development, etc. We salute Charles on his lifelong dedicated service to and achievements in the promotion of statistical development and their use in Africa and internationally. We go forth with promise and energized by the great work done by this statistics giant.
The term statistical development in Africa is coterminous with Charles Lufumpa and spans two and half decades of a colourfully quiet career. He livened up the Addis Ababa Plan of Action for Statistics which was furloughed for almost two decades at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. When I first met him, it was with regard to participation of Statistics South Africa in the International Comparisons Programme (ICP). He wanted South Africa to participate as a ring country. I had just had my scars from a badly managed consumer Price Index, and taking on a global task on such a sensitive index did not place me in good stead. I refused, but a no to Charles does not work. He approached Jacob Ryten to speak to me, and in a joint meeting all went smoothly. Charles was one you would go for intractable missions with. He never shunned taking responsibility. One of those was the failed AfDB support for a session in Angola, one if left unattended and repaired could have spawned a political blowup in the newly born Africa Symposium for Statistical Development. The gory details are of entertaining value and deserve discussing separately. Suffice to mention that with a week to Christmas Charles was in Angola with the now Statistician General of South Africa, Risenga Maluleke, to manage and secure the successful progression of the ASSD. His soft voice belies his tenacity and determination. He hardly takes the limelight, leads from behind and the sidelines but steps up with uncompromising integrity when the occasion demands. My hostility to the AfDB when we established ASSD in January 2006, and located a terminology the “Friends of the ECA” was diplomatically melted with a visit to Tunisia where the discussion on roles and responsibility was discussed amongst the UNECA, AfDB and ASSD. Not only was the peace pipe smoked, a fig leaf was extended and shared, but it was done in the context of consumption of a variety of the most juicy, tasteful and size-able figs I have ever come across. Dr Charles Lufumpa structured the most innovative funding model for statistics in Africa. This was an envy in all regions. On the downside, Charles like most statistics offices in Africa and the world, led a boy’s choir, and in this regard a gender lens is urgently needed and this is a matter for his successor.
Namibia in particular will miss the contribution that Charles accorded to us in terms of his advice and assistance that we always received from him as the Director of Statistics at the AfDB. His accessibility, generosity, humility and guidance will always be treasured by Namibia and I believe by the African Statistical fraternity at large.
Go well Charles and please keep your door open for continuous support and advice.
We have all known Charles for a long time. Both professionally and socially. It is difficult to describe him fully without significant omissions. The task as we can all imagine is huge. Statistical development is a difficult programme and even more complex is development statistics. Dealing with 54 African countries national statistics offices, regional and global partners is not easy. It requires knowledge, skill, diplomacy, patience, commitment, integrity and the list goes on. Yet Charles made it look simple.
Dr Charles approached his work with passion. Partnered in mobilizing African countries to improve and invest in official statistics. Advised many heads of statistics offices on a personal level. Connected emotionally with everyone he met along the way and yes, he succeeded. Looking back, it looks like he gave everyone, everything that they needed. How that is possible, I will have to look for him to get the answer. He developed and supported many Pan African Statistics initiatives that have benefited many African countries.
His wisdom, dedication, supportiveness, peacefulness, firmness, the list is long is contagious. He is a man of great integrity. I wish I could find one word that covers everything that he is!
Wise, supportive, dedication, commitment, truthful, positive, …
We will keep in touch and we hope you spare some time to keep in touch with the statistics community.
I have known Dr. Charles Leyeka Lufumpa since 2004 when I was in the trenches of the general data dissemination system (GDDS) programme of IMF trying to help improve and develop sustainable statistical systems of countries in Africa. I learnt at the time that he was already a pillar if not a cornerstone in spearheading statistical development in the continent. Since then I grew to learn more about him and how under his stewardship of the statistics department at the African Development Bank supported countries in an array of statistical areas to building capacity. This was not only limited to member countries of the Bank but also to Regional Economic Groupings and the Regional Statistical Training Centres. During my tenure at IMF we shared an exchange of ideas on a number of issues, and in all of them he demonstrated his impeccable leadership and insightful knowledge of the issues that confront statistical development in Africa. He provided guidance on how the GDDS programme I was responsible for, could complement the work of the Bank and foster impactful capacity building in countries. Interestingly, after my tenure at the IMF in 2009, I ended up working for him as one of his Managers responsible for the statistical capacity development division in the statistics department at the Bank. It is in this time that I got to know and understand Charles and who he really was as a professional, a friend and my countryman. Charles has a big heart which is indescribable, and I am yet to know another person of similar standing, very tolerant, calm and collected always, even in the heat of a difficult situation. He did not show stress at all – always above aboard. It is therefore not surprising that he not only earned respect from his peers, heads of national statistical agencies both in region and beyond but also has become a world-renowned leader in statistics. The personal and professional relationship has continued even when I moved to the UN Economic Commission for Africa in 2016. We have continued to work together
in a number of complimentary statistical programmes and I must say, he has been instrumental in ensuring that all heads of statistical offices attend the Statistical Commission for Africa. Dr. Lufumpa made sure that the Bank provides financial support. His contribution in statistical development has been nothing short of phenomenal. I salute him, and I look forward to further engaging him in his new endeavor.
On behalf of the ECA and the entire African statistical community, I wish Dr. Charles Lufumpa all the best, and trust he will continue to add value as he transitions to join the many highly esteemed Statistical Elders that my office draws upon for support.
