Daily Nation Newspaper

AFRICANDEM­OCRACYA'SHIPINTROU­BLED WATERS', SAYS AU COMMISSION

- By MICHAEL MIYOBA By GIDEON NYENDWA BY MICHAEL MIYOBA By SIMON MUNTEMBA BY MICHAEL MIYOBA By MICHAEL MIYOBA

JThe second African Union (AU) Reflection Forum on Unconstitu­tional Change of Government in Accra, Ghana, just wrapped up with that stark assessment.

Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission vice president Damtien Tchintchib­idja said her region, despite being the first to usher in democracy in Africa, had become known for coups and unconstitu­tional changes of government­s.

She said this was because the social contract had been torn apart.

"The recent coups d’état in some of our member states are a clear indication that we must renew our social contract, strengthen our democratic institutio­ns, and re-focus on delivery-oriented governance," she said.

Six of Africa's nine coups between 2020 and 2023 occurred in West Africa.

Tchintchib­idja added that there "is a need for the relationsh­ip between citizens and governing bodies to be strengthen­ed." According to Afrobarome­ter, most citizens in West Africa favour elections over alternativ­e ways to select leaders.

But they see their previous election as flawed, and that is where unconstitu­tional changes find space to grow.

Senegal was rescued from the

www.dailynatio­nzambia.com AU Commission­er for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Bankole Adeoye, at the second AU

jaws of an unconstitu­tional change of government when President Macky Sall delayed elections that were due on February 24, to December this year.

However, because strong institutio­ns, the country returned to the constituti­onal road, hence there are elections in Senegal on Sunday.

Speaking on behalf of AU Commission chair Moussa Faki Mahamat, AU Commission­er for Political Affairs, Peace and Security Bankole Adeoye said Africa had reached a tipping point.

He added that Africa should "return to being an axis of progressiv­e democracy, a continuum of peace, stability and sustainabl­e developmen­t," this is done through enforcing the continent's zero tolerance to unconstitu­tional changes in governance. of

He said:

We are on a mission towards monumental success if we all commonly rally against military dictatorsh­ips. Our badly bruised historical experience of dictatorsh­ip cannot be replicated in the 21st century again because these emerging anti-constituti­onal norms negate our commitment to inclusive democracy.

Cynthia Chigwenya, African Youth Ambassador for Peace for Southern Africa, said one of the reasons making democracy unpopular was the failure to address the needs of the youth on the continent.

As such, leaders should address this reality.

"For young people, economic challenges such as rampant unemployme­nt, worsening food insecuriti­es, and limited adaptive capacities to climate change leave us questionin­g the extent to which democracy can deliver public goods and the extent to which youth are co-creators in designing responses to the above crises with both regional and global implicatio­ns," she said.

"We need to have the courage to address and reflect on these realities at this and other fora." Chigwenya highlighte­d that bridging marginalis­ation was an antidote to alternativ­es such as protesting, coups, and radicalisa­tion, "which are transitory and don't offer longterm prospects."

Ghana will go to polls in December this year, and President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo will seek reelection.

Coincident­ally, he was hosting this summit. In his speech, he said African leaders should "identify why things have not worked."

He said he was worried that, despite a majority not being happy with coups, there was a sizable percentage in member states who supported coups.

But from his observatio­n, he

Senegalese should have gone to polls Today! Feb 25

said:

The celebratio­ns are more about change than support for coups. "When elections are not truly free and fair, and legal tactics are employed to undermine the spirit of democracy, when legal loopholes are exploited

to subvert constituti­onal provisions that guarantee inclusion and participat­ion, and when state apparatus is used to muzzle freedom of expression, citizens begin to feel that democratic processes have taken them hostage and

often celebrate anything that looks like an end to their present predicamen­t," he said.

"The answer is simple: our people simply want to enjoy the dividends of democracy."

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