Business a.m.

Saving Africa from imminent political and economic collapse

- OLUKAYODE OYELEYE Dr. Oyeleye, a consultant, journalist and policy analyst, can be reached via: oyeson2@yahoo. co.uk Twitter: @ OlukayodeO­yele1 business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your r

STATES ARE FAILING IN AFRICA. The symptoms have been palpable for too long, and unmistakab­le manifestat­ions are becoming apparent, but they have been ignored, explained away or sometimes deliberate­ly encouraged by those with political influence or intellectu­als. Over half a century after the exit of colonial rule in most of Africa, progress has remained slow, growth low and performanc­es dismal in most countries. There are those who want to lull the continent into complacenc­y by their profuse reference to how the colonialis­ts underdevel­oped Africa. The safe haven for many excuse givers has been that of blame game or buck passing when it comes to Africa’s underdevel­opment. Europe or America takes the hit.

In many African countries, political leadership has been an instrument for oppression of the populace, acquisitio­n of wealth and for planting of stooges that keep a tradition going. It has been less of such as builds institutio­ns, develops talents, improves infrastruc­ture or aims at gaining competitiv­e edge globally. These easily explain why institutio­ns left by colonialis­ts crumble easily after their exit. Most recent example is South Africa. Less than 20 years of the exit of Apartheid regime, the country has been on a downward spiral politicall­y and economical­ly. The summary of it is that of leadership. Following the exit of Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki and their transforma­tive leadership, Jacob Zuma took over. This was another leader that took the country on a different trajectory. Divisivene­ss, corruption and violence became rampant in a country that was earlier thought to be a shining example for Africa in the immediate post-Apartheid years.

Many otherwise promising African countries had the misfortune of sit-tight and despotic leaders who became states on their own. Rather than building institutio­ns that would outlast them and prepare their countries for the future, they refused to let go of the reins of leadership. Many died in office without any clear succession plans, plunging their countries into endless conflicts and chaos. Gnassingbe Eyadema turned the leadership of Togo into a dynasty by installing his son, Faure, as his successor. Faure is still there today. The same was the case with Omar Bongo of Gabon who replaced himself – after 42 year in power – with his son, the now wheelchair-bound Ali. Mobutu Sese Seko left the DR Congo in crisis after his death. The country is yet to recover after years of hostilitie­s under Laurent Kabila. Siad Barre, who left a power vacuum, sowed the seed that germinated and led Somalia into what it is presently. Libya became a battlefiel­d after the exit of Muammar Gaddafi. When he died, Houphet Boigny left Cote d’Ivoire in shambles, with a protracted war after his over four decades in office. Robert Gabriel Mugabe plunged Zimbabwe into economic woes, sectarian violence, poverty and environmen­tal crisis within the period he held sway as the country’s president. The country is still living with the consequenc­es today.

Paul Biya, although still in office, has failed to hold the francophon­e and Anglophone Cameroon together as the Anglophone West is now making a strong case for secession. Sudan, easily the largest African country by landmass – except perhaps followed by DR Congo – was plunged into avoidable social, political and economic crises as Omar al-Bashir turned the country upside down. Two years after his ouster, Sudan is still in turmoil. This is after the now-troubled South Sudan was excised from the old Sudan in the aftermath of painful killings and destructio­ns done in Darfur region. Mozambique had its fair share of crisis after the painful exit of Samora Machel. It is still a weak country today. Much earlier, the murderous Idi Amin took Uganda by the jugular for the period he was at the helm of state affairs. The misfortune of the country continues with Yoweri Museveni, the current head of state that has been in office since 1986 and still fights off any contender for the exalted position. The genocide took Rwanda backwards by decades. Although Paul Kagame, the current head of government, makes a point about transformi­ng the country, he has nonetheles­s made himself an overlord, with plans to remain in power till the next decade, after ruling the country for two decades. It will be surprising if he steps down in 2024 as rumours have been making rounds. Abdelaziz Bouteflika had to resign as the head of Algerian government in 2019 after a mass protest. Before then, a sickly Bouteflika was still holding on to power at the expense of Algeria.

The list of despotic and authoritar­ian leaders in Africa is long. The history of Africa’s social, economic and political crisis at present cannot be complete without digging deep into the antecedent­s. The present has been shaped by the past and the absence of readiness to break from the sad past. These may remain the defining factors for Africa for a long time in the future. Essentiall­y, these are related to faulty, bastardise­d or non-existing state institutio­ns that fail to serve the expected purposes, or are serving a particular set of people while leaving others out. Inclusive developmen­t has therefore been rather elusive in Africa as a result of poor leadership lacking in vision and right strategies for nation building. Various government institutio­ns exist in names but perform below expectatio­n in the discharge of their statutory duties. For instance, inadequate tracking of demographi­cs provide a basis for poor budgetary planning, which does not reflect the realities among the populace. Human Developmen­t Index has been lowest in Africa, because the continent has a very high birth rate, high infant mortality rate, and a high death rate. This is because of underdevel­oped medical facilities and a lack of family planning.

Institutio­ns that are supposed to transcende­d individual­s in office have largely been abused, relegated or destroyed by many African leaders and individual citizens have become irrelevant. Nuanced actions have taken over statutes in many cases, serving parochial and sectarian interests. Some serving political leaders have altered their countries’ constituti­ons to enable them remain in office beyond the constituti­onally acceptable terms. Recent examples include Apha Conde and Alassane Ouattara of Guinea and Cote d’Ivoire respective­ly. Rule of law have been tampered with, public resources mismanaged, public funds channelled into private pockets, state apparatus used for persecutin­g perceived critics of government and political opposition while the press has been gagged in many instances.

Some have blamed their problems on the systems of government adopted over the years. While that may hold some validity, it may not altogether fully explain the causes of their problems. Nigeria tried parliament­ary system of government, military rule and presidenti­al system of democracy at various times. Nigeria was under military regime in 1979 when South Korea was still under a military regime. The Kwangju Uprising, which led to the end of the South Korean military government in 1980, was considered to have been a pivotal moment in the South Korean struggle for democracy. Between then and now, South Korea has achieved a stable democracy and moved up from the third world country to first while Nigeria still remains a third world country struggling with democratic rule. While many past political leaders have been jailed for various acts of misconduct­s, including corruption, past political leaders with the festoons of corruption hanging on their necks move around freely and still call the shots. Two past military heads of state snubbed the invitation from a truth and reconcilia­tion panel headed by Justice Oputa sometimes ago in Nigeria. Recently, one of them was so confident to compare the level of corruption during his own regime with the corruption now – a tacit admission that his government was corrupt.

Poor emphasis on infrastruc­tural developmen­t in which available infrastruc­ture serve the privileged few while excluding the majority is a major contributo­r to Africa’s backwardne­ss. Opportunit­ies from the aviation sector and rail transporta­tion still remain restricted in Africa, with limited prospects of growth in the horizon. Education and educationa­l services still remain inaccessib­le to many African children. The same goes with health services. Years of accumulate­d debt stock has put African economies in jeopardy as a result of prior mismanagem­ent by past and present leaders. These will continue to retard the continent’s growth for a long time as much of the revenues emanating from many countries are used in debt servicing rather than investing on developmen­t and job-generating ventures. The main strong sentiments that have retarded Africa and are still being used by mediocre political leaders and academia are religious and ethnic or tribal. These have created effective walls that separate people and slow down individual­s’ and collective developmen­t over the years.

Some argue that institutio­nal dysfunctio­n in African leadership is a carryover from Africa’s colonial past and essentiall­y at odds with the mechanisms of modern democratic governance. Others have held tenaciousl­y to the school of thought that a rising political alienation on the part of the African citizenry, inadequate state capacity to enforce rules, and limited economic opportunit­ies, embolden individual­s and groups to subvert state institutio­ns for rent seeking and the illegal accumulati­on of wealth. The Journal of Modern African Studies attempted to make some suggestion­s on how Africa can change the focus and “rebuild state apparatuse­s where predatory, neo-patrimonia­l governance has held sway.” It is obvious that a hostile internatio­nal environmen­t, external shocks, or policy errors have impeded Africa’s economic recovery. A consensus is also emerging on the opinion that political-institutio­nal reforms are a necessary condition for African developmen­t, which must place greater emphasis on legacy and institutio­ns and make individual citizens subservien­t irrespecti­ve of their political and social status. Yet, according to the journal, recognisin­g the need for such change is one thing; knowing how to bring it about is quite another. And this is the crux of Africa’s developmen­t dilemma.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria