The Guardian (Nigeria)

Standing with Ukraine: An African perspectiv­e

- By Irene Fowler Fowler is a Nigerian internatio­nal lawyer ( Ll. M Harvard), human rights advocate, essayist, and poet based in Lagos, Nigeria.

RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin has crossed the Rubicon with his illegal, predatory and brutal invasion of Ukraine. His vicious war is based partly on ill- conceived, debunked and short- lived lies about the victimizat­ion of Russian speakers in Ukraine. The question is how many other aspiring little tin- pot dictators and soulless despots will now feel emboldened to emerge from the shadows and follow Putin’s example of achieving a netherworl­d level of mendacity and devastatio­n.

Alas, Putin’s new and bizarre benchmark for evil would be nowhere more consequent­ial and unwelcome than in Africa. Most, if not all, of our democracie­s, were cynically cobbled together to serve European imperial interests. As a result, they are fragile and comprise a hodgepodge of disparate tribal and ethnic entities, making us ultimately unable to co- exist and thrive as homogenous nation- states.

In his much- vaunted address to the United Nations Security Council on Feb. 22, 2022, Kenyan UN ambassador Martin Kimani said, “At independen­ce, Africa inherited arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers. Rather than seeking to redraw them in pursuit of ethnically homogenous countries, which would have condemned Africa to still be waging bloody wars these many decades later, the continent chose to follow the rules of the Organizati­on of African Unity and the United Nations Charter, not because our borders satisfied us, but because we wanted something greater forged in peace.”

The savage execution of Russia’s unprovoked war against Ukraine is being played out, minute by minute, before the eyes of the world. And we have seen this before. Similar grotesque leaps into moral darkness have taken place in several African countries. And the continent can ill afford to sustain the emergence of another tyrannical ruler who would try and impose his personal brand of megalomani­a while terrorizin­g wide swathes of the populace and further retarding progress and developmen­t. It behooves us to heed the words of British Science Fiction writer Charles Stross: “Where would dictators be without our compliant amnesia? Make the collective lose its memory, and you can conceal anything.”

In an emergency session on March 2, 2022, the United Nations voted on a resolution to condemn Putin’s war on Ukraine. Although the resolution garnered widespread support, only 28 of the 54 African countries represente­d in the U. N. voted in favor. In my estimation, the reticence of those other 26 African countries to champion the inalienabl­e rights of a sovereign democratic nation is a sorely missed opportunit­y to stand unequivoca­lly for the internatio­nal order and to forge deeper bonds with other democracie­s based on shared values.

I would counsel African leaders to be mindful of our tortured history under the foot of imperialis­m and its deleteriou­s fallout, the effects of which still haunt us and hold us back to this day.

Speaking of the land of his birth, South Africa, the global icon extraordin­aire and celebrated lodestar Nelson Mandela said, “Never, never and never again shall it be that this beautiful land will again experience the oppression of one by another.” I can boldly state without fear of contradict­ion that Mandela’s passionate emotions and irrepressi­ble drive would have found a common cause with Ukraine today.

Seared in humanity’s collective consciousn­ess are certain hellish episodes that will live in infamy and forever characteri­ze Man’s inhumanity to Man. These memories serve as silent sentinels of the depravity we are capable of as a species. Such an episode in the Second World War ( 1939- 1945), the origins of which can be traced to the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party in Germany.

Hitler’s Machiavell­ian tactics included vilifying and dehumanizi­ng certain population­s. A striking parallel can be drawn between Hitler’s demagoguer­y and Putin’s anti- Ukraine rhetoric. Equally sinister is the through- line between Kremlin propaganda and the countless ongoing atrocities being committed against Ukraine and its people by Putin’s invading forces.

On the African continent, we have witnessed episodes of genocidal terror in the name of ethnic cleansing. The situation is especially fraught, as it is estimated that Africa is home to about 3000 different tribes. Tribalism continues to remain a challenge to our fragile democracie­s, with omnipresen­t tribal tensions percolatin­g incessantl­y below the surface. It only takes an unconscion­able public figure, surrounded by a corrupt cabal of enablers and enforcers propping him up, for hell on earth to be unleashed.

Putin’s slash and burn model of exercising deadly power could have dastardly ripple effects across the world at large if not checked and eliminated. To stand by idly would be interprete­d as a green light for more of the same. The scene would thus be set for the igniting of countless other conflagrat­ions around the globe. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the heroic, intrepid man of the moment, has demonstrat­ed repeatedly that he is in a battle for the soul of the world.

The future of a rules- based internatio­nal order is dependent on functional and effective universal democratic governance. Democracy has proven thus far to be the most equitable form of governance and the best guarantee of individual rights and freedoms. Although it is far from perfect, it is underpinne­d by the rule of law.

The tragic events unfolding in Ukraine are a direct result of Putin’s tyrannical, autocratic leadership, evincing his criminal inclinatio­ns and total contempt for the rule of law. He must be held accountabl­e for his unlawful prosecutio­n of an unjust war against Ukraine. He must also be held responsibl­e for the many crimes against humanity taking place in Ukraine. Only then will democracy be able to ensure its viability, by simultaneo­usly employing both defensive and offensive measures to ward off full- on death blows against its continued existence.

I urge the gatekeeper­s of all democratic nations to draw inspiratio­n and resolve from the brave actions of Ukrainian leaders, and from those admirable, salt- of- the- earth Ukrainians who are in a David and Goliath fight for survival.

The successful outcome of their principled and righteous cause will redound to the longterm benefit of a rules- based internatio­nal order, and by necessary implicatio­n, enhance the stability and advancemen­ts of individual nations and global regional blocs.

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