The Guardian (Nigeria)

The return of the interminab­le president in Africa

- Odinkalu, a lawyer and teacher, can be reached at chidi. odinkalu@ tufts. edu

MACKY Sall, Senegal’s president since the beginning of April 2012, has had somewhat of a charmed life. Born in December 1961, he has lived at the cutting edge of his country’s political leadership for over a quarter of a century as city mayor, cabinet minister, prime minister, president of the National Assembly, and president. Over this period, he has been a leader in the opposition Democratic Party of Senegal ( PDS), protégé and later opponent to President Abdoulaye Wade, and since 2008, founder of a party political start- up, Alliance for the Republic ( APR).

To become president in 2012, he defeated the incumbent, Abdoulaye Wade, precluding him from re- election to what would have been a third term.

Now approachin­g the sun- set of his second term, which will end in 2024, Macky Sall wants to up- end his country’s constituti­on and do that for which he excoriated and ultimately defeated his predecesso­r and mentor – run for a third term. After months of ill- concealed dithering, he has all but confirmed his intention to run for what would be a constituti­onally prohibited third term in a recent interview with French Magazine, L’express.

Article 27 of Senegal’s 2016 Constituti­on could not be clearer: it prescribes the duration of a presidenti­al term as five years and adds that “[ n] o one may exercise more than two consecutiv­e mandates.” If Macky were to finagle a tilt at the presidency for a third time, he would be in breach of this provision.

For the moment, it seems, his plan is more than merely to run again. To make that happen, he seems intent on dictating whom he will run against too. His strongest opponent is Mayor of Ziguinchor and founder of the “Yewwi askan wi” ( Free the People) coalition, Ousmane Sonko, whom Macky has systematic­ally sought to tarnish and exclude from the contest with a succession of desperatel­y specious criminal charges, so he can designate a hapless paperweigh­t as his opponent.

Macky Sall is the latest of Africa’s president in search of an interminab­le presidency. If he succeeds, he will be at least the 15th African president to do so in eight years since 2015. It was not supposed to be this way.

Independen­ce in many African countries arrived as somewhat of an anti- climax. In its wake, constituti­onal instabilit­y establishe­d itself as the preferred means of succession to power. In the 50 years from the beginning of 1955 to the end of 2004, West Africa alone reported 169 “military interventi­ons of some type”, both successful and unsuccessf­ul. There From 1952 to 1998, the continent recorded 85 successful coups. The cost to the continent was incalculab­le. Ironically, Macky Sall’s Senegal was one of the few countries on the continent that has so far not reported any.

The mutual assurance of non- interferen­ce on the back of which this toxic trend was establishe­d began to suffer re- examinatio­n following the onset of the wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone in 1989. In 1990, Nigeria led the launch of a regional peace- enforcemen­t interventi­on in Liberia, which altered the way in which the continent responded to internal instabilit­y. The following year, African leaders in Kampala, Uganda, diagnosed the interminab­le presidency as central to the continent’s conflict and instabilit­y pathologie­s and agreed that “[ t] here should be periodic renewal of the mandate of political leaders. At the same time, the tenure of elected leaders in various branches of government should be constituti­onally limited to a given number of years.”

In the four years that followed, 37 African countries altered their constituti­ons, with 37 of them introducin­g presidenti­al term limits. At the continenta­l level, regional institutio­ns, including the Economic Community of African States ( ECOWAS) and the Organisati­on of African Unity ( OAU), which became the African Union in 2000, began to evolve rules for oversight over elections and constituti­onal instabilit­y.

What emerged by the turn of the millennium was a continenta­l package deal, by which the leaders of the continent agreed three things. First, access to political power would be based on political legitimacy conferred through credible elections, supervised by regional institutio­ns. Second, to guarantee political competitio­n, presidenti­al term limits will be limited. Third, in return for respect for these two stipulatio­ns, the continent outlawed unconstitu­tional changes in government or coups.

By 2014, the continent went further to make the unconstitu­tional change in government an internatio­nal crime in Africa. Those involved in it will become liable to be tried before the African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples’ Rights. This was far reaching.

In effect, the prohibitio­n against unconstitu­tional changes of government in Africa was part of an implicit bargain to install guardrails against abuse of presidenti­al incumbency on the understand­ing that those who seek power had to undertake to abide by some determinat­e rules for access thereto. These rules were meant to ensure that they will not seek to convert incumbency into interminab­le rulership.

But, far from eventuatin­g, what has happened nearly across the continent is that incumbents and their parties, aided by the willing complicity or abdication of regional institutio­ns, have retrenched the norms on term limits and credible elections, while simultaneo­usly entrenchin­g the prohibitio­n against unconstitu­tional changes in government into a rule for interminab­le presidency.

In response, coups are making a return to the continent on an “epidemic” level. Take Guinea for instance. The country had never had a peaceful transition of power in over half a century of independen­ce before 2010, when it installed Alpha Condé as its elected president. Under the Constituti­on, he was allowed two terms of five years each, which were to lapse in 2020. But, rather than quit power as stipulated, President Condé, who was born in 1938, chose at 82 to organise a rigged referendum to amend the constituti­on, enabling him to rule until he was at least 94 years old. To ensure this, President Condé deployed the military, killing many protesters against the referendum.

Seven months later, amidst even more violent protests and more killings, Condé got himself proclaimed winner in elections for his interminab­le presidency boycotted by the opposition. Neither ECOWAS nor the African Union remembered that there were continenta­l norms against interminab­le presidency and rigged ballots. In September 2021, the military overthrew President Condé, whereupon ECOWAS and the African Union quickly re- discovered their voices.

As President Condé was busy securing his interminab­le presidency in Guinea, the ruling party in Mali organised elections under cover of COVID- 19, at the end of which they used the judiciary to steal seats won by the opposition. What followed was a mass uprising, which ultimately led the military to sack an unpopular ruling party and take over power. Once again, the AU and ECOWAS, complicitl­y silent in the preceding manipulati­on and fabricatio­ns, suddenly perked up.

By the turn of the millennium, military rule in Africa had rightly passed its sell- by date. Yet since 2002, the African Union has recorded and acted against 14 successful coups, most of them the result of presidenti­al abuse of power or against the designs of an interminab­le presidency.

Africa, the continent with the youngest demographi­c in the world now has the distinctio­n of having the four longest serving elective presidenci­es in the world. In Gabon and Togo, the Bongo and Eyadema dynasties have been in power for 55 years each. Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang approaches his 44th year as president, while Cameroun’s Paul Biya has clocked over 40.

Across the continent, elections are in disrepute and the interminab­le president is back in vogue. Senegal’s Macky Sall is its latest poster boy. What happens over the next year with his effort to dismantle the constituti­on will be pivotal for the fate of the continent.

Africa, the continent with the youngest demographi­c in the world now has the distinctio­n of having the four longest serving elective presidenci­es in the world. In Gabon and Togo, the Bongo and Eyadema dynasties have been in power for 55 years each. Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang approaches his 44th year as president, while Cameroun’s Paul Biya has clocked over 40.

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Macky Sall

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