STRONGMAN'S RULE
This year marks the 32nd year
since Mr. Museveni ascended to power by force. Other heads of states, such as
Eduardos dos Santos, Theorodre Oguang Ngema in Equatorial Guinea, and Mobutu
Sseseko of Zaire ruled for well over the 32 years mark. Currently, there are
about 10 such Presidents in Sub-Sahara Africa whose longevity in power exceeds
a generation of 25 years.
In nearly all these countries, the Presidents also presided over Africa's
most impoverished and disparate societies, whose citizens are some of the world’s
most suppressed, alienated, disempowered, and divided along parochial lines
such as tribalism. For all the years in longevity, these countries produce and
export colonial era produces – cash crops, are highly indebted, and fail to
provide social services to its citizens. The longer the regime stays in power,
the more it becomes incompetent and illegitimate, leading their nations to
exploitation and under-development.
The proponents of such regimes, who construct and propagate idealized
narratives to justify the dismal performances, are usually the gullible elites
and foreign interests.
By incompetence, we mean the growing inability
of these regimes to uphold the social contract and their dealignment of the mandate
to fulfill the development needs of the people. That is, the failure to prioritize
and deliver on the needs of its people when it should. By illegitimacy we mean
the phony manner in which most of these regimes retain power.
There is an observable inverse function between these variables - the
longer a regime stays in power (longevity) in Africa, the more they decay -
become incompetent and illegitimate, - with inefficiency as a near natural
consequence.
The incompetence starts with the regimes ceding critical policy matters
to foreign interests (corporations, foreign powers, and so-called development
partners), eventually becoming less accountable to their people, and growing accustomed
to privileges resulting from the functions of social and historical structures
(including colonial structures) that generate social inequalities.
No one African country that has had a leader for over 25 years was
transformed within those years, from a primitive society to industrialized
nation. Libya under Muammar Gadhafi became a dependent state, not an industrialized
welfare state. Most of these countries are basket cases – as failed or failing
states. Further, citizens in these countries become deformed, disempowered, and
deprived of citizenship rights. These states tend to collapse with exit of such
leaders because they survive by destroying the institutions of the state.
In nearly all these countries, citizens are disempowered that they cannot
seek accountability from their government, they civic rights are diminished.
Many are now subjects of modern slave trade and human trafficking.
The longevity also makes it possible for foreign interests such as IMF/WB
and development partners, such as USAID, EU, DFID, to usurp critical domestic
policy areas, shaping social and economic policies, to benefit western and
eastern civilization.
There is need for a new generation of African thinkers to challenge this
concept of strongman militarized longevity. Africans need to adhere to term
limits more so than age limits for effective management of modern African
societies and its resources to develop the continent. Several scholars have
studied macro-economic policies that exploit Africa and anti-statist influence
of neoliberalism - citing the roles of civil society, foundations/Charities (philanthrocapitalism),
and African elites in undermining, reducing, and containing the state to a bare
minimum.
However,
the strongmen’s regime typology in Africa has become an outstanding
menace that subverts social and economic development of Africa. They promote under-development
through their nepotistic/sectarian tendencies, for survival; incompetence in enacting
pro-people’s social and economic policies; complacency to residual colonial structures
of power and foreign interests; repressive to evade accountability; stratifying
through a false and opportunistic elites to justify and normalize their
incompetence and inefficiency.
In sum, most of the long serving regimes in Africa are not only incompetent
but also illegitimate.
End.
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