Newswire : Africa confronts an aged leadership unwilling to retire

President Paul Biya of the Cameroons

Feb. 6, 2023 (GIN) – Africa leaders serving 20 or more years in office are drawing the attention of critics who question their ability to run a country after so many years.
Suspicions about the stability of Cameroonian President Paul Biya, age 89, were raised in a recent issue of Ghana Business News. According to some observers, Biya, seen in a video at the US-Africa Leadership Summit in Washington DC last month, appeared listless, absent-minded, confused and unaware of his environment.
 “He kept asking his aides where he was, some observers said, and who was in the room and when they told him and gave him his speech, he was flipping the papers and was asking more questions suggesting that he had no idea where he was nor what he was doing there.
 Biya has been Head of State for more than 40 years and was a resident of Switzerland longer than he lived in Cameroon. Some now question Biya’s mental and physical state.
 The case of Cameroon isn’t different from many African countries. In Zimbabwe, the late Robert Mugabe served as President until a very advanced age. When Mugabe died in 2019, he was 95 years old. He had ruled Zimbabwe for 37 years, and was ousted by his own henchmen in 2017, when he was 93 years old.
 In Gabon, 63-year-old Ali Bongo Ondima, the third and current president since October 2009, survived a coup d’etat in 2019. Among the stated reasons for the coup was an attempt to “restore democracy” following the 2016 election, which Mr Bongo narrowly won amid accusations of fraud and acts of violence. He has hinted he would run again for re-election this year.
Other aging leaders include South Sudan President Salva Kirr who appeared on the Internet wetting himself in public while performing a public duty. Kirr is 71 years old.

Teodoro Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea, at 80 years old, has been in charge of his country for 43 years, making him the longest serving Head of State in the world.

Nana Akufo-Addo of Ghana is 78 years old, and by the time he ends his second term in office, he would be almost 80 years old.

Others are the President of Cote d’Ivoire, 81-year-old Alassane Ouattara who changed his country’s constitution and extended his tenure in office, at the expense of the lives of some of his citizens; Nigeria’s Mohammadu Buhari , 80. As he nears the end of his tenure as president, two of the contenders to the office are in their 70s. Bola Tinubu is 70 years old and Abubakar Atiku is 76.

Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune is 77 years old. He became president after the death of Abdelaziz Bouteflika. Bouteflika died in 2021 at the age of 84 after running Algeria for 40 years.

At the age of 78, Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has been in office for 38 years and still counting.

“The age of the men running countries in Africa paints a gloomy picture of the continent where the youth make up more than 60 per cent of the population and projected to reach more than 850 million by 2050”, said Emmanuel K. Dogbevi in a recent edition of NewsBridge Africa. ‘It is high time Africans put in the spotlight the subject of the age of people they hand the running of their countries to.”   

Ghana picks new leader who promises jobs, jobs, jobs

akufo-addo

New President of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo

(TriceEdneyWire.com/GIN) – In a surprise upset for incumbent President John Dramani Mahama, voters turned out strongly for opposition candidate Nana Akufo-Addo, whose campaign for the presidency gave hope to thousands of jobless Ghanaians.

Mr. Akufo-Addo earned 54% of the vote, while Mr Mahama took 44 percent. It was the first time in Ghana that an opposition candidate defeated an incumbent President at the ballot box.

“There must be jobs in our country,” Mr. Akufo-Addo declared. “That means big investments in viable industries and boosting our agriculture productivity,” adding that he was also committed to delivering on a pledge, made five years ago, to ensure that all Ghanaians would have access to free secondary education.

“The lack of jobs, which is the case under (the Mahama) government, poses a threat to the future stability of our country.”
Ghana’s underemployment rate is 33 percent with 69 percent of the working population in low wage, insecure and informal jobs, according to the online news site Ghanaweb.

According to the World Bank, some 48 percent of the youth between 15-24 years have no jobs. In a press interview, Mr. Akufo-Addo stressed that jobs for this sector would get top priority as rising youth unemployment was a “betrayal of future generations and would create problems down the road.” Unemployment is also higher among women, according to the Bank.

Agriculture, the backbone of Ghana’s economy, recorded the lowest average growth rate at 3.9 per cent annually over a period of two decades from 1993 to 2013.

The crisis in employment has been called “an unemployment time bomb” which has forced hundreds of high school graduates to leave the country for better work opportunities. In a move to build back industry, Mr. Akufo-Addo pledged to build one factory in each of Ghana’s 216 districts. He pledged to build a dam in every village to support agriculture.

Along with jobs, the president-elect promised to attack corruption with the appointment of an independent prosecutor. Last year, Transparency International ranked Ghana as second most corrupt African country, after South Africa.

The president-elect will be sworn in on Jan. 7 after a short transition period. Mr. Akufo-Addo comes from a prominent Ghanaian royal and political family. His father was a Chief Justice, President of Ghana (1970-1972) and member of the “Big Six” who, along with Kwame Nkrumah, spearheaded the transition from colony to independence.

His maternal grandfather was Nana Sir Ofori Atta, King of Akyem Abuakwa, one of the largest and wealthiest kingdoms of the then Gold Coast Colony. The president-elect’s own political career spans more than four decades. Active in political movements in his early 30s, he criticized the military government of the time.