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Ezekwesili Identifies Bad Leadership as Africa’s Greatest Challenge
Kuni Tyessi in Abuja
Former Minister of Education, Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili, has linked bad leadership to a myriad of challenges affecting the economic development of Africa as a continent.
She suggested urgent structural transformation of African politics by leaders of thought across governments, the private sector, and civil societies who are determined to start that journey of change.
Ezekwesili, who stated this yesterday in Abuja at the 2023 School of Politics, Policy, and Governance (SPPG) graduation ceremony, said data had proven that development would not be feasible with the current state of affairs on the continent.
She said Africa has chosen the path of democracy, adding that if historical numbers are looked at, proofs are showing that countries that have enjoyed prosperity have come through the democratic path.
“As you listen to our brothers and sisters from various countries on the continent, you can see that it is a common denominator for Africans to mourn the absence of quality leadership.
“Africa has chosen the path of democracy and if you look at historical numbers, more countries that have enjoyed prosperity have come through the democratic path.
“So, democracy is a very important thing because democracy comes with political freedom. With political freedom, there is a rule of law and that rule of law is the cornerstone of economic freedom.
“It is economic freedom that leads to the proliferation of ideas, innovations, creativity and therefore, the two most important economic agenda for countries is to get solved faster and better.
“Competitiveness and productivity are all based on empirical data. So, if we know all those things as evidence abounds, we cannot then sit back and hope that somehow change will come.
“So, if Africans need to transform our politics and we just sit back as citizens, hoping that those who have entrenched poor governance as a matter of political culture will someday fall in the kind of Apostle Paul and have a Damascus experience we will wait forever and that is not something that this generation should do,” she stated.
In addition, a Kenyan activist, Boniface Mwangi, said Africa’s biggest problem is leadership and that has to be fixed, noting that too much concentration on religion has contributed to the continent’s underdevelopment, which must be addressed.
Mwangi stressed the need for young people to take over power from the older class, which has not helped the continent but are mere neocolonial stooges as African stolen wealth is stashed in advanced countries.
“Africa’s biggest problem is its leadership and we have to fix that. Driving from Abuja Airport to the Hotel I saw the biggest buildings and very magnificent ones were not schools, good homes but churches and there lies our problem. We focus a lot on religion and we need to fix that.
“Our leaders have copied the white man’s ways. When the white man colonised our continent, he took our lands; he took our minerals; he took everything and we kicked them out and then we took the bad habits. Our continent – our land was communal but now we have become very Western in our ideals. So, we have 10 billionaires and a billion poor in Africa and that needs to be fixed.
“And then we need young people to take over power and that can’t happen when we spend more time praying than politicking; make politics our way of life because the reason why you don’t have a job, the reason why there is no security, medicine in hospitals.
“The biggest mistake the young people have made in this continent is to serve the old people. The old people of yesteryears – the people who came before us – the ones who fought for independence did not collaborate with the white men; why are we collaborating with criminals, collaborating with thugs?
“So, we need to think about how we have across Africa a pan- African movement to fix our leadership because if we don’t fix our leadership we will be doomed. The people we have in power are neocolonial stooges, they work for the white man. The money that is stolen in our continent goes abroad,” he added.