Tag: Africa

  • 55 nations for Africa Internet Forum

    55 nations for Africa Internet Forum

    Nigeria will, between September 18 and 21, host 54 nations at Africa Internet Governance Forum (AfIGF 2023) in Abuja, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    This year’s event, the 12th edition, will be hosted by Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) at Transcorp Hilton Hotel in Abuja.

    NCC’s Director of Public Affairs, Reuben Muoka, said the forum would serve as a platform for dialogue and collaboration  to advance digital connectivity, address challenges, and empower Africa through digital transformation.

    Read Also: Political dynasties and Africa’s instability

    Muoka said: “The event will be preceded by African Youth Internet Governance Forum,  from September 13 to 18. 

    “The events will begin with Parliamentarian Symposium, on September 18 and 19, during which members from participating countries will consult and network with in a roundtable for better understanding of roles of the legislature, and nudge deeper synergy with parliaments on Internet Governance.’’

    “As a crucial gathering of stakeholders and investors in Africa’s digital future, the AfIGF 2023 promises to be a rare assemblage of key stakeholders from government, civil society, academia, the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) sector, and a broad spectrum of actors in the private sector intentionally rallied to discuss important matters focused on the development, access, and governance of the Internet in Africa.”

  • Coups, the state and crises of instability in Africa

    Coups, the state and crises of instability in Africa

    • By Charles Onunaiju

    The return of the military in some countries in the West and Central Africa sub – regions have generated intense concerns about what many people consider the fate of democracy in the region. In Niger Republic, where the military takeover happened in late July, ECOWAS, the sub -regional organization and the strong men in Niamey are negotiating to restore the ousted civilian government, even though hopes are fast fading that the former civilian administration would be reinstated. The military regime is offering a three-year transitional period before the restoration of civil rule.

    In the Central Africa state of Gabon, with a population of less than three million, a 56-year dynastic rule of the Bongos was terminated, with crowds pouring out in the street to celebrate. Earlier between 2020 and today, coups and counter coups have taken place in Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso and even an attempted but unsuccessful one in Guinea Bissau. Concerns are that the ambitions of some factions of the military in the region are threatening elected civilian rule.

    Read Also: The coup epidemic

    There is ground-swell of opinions that democracy Africa is in crises. Some opinions hold that civilian practitioners of democracy have poorly executed the project leaving the room for the ambitious factions of the military to step in. In some cases as in Guinea and Gabon, politicians attempted to manipulate the constitutional process, leaving popular frustrations to boil over and consequently instigating the military intervention.

    While the political process of the civil rule might be weak and vulnerable to manipulations, the state as the critical foundation upon which the democratic process is erected is amorphous, ambiguous and fragile and the contemporary crises of civilian rule in Africa is a manifestation of the deeper crises of the ambiguity of the state in Africa. The nature of modem state anywhere, is the culmination of the dynamics in historical trajectories of the society in question.

    The dynamics involves conflicts and its resolutions which naturally generate institutions, processes and rules that mitigate and shape the construction of consensus, a foundational framework for resolving emerging dissensions, agitations and conflicts.

    In Africa, the modern state was the result of a violent and disruptive external intervention and the arrest of the continent and her people’s historical process. The purpose of the colonial state from whence the modern state arise has no consideration for the concerns of the people except for maintenance of an “order” that was conducive to the colonial project of domination and exploitation.

    The achievement of political independence and the end of colonial rule would not have been the ultimate ambitions of the anti-colonial leaders but a total reconnection to the African historical process through renegotiating the inherited colonial state and casting it anew in the light of the several existential social variables and the historic nature of the productive forces, values and the point of the clash of colonial and indigenous institutions. None of these introspections or reflections would have meant the wholesome rejections of the concrete experiences and its institutional manifestations gained in the course of the encounter with colonialism and its chief instrument of enforcing domination and plunder, the modern state.

    Contemporary military coups in Africa and poor governance under civil democratic rule are not crises of democracy but critical and epic crises of the state. Democracy especially liberal or electoral democracy is contestations and competitions but must be secured on the strategic consensus and order enabled and fostered by the state.

    A state built on consensus and order is one whose institutions, processes and rule evolve from the internal dynamic of its society, manifesting its values and social norms. The critical role of the state as an ombudsman and arbiter is not in its coercive power alone, which it however deploys to remake the recalcitrant, but in the power of the civic consensus from which it originates, evolves and thrives. The broad legitimacy of a state, originating from civic consensus or even a revolution but generating a template for consensus, is the stable order on which the mechanism of democracy can and should be erected to advance the common good.

    The modem state in Africa was made in the image of their colonial creators and because it was born out of a historical lacuna, it did not bear birth marks of Africa’s existential social reality. It was born and thrived under the reality of colonial domination and exploitation and save for the change of personnel with the departure of white colonial administrators and managers, nothing significantly changed in the structure of the state. And even an indigenous attempt to re-purpose the state, without affecting its structure and interrogating its origins have led to the contemporary atrophy and stagnation in which the game of revolving doors alternating between the interregnum of civilian and military rule becomes the fate of Africa.

    The social context of the current stagnation of civil rule in Africa is the unreformed modern state and the dysfunctional institutions and processes it has spawned. The slippery ground on which the democratic project is been erected is the beleaguered and ambiguous state. The modem state is an organism and not of machine. It should be a living organism, breathing the oxygen of its own reality, evolving in coherence with the daily dose of the indigenous experiences and ideas that nourishes and strengthens it.

    Where the state is a living organism, it lives and thrives by the nourishing hopes and aspirations of its people. In most of Africa, the modern state from its colonial origins to its contemporary existence has functioned as machine, lifted by any triumphant faction of the competing elite to primitively extract surplus while leaving the people with the burden of an unreformed machine.

    To revisit the state and reinvent it in the context of the Africa’s existential reality and aligning it to current and contemporary stage of development, without the pyrrhic declaration of easy victory is the only way forward. Inclusive and sustainable development has been vitiated in Africa not for lack of vision or goodwill but has been largely constrained by the objective nature of its modem state. Even the electoral process in Africa has remained stymied with controversies about its credibility and in most cases heavily contested by parties.

    Because civil democratic process has been constrained by the nature of the modern state, it has not delivered on tangible improvement in the quality of lives of the people. Military interventions and rule is more constrained to deliver on sustainable and inclusive development, because the military is the most acute and concentrated expressions of the ambiguity of modern state in Africa, that made it structurally more of the problem than the solution. Any meaningful reform and reinvention of the modern state in Africa would re-assess and realign the military in the course of any meaningful strategic retooling of strategic institutions.

    As it stands in Africa today, there would be no need to reinvent the wheel or indulge in the lazy fantasy of knocking everything out; statesmanship and imaginative leadership should understand the extant hollowness that belies institutions that enjoys the bloom of generous rhetoric flourish but grossly deficient in the critical indices that makes for institutional efficiency and credibility. A credible and efficient state would considerably give effect to entrepreneurship and resourcefulness and also allows immense  scope to the unfettering of the productive forces and harnessing them in a free and open market largely unconstrained by  vicious special interests.

    A market economy is a mobiliser of entrepreneurial initiatives but without a strong, credible and efficient state, it would be an arena of chaos where bandits and robbers dressed in business suits are eminent actors. The return of what appear like epidemic of military coups is not simply an assault at democracy and should not be finger point exercise at any culprit.

    The story of the stagnation and ambiguity of the modern state in Africa is not a pathetic license for hopelessness but a wake – up call to reframe the existing thought infrastructure, realign it to the social reality we live in and not to cultivate an extant idealism constructed from another social reality. The practical way to re-engage our reality is to interrogate it with more and more questions instead of pretending to have found the answers.

    • Onunaiju is director of Abuja based think tank.
  • Political dynasties and Africa’s instability

    Political dynasties and Africa’s instability

    Sir: In the quest for political stability, African nations have grappled with the need to address multiple prerequisites. However, a paradox has emerged, as leadership itself has become a stumbling block. Despite the clear need to prioritize the prerequisites for stability, many leaders, driven by dynastic ambitions, have inadvertently pushed their countries towards the brink of instability.

    Across Africa, political dynasties have become a formidable force, with leaders grooming their own family members for political ascendancy. While this phenomenon is not unique to Africa and echoes in other parts of the world, it is the illegitimate perpetuation of family rule that raises concern.

    In some cases, leaders with hardline and illiberal tendencies have employed questionable methods to transfer power to their family members, thereby undermining political stability and democratic governance. Some notable examples will suffice.

     Following Laurent Kabila’s assassination in 2001, political elites swiftly placed Joseph Kabila in power. Over nearly two decades, his rule was marked by attempts to extend his stay, prompting widespread protests. Even after leaving office, Joseph Kabila continues to wield considerable influence in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

    In 2005, the passing of Togo’s long-time ruler, Gnassingbe Eyadéma, led to his son, Faure Gnassingbe, assuming power. Faure manipulated the constitution to extend his rule, raising concerns about democratic governance.

    Read Also: Niger, Gabon others may miss Africa Military Games 2024, says DHQ

    In Gabon, the just ousted president succeeded his father in 2009 and maintained his grip on power through questionable elections designed to secure his continued rule.

    In Chad, Idris Derby’s son succeeded him after his death in battle last year, sparking debates about the legitimacy of the transition.

    The president of Equatorial Guinea, who recently embarked on his sixth term in office, has long groomed his son as his successor, ensuring the continuation of family rule. Reports suggest that leaders in Eritrea and Cameroon are contemplating grooming their sons or relatives to perpetuate dynastic rule.

    These dynastic successions and the determination to consolidate them have emerged as significant sources of instability across the continent. The persistence of political dynasties in African politics continues to shape the continent’s political landscape and poses significant challenges to stability and prosperity. These dynamic fuels illiberal democracy and authoritarianism, undermining the foundations of democratic governance and political equilibrium. To overcome these challenges, African nations must prioritize democratic values, accountability, inclusivity, and good governance.

    Breaking free from the grip of political dynasties and embracing the principles of true democracy is imperative. The future of Africa depends on its ability to navigate this complex terrain, dismantle the chains of dynastic rule, and chart a path toward genuine political stability, prosperity, and democratic progress. The journey may be challenging, but it is essential for Africa’s growth and development in the 21st century.

    • Akinola Ayobami Steven, <akinolaa61@gmail.com>
  • Intrigues as Africa bows to spectre of coup d’etats

    Intrigues as Africa bows to spectre of coup d’etats

    • Why Nigeria must shun calls for military takeover

    Robert Okon simply couched terror in a patriotic slogan. “Nigeria must be saved. Very soon, it will be our turn. The next coup will be in Nigeria,” he said. His words pirouetted with insolent conviction, inciting more doomsday predictions across his WhatsApp forum. One contributor to the discourse said it was about time Nigerians marched on the Defence Headquarters to present a formal letter to the armed forces to forcibly take over the reins of government.

    Another brazenly suggested that the Russian mercenaries, the Wagner Group, be invited to facilitate the coup if the Nigerian Army wouldn’t budge.

    No form of appeasement or moral suasion could pacify the coup mongers. Not even the cautionary take that “the internet never forgets.”

    Many contributors to the forum applauded the increasing incidences of coup d’etats across the African continent. In a reflecting window perhaps they might discover the horror of their wild convictions.

    There is no gainsaying a new pandemic spreads and spirals through Africa as gun-totting bloodhounds barge onto the corridors of power in a series of terrifying coup d’etats.

    The culprits – mostly young soldiers and members of presidential guards – all chant their intent to salvage what’s left of their plundered nation-states. No thanks to “corrupt civilian leadership.” 

    The most recent coup was executed by military officers in the oil-rich Central African nation of Gabon. The officers said, early on Wednesday, that they had seized power and were overturning the results of a disputed election that returned the incumbent, President Ali Bongo Ondimba, for a third term in office.

    Read Also: Abdulsalami and Jonathan on African coups

    Appearing on state-run TV hours after Bongo was declared the winner of last weekend’s vote, the officers said they were cancelling the result, suspending the government and closing Gabon’s borders until further notice.

    Gunshots boomed through the country’s capital, Libreville, from the vicinity of the presidential residence soon after the announcement. Hours later Bongo, one of France’s closest allies in Africa, appeared in a video posted to social media and authenticated by an adviser, pleading for international help.

    The takeover in Gabon is just the latest in a string of coups that have taken place in recent years and comes just a month after soldiers took control in Niger. On July 26, 2023, members of Niger’s presidential guard detained President Mohamed Bazoum inside his palace, declaring on national television that they were seizing power to address the “deteriorating security situation and bad governance.”

    Abdourahamane Tiani, the commander of the presidential guard, was named the new head of state a few days later by the military junta.

    The coup by the presidential elite force in Niger has been condemned by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and Western nations, notably France, which has considerable interests there. Sanctions are being imposed by Western and African countries, including Nigeria, to force the coup leaders to hand power back to the president.

    The leaders of ECOWAS have been in talks with the junta to reinstate constitutional order, noting that they will activate ‘standby forces’ if diplomacy fails.

    Against the backdrop of the deliberations, the junta has severed ties with its former coloniser, France, and ordered the French ambassador, Sylvain Itte, to leave the country. Earlier this month, the National Council for the Safeguarding of the Country (CNSP), ended Niger’s military agreements with France and ordered its troops to leave by Friday, September 2. France has, however, refused to withdraw on the grounds that it does not recognize the authority of the military government; it reiterated its threat of supporting military invasion by ECOWAS, even as the regional bloc is “determined to bend backwards to accommodate diplomatic efforts.”  

    Niger’s military government reportedly cut off electricity and water supply to the French embassy in Niamey, the country’s capital, on Sunday, August 27, after the expiry of the 48-hours it gave the French ambassador, Itte, to leave the country.

    The junta also warned Nigeriens against providing electricity, water, and food supplies to the French military base, warning that anyone caught doing so will be treated as “enemies of the sovereign people.”

    Mass protests against French troops intensify in Niger as the deadline for the withdrawal of the French troops and ambassador approaches. The 1,500 troops-strong military base in Niamey has become a site of frequent demonstrations, with people demanding that Niger’s former coloniser withdraw its troops, waving the national flag of Niger, reportedly alongside those of the BRICS countries and the DPRK.

    A similar protest was also held on Friday, August 25, hours after the military government, the National Council for the Safeguarding of the Country (CNSP), ordered the French ambassador out of Niger. Protesters raised anti-French slogans and threatened to invade the base if the troops did not leave Niger in a week. 

    A disturbing trend

    The recent coups in Gabon and Niger highlight a disturbing trend in several West African countries: the resurgence of unconstitutional means to bring about regime change. In the last three years, there have been military takeovers in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Guinea.

    In Burkina Faso, there were two coups in 2022; the first coup was executed in January by Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Damiba who ousted President Roch Kabore citing the latter’s failure to contain violence by Islamist militants.

    However, on September 30, 2022, Captain Ibrahim Traore seized power from Damiba to become the country’s new leader.

    In Chad, the army seized control of the country in April 2021, after President Idriss Deby was killed in combat while visiting forces engaged in fighting rebels in the north. The president’s son, General Mahamat Idriss Deby, was named interim president, which contravenes Chadian law, where the speaker of parliament should have become president. The unlawful transfer of power sparked rioting in N’Djamena, the country’s capital, which the military eventually quashed with extreme force.

    Likewise, in Mali, President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita was overthrown in August 2020 by a gang of Malian colonels under the command of Assimi Goita. But following a clash between the coup leader and the interim president, retired colonel Bah Ndaw, the junta staged a second coup in May 2021, and Assimi Goita, who had been acting vice president in the meantime, was promoted to president.

    In Guinea, President Alpha Conde was overthrown in September 2021 by he army’s special forces leader Colonel Mamady Doumbouya after the former altered the constitution in 2020 to circumvent restrictions that would have prohibited him from running for a third term, which led to severe unrest.

    ECOWAS thereafter imposed sanctions on Doumbouya, the junta leaders, and relatives, rejecting the promise of a transition to democracy in three years apparently with little impact.

    There have also been failed coup attempts in Guinea Bissau, The Gambia and the island nation of Sao Tome and Principe.

    The recent coup d’etats span what has been called Africa’s coup belt: a line of six countries crossing 3,500 miles, from coast to coast, that has become the longest corridor of military rule on earth.

    These forcible military interventions have so far aggravated the pattern of instability across Africa’s Sahel and jeopardises what has been a rare process of fairly steady democracy building in the region.

     Some African coup statistics

    Out of the 486 attempted or successful military coups executed globally since 1950, Africa accounts for the largest number with 214, of which at least 106 have been successful. Based on data compiled by American researchers Jonathan M. Powell and Clayton L. Thyne, at least 45 of the 54 nations across the African continent have experienced at least a single coup attempt since 1950.

    Pundits believed that coups were becoming unfashionable in Africa by 2015 due to a reduction in their occurrences on the continent. Recent events, however, suggest that they are dangerously back in fashion in Africa, as some countries including Gabon, Niger, Guinea Bissau, Guinea, Mali, Chad, Sudan, and Burkina Faso, have experienced a series of successful and failed military takeovers over the last four years.

     Coups don’t happen in a vacuum

    The recent military coups, however, did not happen in a vacuum. Issues of corruption, insecurity, unemployment, and a sit-tight syndrome among Africa’s civilian and aging political class, have all contributed to the atmosphere of discontent that enabled the military intervention.

    Several other reasons have been adduced for the prevalence of coups in Africa, including modernisation, cultural pluralism, soldiers’ greed and grievances, poor governance, corruption, autocracy, limited economic growth, and low income levels, among other factors.

    Many of the discussions, however, have focused on internal triggers and factors, thus underestimating the pivotal role of foreign entities. While a few external factors, such as colonial heritage and the Cold War between the United States (US) and the Soviet Union, have been included in the causes of military coups in Africa, such discussions have not been convincingly presented.

    The unfolding dynamics of the current crisis in Niger bear the distinct imprints of global power politics. There are reports of Russian involvement in the coup, with allegations pointing towards the participation of the Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary organisation.

    The legacy of France, a formidable player in the region with its historical colonial clout, looms large in the surge of military coups seen across the former French colonies. The four recent countries subjected to coups all share a common Francophone heritage, and the coup leaders consistently attribute their actions to the ousted democratic governments’ perceived pro-French leanings. In the context of Niger, the military justified its actions by painting President Bazoum as a puppet manipulated by French interests.

    Thus while the rising cases of military coups have been viewed by most as a threat to democracy, some pundits have interpreted the trend as a rebellion against French neocolonialism.

    Niger, for instance, is part of the 14 West African countries that form what is known as the Franc Zone. These countries might have achieved political independence but are still economically enslaved thanks to a colonial pact that not only determines how these countries spend their own money but also ensures that France remains the main beneficiary of their natural resources.

    Recall that former French colonies in West Africa were joined through a pact that forced them to deposit as much as 50 per cent of their foreign reserves into the French treasury. This money is held “in trust” by the French government to guarantee what is known as the CFA (Communauté Financière Africaine) franc currency used in these countries.

    In essence, Paris determines economic policies for these countries – with France remaining the main beneficiary of these policies. In addition, France has the exclusive right to supply these countries with military equipment and to militarily intervene in them which explains why French troops are always the first on the ground when a Francophone African country erupts into conflict or political turmoil.

    French military bases in countries such as Djibouti and Gabon also allow France to have a visible presence on the ground. Furthermore, the aid that France provides to African countries is spent not so much on development programmes, but on subsidising friendly governments’ armies. It is also given on the condition that recipient countries spend most of it on contracts with French companies.

    Any African leader who has threatened to defy the pact finds himself either ousted in a coup or assassinated. For example, when Togo’s first president, Sylvanus Olympio, decided to use Togo’s own currency and to discontinue the CFA franc, he was assassinated by an army sergeant allegedly on the orders of some foreign influence.

    When Mali’s first president, Modibo Keita, attempted to do the same, he was overthrown in a coup.

    The changing face of military takeover

    A stereotypical coup d’état involves the most senior members of the military (i.e., generals) overthrowing the government in a short, but potentially violent, incident that causes mass panic in the population. The most recent coups in Africa, however, differ in some key aspects from the coups that were seen on the continent in the past, especially during the immediate post-independence period.

    The new model of coups has been led by slightly younger officers, they have been less violent, and in some cases, they have occurred – with popular support – against a background of political stagnation and intense security challenges.

    The age of the coup leaders has been a remarkably consistent element of these most recent coups. With the exception of Sudan, the coup leaders have ranged in age from 34 to 41. They have also been lower in rank than most coup leaders (and have come mostly from special forces units), including two Colonels, a Lieutenant-Colonel, and a Captain. This growing dynamic is certainly not completely unprecedented: Jerry Rawlings was a 31-year old Flight-Lieutenant when he led his first coup attempt in Ghana, and Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo was a 37-year old lieutenant-colonel when he seized power in Equatorial Guinea. The latter example also highlights a potential negative implication of this element of the current wave of coups: the leaders may try to stay in power for a very long time.

    Toxic consciousness or new nationalist push?

    Beneath the wave of coups rocking the continent persists a subtext of Pan-Africanism. This is discernible, for instance, in neighbouring Mali and Burkina Faso’s support to the Nigerien junta. The two countries that have experienced coups themselves in recent years are fully in support of the Nigerien coup leader, Abdourahamane Tchiani as are the people of Niger, who were seen applauding the coup leaders and even held a protest in support of them.

    This is similar to what happened in Burkina Faso, when coup leaders promising radical change were welcomed and civilians were seen kissing the hands of soldiers loyal to coup leader Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Damiba, who they believed would be much more effective than the ousted president in dealing with violent Islamic insurgents in the country.

    In Guinea, the military takeover was viewed positively by citizens who were frustrated by President Alpha Cond’s scrapping of the two-term presidential limit, which allowed him to run for a third term in 2020.

    Since 2020, the West African region has experienced several coups, all in former French colonies as anti-French sentiment grows in the region.

    The common thread now running through French-speaking countries is their colonial history.

    France, the former colonial ruler of all the countries that have experienced the recent coups, has directly or indirectly played a role in the running of their governments long after independence, in a bid to maintain its hold and interests in what is known as its pré carré (one’s own little corner).

    In the wake of the recent coups, however, affected nations have erupted with anti-France protests to underscore their dissatisfaction with the latter’s perceived interference in their affairs.

    Cameroonian academic, Prof Pascal Touoyem, ascribed the new nationalist surge to young, outspoken military officers reminiscent of the late African revolutionary, Thomas Sankara. For him, a new nationalist wind is blowing through the military barracks.

    The slew of coups by the young military officers is being romanticised across the affected nations as the onset of a new wave of political consciousness and Pan-Africanism propagated by Sankara.

    “We are witnessing the emergence, and even the rise to power, of sovereigntist armies that reflect the deep aspirations of the people. This is a democratisation that is taking place, but from below and for the silent majority,” said Prof Touoyem.

    A Nigerian call to ruination

    There is no gainsaying the rash of coup d’etats spreading through West Africa has triggered dread of a similar misadventure in Nigeria.

    A casual visit to internet platforms, Facebook and Twitter, reveals the depth of disillusionment afflicting large swathes of the populace, mostly of the youth divide.

    Many are blatantly calling for urgent military intervention, citing the declining purchasing power, skyrocketing inflation and unemployment as their reasons.

    “What we are facing right now in Nigeria requires a military takeover. Let the military seize power. We don’t mind,” said Bimpe Atunri, a nurse. Corroborating her, Raphael Nduka, a stockbroker stated that with the current situation in the country, many won’t mind a coup.

    “Life is hard generally. However, it has become harder to survive in Nigeria since the fuel subsidy was removed. Nobody eats three square meals these days. Times are hard and people are really suffering,” said Timothy Ojo, teacher, in a private chat with The Nation.

    Those clamouring for a coup in Nigeria, he argued, are either those in their 20s and unfortunately are ignorant of the likely devastation that they are inviting on the nation. “We that are older should enlighten them about the horrors we went through during the civil war,” he said.

    The military has been an important institution for protecting States from external threats. Military personnel can also fuel civil conflicts and undermine the stability of political regimes mostly in States with loose political control of the military.

    In Africa, military institutions have, on one hand, helped to protect States from both internal and external threats, including local insurgencies. On the other hand, they have destabilised several political regimes through coup d’états.

    Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu has bemoaned what he called an “autocratic contagion” spreading across Africa at the moment. According to him, he is committed to working with other Heads of State in the continent to end the scourge and defend democracy. Tinubu stated this in his first response to the Wednesday coup in Gabon, according to a statement by his spokesperson, Ajuri Ngelale.

    The Nigerian Defence Headquarters, on its part, has refuted viral social media claims suggesting that the Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN) had been approached with a request to change the nation’s leadership through a military coup.

    In a statement signed by the Director of Defence Information, Brigadier General Tukur Gusau, the armed forces assured Nigerians of their commitment to protect the nation’s democracy and their loyalty to His Excellency President Bola Tinubu.

    The Defence Headquarters warned those propagating such misleading narratives to cease immediately or face legal consequences, cautioning that the military, in collaboration with other security agencies, is actively monitoring and will act against any such threats to national stability.

    A recall to horror

    The coup of January 15, 1966, marked a turning point in Nigeria’s history as it terminated the First Republic and initiated the crisis that culminated in the disastrous civil war from 1967 to 1970.

    The actions and motivation of the principal actors have been the subject of spirited analysis and interpretation over the years. The coup was so complex that one needs to understand the political situation at the time to appreciate the reasons for the coup. After Nigeria gained independence from the United Kingdom, its domestic politics tried to emulate that of its former colonial master by adopting a Westminster-style parliamentary democracy.

    But instead of the cultured debate and sophisticated party political culture of the UK, Nigeria’s politics fragmented on regional and ethnic lines, according to prominent historian, Max Siollun.

    Due to the splitting of the country into three geopolitical regions, party politics (and political parties) took on the identity and ideology of each of the three regions. The northern region was represented by the Northern People’s Congress (NPC) whose motto of “one north, one people” gave a realistic and accurate assessment of its objectives. Southerners viewed the NPC as the party of the Hausa-Fulani. The western region’s dominant party was the Action Group (AG) while the dominant party in the eastern region was the National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC) which was controlled by the Igbos. The regional nature of these parties assured that none of them could govern Nigeria on its own and precipitated the immediate possibility of ethnic conflict.

    The First Republic was bedevilled by acrimony because the Constitution created powerful political divisions that made compromises difficult.

    Dissatisfied by the spate of political bickering and perceived corruption of the civilian leadership, in August 1965 a group of young, idealistic Army Majors: Emmanuel Ifeajuna, Timothy Onwuatuegwu, Chris Anuforo, Don Okafor, Humphrey Chukwuka, and Adewale Ademoyega began plotting a coup d’état against the incumbent Prime Minister Abubakar Balewa. The coup was planned because according to the officers, the men at the helm of affairs were running Nigeria aground with their corrupt ways. Ministers under them were living flamboyant lifestyles and looting public funds at the expense of ordinary citizens, they claimed.

    But the Majors, led by Chukwuma Kaduna Nzegwu, apparently had no idea of how to govern the country apart from eliminating the politicians and a few military officers. Army commander Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi suppressed the coup but seized power himself. Aguiyi-Ironsi’s solution to the failures of the 1947-1963 Constitution was the termination of federalism and introduction of a unitary system by Military Decree.

    Most of his advisers in this unitary experiment were from his ethnic group. Also, he refused to put on trial the military coup plotters of January 15, 1966, who assassinated politicians and other military officers. Northerners interpreted the Major Nzegwu-led coup and Aguiyi-Ironsi’s intervention as an Igbo-led conspiracy to subjugate the north and impose Igbo domination.

    Subsequently, there was widespread unrest before northern military officers led by Majors Murtala Mohammed, Theophilus Danjuma, and Martins Adamu terminated Major Aguiyi-Ironsi’s regime six months later and assassinated him.

    Northern mobs attacked and killed Igbos living in their domain, and the latter fled south. Northerners living in the southeast were also killed in reprisal attacks. In the following year, the southeastern (Igbo) states united to form a new breakaway country called Biafra.

    Although the army suppressed the attempt at secession after a brutal civil war, the bitterness remains more than 50 years later. While unaddressed grievances from 1966 lie at the heart of the Biafra movement’s resurgence through IPOB.

    The recent calls for a military coup in Nigeria resonate jarringly on the internet and social media platforms as youths, many of whom were born several years after the country’s bloody coups and civil war era, bemoan harsh living conditions accentuated by fuel subsidy removal and the loss of their preferred candidate at the 2023 general elections.

    This minute, the cult of digital citizenship fosters a supreme theme: that of the maleficent-woke youth. Social media expanded to fill and enrich the lacuna created by policy failure and misgovernance, substituting Nigeria’s bleak moon for a digitized dawn.

    Call it science’s dark revenge or technology’s defiant stand against conservative norms. In the mix, Nigeria incinerates at the speed of blistering terabytes. Two planes of reality collide a la traditional versus new media; conservative ethicist versus deviant liberal. Nigeria erupts in primaeval chaos.

    The intelligible persistently yields to the unintelligible and citizenship gets redefined as maleficent youths vengefully debase and defy society’s political class and arrogant hierarchs.

    The digitally-woke youth is technology’s heroic personae and his cult runs where dissent rebounds. He has a fearless disposition and he romanticises the anticipated benefits of an urgent coup d’etat.

    Someone would be kind enough to remind such youths perhaps of the misadventure that birthed Nigeria’s first military coup and a chain of subsequent coups and very bloody civil war.

    From July 6, 1967, to January 15, 1970, Nigeria experienced a civil war popularly known all over the world as the Biafran War.

    It all started on January 15, 1966, when mutinous soldiers led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu and Emmanuel Ifeajuna killed 22 people including the Nigerian Prime Minister, many senior politicians and Army officers and their wives, and sentinels on protective duty.

    The coup plotters attacked the cities of Kaduna, Ibadan, and Lagos while also blockading the Niger and Benue Rivers within a two-day timespan before being subdued.

    During the two and half years of the war, there were about 100,000 overall military casualties, while between 500,000 and two million civilians died of starvation and battlefield injuries.

  • List of Francophone countries in Africa

    List of Francophone countries in Africa

    Africa is renowned for being a varied continent with a wide range of languages and cultures. Some languages are native to their nation, while others were made popular by colonialism. There are 21 nations categorized as francophone nations.

    Francophone countries are countries that use French as their official language or use it as one of their other official languages, next to many others.

    Of the 21 francophone countries, Mali ditched French as its official language under the country’s new constitution.

    Read Also: ‘African Francophone start-ups raised $300m in 2022’

    Here are the 20 francophone countries in Africa:

    1. Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
    2. Madagascar
    3. Cameroon
    4. Ivory Coast
    5. Niger
    6. Burkina Faso
    7. Senegal
    8. Chad
    9. Guinea
    10. Rwanda
    11. Burundi
    12. Benin
    13. Togo
    14. Central African Republic
    15. Republic of the Congo
    16. Gabon
    17. Djibouti
    18. Equatorial Guinea
    19. Comoros
    20. Seychelles

  • TIMELINE of military coups in Africa since 2020

    TIMELINE of military coups in Africa since 2020

    The military on Wednesday ousted President Ali Bongo Ondimba following the results of the 2023 Gabonese general elections.

    He ruled Gabon for 14 years while his father Albert-Bernard Bongo ruled for 42 years.

    This is the TIMELINE of Africa’s military coup since 2020:

    Malian coup d’état (2020)

    On August 18, 2020, President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta was overthrown by the military with a transitional government was formed in October.

    Malian coup d’état (2021)

    The 2021 Malian coup d’état began on the night of 24 May 2021 when the Malian Army led by Vice President Assimi Goïta captured President Bah N’daw, Prime Minister Moctar Ouane and Minister of Defence Souleymane Doucouré.

    Assimi Goïta, the head of the junta that led the 2020 Malian coup d’état, announced that N’daw and Ouane were stripped of their powers and that new elections would be held in 2022.

    It became the country’s third coup d’état in ten years, following the 2012 and 2020 military takeovers, with the latter having happened only nine months earlier.

    Guinean coup d’état (2021)

    On 5 September 2021, President of Guinea Alpha Condé was captured by the country’s armed forces in a coup d’état after gunfire in the capital, Conakry.

    Special forces commander Mamady Doumbouya released a broadcast on state television announcing the dissolution of the constitution and government.

    Sudanese coup d’état (2021)

    On 25 October 2021, the Sudanese military, led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, took control of the Government of Sudan in a military coup.

    At least five senior government figures were initially detained. Civilian Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok refused to declare support for the coup and on 25 October called for popular resistance;[8] he was confined to house arrest on 26 October.

    Read Also: 12 ways governments can prevent coup d’etat in Africa

    Burkina Faso coup d’état (January 2022)

    On January 24, 2022, President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré was ousted from power by the military, Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba was inaugurated president in February.

    Burkina Faso coup d’état (September 2022)

    Another coup d’état took place in Burkina Faso on September 30, 2022, removing Interim President Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba over his alleged inability to deal with the country’s Islamist insurgency.

    Damiba had come to power in a coup d’état just eight months earlier. Captain Ibrahim Traoré took over as interim leader.

    Gabonese coup d’état (2023)

    A coup d’état occurred in Gabon on 30 August 2023. Following contested results and political tension over a general election held on 26 August, the military ousted the reelected president, Ali Bongo Ondimba, whose victory was announced on 30 August.

    The coup brought an end to the 56-year-long rule of the Bongo family over Gabon.

    Nigerien coup d’état (2023)

    On 26 July 2023, a coup d’état occurred in the Republic of the Niger when the country’s presidential guard detained president Mohamed Bazoum, and presidential guard commander general Abdourahamane Tchiani proclaimed himself the leader of a new military junta, shortly after confirming the coup a success.

    This was the fifth military coup d’état since the country gained independence from France in 1960, and the first since 2010.

  • Nunc Dimittis for French neo-colonialism in Africa?

    Nunc Dimittis for French neo-colonialism in Africa?

    •  By Alade Fawole

    Acepting the existence of a problem is the beginning of finding solutions to it. Now, there is a groundswell of public opinion across Africa against France’s ruthless neo-colonialism in French-speaking Africa, pilling pressure on the governments of the affected countries and forcing some of them to begin to consider necessary measures, even if still tentative, to free themselves from France’s chokehold. In Mali, Burkina Faso and now Niger, nationalistic and anti-French soldiers have taken over governments, and two of them, Mali and Burkina Faso, have expelled French military forces from their countries.

    I’m not by any means endorsing military coups; just stating the facts. But this is also possibly the humble stirrings of a long overdue whirlwind of irrepressible mass opposition from country to country that will eventually end France’s iniquitous exploitation of its former colonies.

    It may not yet be time to sing France’s Nunc Dimittis but it is certainly the beginning of the process of its well-deserved disgrace out of the continent. It matters little to me who kick-starts the process – soldiers or civilians, as long as Africans can rid the continent of this sick, rabid, sinister, and abominable foreign plunderer, whose sole pretence to wealth and grandeur in the community of nations is based on its rape of Africa while also hypocritically accusing the continent of being poor and underdeveloped.

     It’s time all the Francophone countries gained real independence, for what they have is only a grotesque similitude, a mere parade of its externalities – national flag and anthem, military and police forces, a government which they are in control of. They do not even have own national currencies but the imposed CFA franc which benefits only France.

    True independence implies that a country is fully in charge of its own affairs, not subject to any outside power or authority. Sadly, the Francophone states are pathetic neo-colonial enclaves, the type Kwame Nkrumah eloquently discussed in his seminal disquisition, Neo-colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism (1965). Any country in the grip of neo-colonialism, he asserts, can never be a master of its own destiny. He himself discovered this bitter reality from governing Ghana, the country he had earlier led to flag independence in 1957. The plight of the former French colonies is far worse than those of their non-Francophone counterparts. Simply put, they are not anywhere near being in charge of their destinies, these having been diabolically taken away from them by Charles de Gaulle who turned them into genuflecting vassals of their former colonial overlord. And the leaders who tried to rebel against this comprehensive enslavement were summarily assassinated or violently overthrown at the behest of Paris.

     Africa deserves to be truly free, and there is hardly a more auspicious moment than now for a collective revolt against France’s neo-colonialism, a time when hitherto dizzying geo-political realignments are occurring across the globe. Africans must leverage this unfolding new world order to achieve real independence for their countries.

    As it is, the West’s firm grip on world affairs is inexorably slipping away; Europe’s situation today emblematizes the immediate post-Second World War era when their colonial empires had begun to crumble; their economies are in the worst shape ever – Germany’s manufacturing sector is collapsing and its economy already in a recession; France is witnessing severe economic downturns and unrelenting social unrests and street riots; Britain is trapped between “Great Britain” and “Little England” on account of the ill-conceived Brexit; Poland is chaffing under the crushing weight of millions of Ukrainian refugees, while all of them are being crushed by huge energy costs since the embargo placed on Russian sources. Even France’s Emmanuel Macron had to drop national hubris and supplicate South Africa for invitation to the just concluded BRICS summit in Johannesburg. It was wisely turned down. The world is changing very fast, and Africa must not be left with the short end of the stick, but stand up against the West’s strangulating economic and financial hegemony, leverage the ongoing de-dollarization of international trade the way BRICS is doing.

    Read Also: Lawyers stage walkout at NBA’s ‘Unbarred’ concert over guest ‘performer’ Portable

     African countries must work together to rid the continent of France that has ravaged, plundered, oppressed, suppressed, humiliated and is still profiting from its abominable neo-colonialism. Africa must rise in unison, with one voice and with everything the continent can muster – political action, diplomatic pressure, propaganda to mobilize international public opinion against France on all global platforms, economic boycotts and embargoes where possible, getting rid of French military bases on African soil, and recalibrating diplomatic relations with France. Collective action is required to encourage and strengthen the spines of the governments of French-speaking countries, to let them know that the whole Africa has their back in this second liberation struggle.

    This is where the African Union should rouse itself from lethargy and fear, take a bold and decisive stand against this destructive neo-imperialism, and speak out powerfully and courageously to back these countries with necessary action in their second liberation struggle. The collective voice of Africa’s 55 nation-states must be heard loud and clear to put pressure on France to end its pernicious neo-colonial oppression. Whatever anyone might say about them, a few courageous leaders like Paul Kagame, Yoweri Museveni, William Ruto, even the intrepid activists like Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao (former AU Permanent Representative in Washington DC), and Julius Malema of the Economic Freedom Fighters of South Africa, must be harnessed to strengthen the spines of the weak ones to stand up for what is right by demanding end to French oppression.

    I personally consider the matter weighty enough for the African Union to consider convening an extraordinary summit to take a collective African stand on France’s neo-colonialism, and collectively utilize every possible global forum to canvas end to injustice like the defunct OAU did in January 1976 on Angola. The world cannot fail to acknowledge and respect collective voice and actions, the OAU proved this with respect to apartheid.

    We need to assist the Francophone countries to terminate all the unequal treaties and obnoxious neo-colonial pacts that France has used to hold them in bondage. They must be free to diversify the locations of their sovereign investments and keep their external reserves wherever they choose; there should be no more restrictions on how they choose to spend their money, sell their produce to whomever they want without having to obtain permission from Paris; freely import whatever foreign products they want; their military, police and intelligence forces to be detached from France’s stranglehold, and all French military troops be removed from their soil;  and payment of so-called colonial debts must be terminated forthwith. Without doing all these, our current grandstanding on liberal democracy being the best system for us will remain hollow. Rwanda is a pace-setter, one of the fastest developing economies, and guess what: it is not a democracy!

     Finally, the African Union must utilize every international forum to expose France for the amoral and immoral nation that it truly is, demand just reparations, and push it relentlessly the way its predecessor, the Organization African Unity, bravely championed the fight to destroy apartheid. This for me is a much more ennobling engagement than our current fixation with defending non-performing and anti-development democratic systems.

    •Prof Fawole writes from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife.

  • Gabon: Yet another sad day for democracy in Africa

    Gabon: Yet another sad day for democracy in Africa

    • By Habib Aruna

    Even as the crisis in neighbouring Niger Republic remains intractable, with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), still hovering between the use of diplomacy and the military to settle the crisis, another major crisis reared its head in Central Africa, with the announcement yesterday this morning by the military that they have taken over the reign of government to restore ‘peace’. 

    The Gabonese people were actually looking forward to hearing the results of last weekend’s presidential elections, an election that was widely condemned by observers as neither credible nor transparent but which the incumbent president, Ali Bongo was expected to win by a ‘landslide’. This new development is a huge setback for French influence in Africa and for democracy, a system that has been at the receiving end of a people who are determined to end dictatorship and mis-governance foisted on them by selfish and greedy rulers. And with the reactions of the people so far on the streets across the country, it’s very clear that the coup has been widely accepted by the people no thanks to the unpopularity of the Bongo dynasty, a family that has ruled the oil rich country for more than five decades. 

    The deposed president’s father, Omar came to power in 1967, with his son, Ali, succeeding him in 2009, after his father’s death. So, it’s easily discernible that the Gabonese people are tired of the Bongo’s family and their cronies holding on to power for so long. They were therefore ready for the change that the coup brought. Needless to add that the deposed president suffered stroke a few years back, a sickness that made him spend several months in a French hospital. Most people had expected him to resign and leave the stage for another person, but trust African rulers; that is far from their DNA. Bongo had since been recuperating and visibly struggling to perform the duty of the leader of a country that is poor because the country’s oil wealth has been mismanaged by the Bongo family.    

    So, even though military putsch should not be an option in the transfer of power, the inability of African rulers to follow the constitution they swore to protect and promote makes military intervention attractive. Once they get to power, elected presidents become tyrants and see their citizens as subjects; they no longer believe in the efficacy of constitutionalism and rule of law; they find it easy to circumvent due process that brought them in and want to change the rules of the game to prolong their stay in power. Of course, they find easy support from Britain and France, the so-called advanced democracies and colonial powers, who in most cases, looked the other way while democracy and rule of law are being desecrated in the continent.  

    Read Also: Niger coup: Military option will be the last choice for ECOWAS – Tinubu

    Examples abound in Africa, from Senegal to Cote D’ivoire; from Guinea to Burkina Faso and from Central African Republic to Democratic Republic of Congo. These leaders, sorry, rulers trample on the rights of the people and would do anything to retain their hold on power. So, the only way a military coup would cease to be an option is for African leaders to allow the people to make their choice at the ballot box, in other words, there must be free, transparent and credible elections that reflect the wishes and aspirations of the people. Those in power should not circumvent the rules guiding democracy which is embedded in the constitution. Alhassan Quatarra in Cote d’ivoire succeeded, albeit wrongfully, in changing the constitution to enable him contest for a third term, when he had pledged to serve for only two terms.

    For sure, it would be difficult to keep people indoors or from the streets not to celebrate military takeover when they have been serially pauperized and decimated by the ousted regime. They would surely come out with a sigh of relief, jubilate and see the new rulers as saviour, who came to rescue them from the pangs of misrule and subjugation. The lesson therefore is for African rulers to follow the examples of the great Nelson Mandela; the leaders of Botswana; recent leaders of Tanzania who do not believe in ruling forever or dying in office.

    Hence, the antidote to stop the military boys from coming out of the barracks to the public space is good governance; knowing when to press the reset buttons to put a smile on the faces of your citizens and more importantly, making sure the constitution and rule of law are sacrosanct. I am not one of those who believe that democracy and its core values are antithetical to the nature and character of Nigerian or by extension, African politics. I have severally argued that with all its deficiencies, democracy remains the only veritable way of ensuring fair and credible representation of what the citizens want. There should however be room for a mixture of our peculiarities and culture when setting the rules, which will guide all the players in the democratic arena.

    Without a doubt, the development in Gabon has further weakened the influence of France in the continent. Yet to recover from the humiliation in Niger and the consistent bashing from the rulers in Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea, the French would have to find a way to stop the people from moving against them and their interests in their former colonies. Paris never saw it coming! It has for centuries subjugated these countries and made them to be subservient to the metropole-Paris- even after their so-called independence. The structures that were planted by the departing colonial power were to make these countries dependent on the French, politically, economically and militarily. This is why there are French military bases in most of these Francophone countries. 

    These military formations were to act as a buffer or to assist the various regimes they put in place in Africa, to wade off internal and external threats, for them to have easy access to the natural resources in these countries. Thus, they don’t care if the democracy that they so revered in their country (France) does not work in Africa, insofar as their interests are protected by the regime in power. Given the above context therefore, we are likely going to see more military takeovers in the continent if the rulers, most of whom, are ruling with impunity, do not quickly return to the table and negotiate power with the people and France will be the ultimate loser.                                 

    •Aruna, a journalist writes from Ikeja.

  • FULL LIST: Five longest-serving African Presidents

    FULL LIST: Five longest-serving African Presidents

    Africa is home to many of the world’s longest-ruling Heads of State.

    They have held onto power for many years and show no signs of stepping down anytime soon. 

    This practice of holding on to power for longer terms which runs through several years perhaps 20, 30 or even 40 has sparked concerns.

    The record-breaker is Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, who ruled for 44 years before being overthrown in 1974.

    Libyan strongman Moamer Kadhafi held sway for almost 42 years. He was killed in 2011 as protests against his rule mushroomed into armed conflict.

    Gabon’s Omar Bongo Ondimba had been at the helm for 41 years when he died in June 2009.

    Angolan leader Jose Eduardo dos Santos stepped down in September 2017 after 38 years in charge. Never democratically elected, the former Marxist rebel died in July 2022 at 79.

    Read Also: 20 things to know about Gabon’s military coup

    Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who died in September 2019 almost two years after being forced to step down, held office for more than 37 years.

    In Sudan, Omar al-Bashir, who came to power in a coup in June 1989, remained in charge for 30 years until the military overthrew him in 2019.

    In Chad, Idriss Deby Itno ruled for 30 years from December 1990 until his death in April 2021. He was succeeded by his son, General Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno.

    Here’s is the full list: 

    1. Paul Biya – Paul Biya is one of the oldest president in Africa, born on 13 February 1933. He has served as a Cameroonian president since 6 November 1982. Paul Biya is second Africa’s longest-serving president and the longest non-royal serving leader in the world. He is 90 years old. 

    2. Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo – Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea has been in power since 1979, making him the longest-serving African president. In the early years of his rule, President Obiang was known for being a brutal dictator. He is 81 years old. 

    He is the longest-serving President of any country ever and the second-longest consecutively-serving current non-royal national leader in the world (after Paul Biya in Cameroon).

    3. Denis Sassou Nguesso – Denis Sassou is also one of Africa’s longest-serving Presidents. He has been the President of the Republic of the Congo for 36 years. He first came to power in 1979 and has since been re-elected three times. Sassou is among the oldest head of state in Africa at 79.

    4. Yoweri Museveni – Yoweri Museveni has been the President of Uganda for 34 years. He first came to power in 1986 and has since been re-elected three times. Museveni is the third oldest head of state in Africa, at 78.

    5. Isaias Afwerki – Isaias Afwerki has been the President of Eritrea for 27 years. He first came to power in 1991 after leading the country’s independence movement from Ethiopia. Afwerki has since been re-elected twice. He is 77 years old.

  • List of Africa’s highest paid footballers

    List of Africa’s highest paid footballers

    Sadio Mane recently made a blockbuster move to Al-Nassr in the Saudi Pro League, becoming the highest paid footballer in Africa.

    Here is a list of Africa’s highest paid footballers:

    1. Sadio Mane – £661,000 per week

    2. Riyad Mahrez – £481,000 per week

    3. Kalidou Koulibaly – £412,000 per week

    4. Franck Kessie – £354,000 per week

    5. Mohamed Salah – £350,000 per week

    Read Also: 15 most peaceful countries in Africa

    6. Edouard Mendy – £227,000 per week

    7. Thomas Partey – £200,000 per week

    8. Achraf Hakimi – £176,000 per week

    9. Yassine Bounou – £165,000 per week

    10. Nicolas Pepe – £140,000 per week

    11. Andre Onana – £115,000 per week