Member of Parliament for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa has called on African leaders to demand good governance from its members to avert the return of a coup era.
This is as a result of the incident in Guinea where the military staged a coup on September 5, 2021 to oust President Alpha Conde, who amended the constitution in 2020 to enable him contest the elections for a third time – an election which he ‘won’ despite reports from the opposition party that it was largely rigged.
Mr. Ablakwa observed that the coup era is likely to return “if the unwarranted thirst for third-terminism, corruption, joblessness, poverty, manipulation of constitutions, profligacy of the ruling elite and naked impunity [by African leaders] are not curbed.”
The MP also called on African leaders to start condemning their colleagues who amend constitutions to enable them stand for third terms. He urged African leaders to isolate such offending politicians by refusing to attend their coronation ceremonies.
“African leaders can start by condemning their colleagues amending their constitutions to enable them stand for third terms, isolating offending politicians and refusing to attend their coronation ceremonies…….”, he stated in a facebook post.
In furtherance, Mr. Ablakwa criticized ECOWAS and AU for failing to prevent Alpha Conde from staging his third-term agenda.
“If the AU and ECOWAS had not conveniently hidden behind non-interferance in internal politics and exhibited courage by stopping President Alpha Conde’s third term agenda a couple of years back, this weekend’s explosion would have been averted”, he wrote.
See his full post below:
The disturbing developments in Guinea which comes after recent similar undesirable military interventions in Mali, Chad and Sudan must remind African leaders that the coup era of the 1960s to 80s may sadly return if the unwarranted thirst for third-termism, corruption, joblessness, poverty, manipulation of constitutions, profligacy of the ruling elite and naked impunity are not curbed.
Instead of waiting late in the day to threaten sanctions on failed democracies, regional and sub regional blocs such as AU, ECOWAS, SADC and EAC should be boldly proactive in calling out their peers on the wrong track and demanding good governance that meets the expectations of the masses, particularly African youth.
African leaders can start by condemning their colleagues amending their constitutions to enable them stand for third terms, isolating offending politicians and refusing to attend their coronation ceremonies instead of the unprincipled support for Côte d’Ivoire, Burundi, Uganda, Guinea, Comoros, Djibouti, Togo, Chad, Congo and Cameroon in flagrant violation of the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance. If the AU and ECOWAS had not conveniently hidden behind non-interference in internal politics and exhibited courage by stopping President Conde’s third term agenda a couple of years back, this weekend’s explosion would have been averted.
African regional intergovernmental organizations would do well to learn from the EU which has been loud and clear with their criticism of two member countries: Hungary and Poland over rule of law concerns.
Another tragic but unsurprising episode in the contemporary African narrative.
As we pray for Guinea to return to stability and hope for the safe release of Alpha Condé may we all be reminded and be rededicated to the unfinished African reconstruction project.