This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
1188 issue: week ending 12 November 2020
Another Wasted Year Ahead
With MondAfrique
The island nation of Comoros on the Indian ocean is the first African nation to inaugurate the election season on the African continent. And if the Comoros island is an example of what’s to come, Africa’s elections are going to count for nothing, with a few notable exceptions.
In the Comoros, the incumbent President Azali Assoumani was declared on the 16 January 2024, the winner of rigged elections that triggered riots. As of January 18, Comoros witnessed a second day of turmoil resulting in one fatality and at least six injuries. Opposition parties contested the election results, alleging fraud and bias in favor of Assoumani, who, having changed the constitution in 2018 to bypass term limits, secured a fourth term with 62.97% of the vote. Accusations of dissent crackdown and protest bans were leveled against Assoumani, who also chairs the African Union.
President Assoumani and the Comoros are a template of what African politics looks like. African leaders have no interest in quitting their presidential seats without upheaval. Aside from some exceptions, there is no such thing as smooth presidential transition. Assoumani of the Comores has been in power since 1999.
So 2024 should be a record election year for Africa. Twenty countries, accounting for 346 million voters will be called to participate to elections that will mostly be rigged and decided in advance.
However, for those of you who live un western nations and where elections are the backbone of governance, it is worth noting that Africa has long been looking to distance itself from western-style democracy. Our colleagues from MondAfrique noted, rightly so, the for the most part, the forthcoming African elections have no democratic content and standards in them, citing the fact that different factors and actors have a more direct impact on the political systems in those countries. Among the factors cited by MondAfrique is the predominant role of the military in several countries like Mali, Niger and Guinea, the strength of traditional tribal structures, the rise of Islamic values favoring tradition over the law or finally the positive image of Vladimir Putin among many of African heads of state, factors that naturally clash with Western democratic values.
So of course, Africa does not have to mimic the west. It can create its own political model. But should we be pleased that a handful of ruthless rulers and their backers will win elections in advance? Not at all. Here is a snapshot of what to expect this year as African experience another election cycle.
Egypt: Helicopter of observer force crashes in Sinai, seven killed
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Libya crisis: Talks in Tunisia show some progress
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
The Mediterranean Sea’s fishing wars
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Libyan lawyer and media figure Hanan Al-Barasi murdered in Benghazi
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Turkey sees rough times ahead with a Biden presidency
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Tunisia is still using repressive laws to punish freedom of speech
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Morocco announces upcoming launch of mystery Covid vaccine
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Egypt: New initiatives to restore the ‘City of the Dead’
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Sahel: Former president of Mali, Amadou Toumani Toure dies in Bamako
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Libyans looking for an end to their conflict. Will foreign meddlers allow them?
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Sahel: Gunmen ambush bus in Mali, kill eight people
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Egypt: Impasse in talks over Ethiopia dam
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Sahel: France drags European troops into a conflict they cannot win
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Egypt: 15-year jail sentence for a sit-in
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Sahel: Series of grisly decapitations in southern Mali
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Tunisia’s problem with its radicalized youth
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Algeria: War hero and anti-regime icon dies from Covid-19
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login
Burkina Faso president launches campaign for second term
This article is free, but it requires registration. Click on article to register or login