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Most Old African Leaders Will Continue to Remain in Office Except Youth Hijack Power from them – Nigeria’s ex-President Obasanjo

Former president Olusegun Obasanjo has said that democracy is taking root in Africa but warned that rising political stars would struggle to unseat old leaders unless they join forces during elections.

| How Africa News

The Independent reports that Obasanjo, who was a military ruler for three years from 1976 and then a civilian leader from 1999 to 2007, said African countries were making progress towards democracy but much more remains to be done.

We gathered that while speaking at the launch in Johannesburg on Wednesday night, March 27, of a book he co-authored on democracy in Africa, Obasanjo said: “Yes we are making progress towards democracy. Africa will get to where it needs to be.”

“Thirty years ago election was an aberration in Africa, today no election is an aberration. Even those (rulers) who want to remain (in power). They still go through some form of election.

“It’s what somebody called autocratic competitiveness. They are still autocratic, but they try to show that they are competitive through election.”

But Zambian opposition leader Hakainde Hichilema said that despite democratic progress registered elsewhere on the continent, some countries in the southern African region were moving backwards.

“We have a re-emergence of authoritarian regimes, and there is regression in the democratic space in our region. We need to reverse this very quickly,” he told AFP, mentioning Zimbabwe and his own country Zambia as examples.

Obasanjo also urged young and upcoming African politicians to get their act together if they are to unseat old African leaders — many of them septuagenarians and octogenarians who have been holding on to power for decades — through elections.

“If the youth think that they will get into power on a platter, they are not getting it right,” he said in the interview. They will have to sna.tch it, those (ageing leaders) will not go.”

Obasanjo co-wrote the book “Democracy Works — Rewiring Politics to Africa’s Advantage” with Zimbabwe’s ex-finance minister and opposition leader Tendai Biti and two other authors.

Former Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who also spoke at the event, said Africa had ”come a long way but that there was still room for improvement as she bemoaned the recycling of the same leaders.”

Meanwhile, we had previously reported that former president Olusegun Obasanjo expressed displeasure over calls in some quarters that the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, should not challenge the victory of President Muhammadu Buhari at the tribunal.

Written by How Africa

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