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African dictators warned: ‘Your time is up’

By Stephanie Busari, CNN and Emily Wither for CNN Sudanese billionaire and communications mogul Mo Ibrahim has issued a warning to African leaders clinging to power, saying people are no longer prepared to put up with

By Stephanie Busari, CNN and Emily Wither for CNN

Sudanese billionaire and communications mogul Mo Ibrahim has issued a warning to African leaders clinging to power, saying people are no longer prepared to put up with bad governance on the continent.

Ibrahim says the face of Africa has changed and the Arab Spring has shown the world that the younger generation are not afraid to demand change.

“There’s a lot of African people who are educated and well informed and that’s a better generation than ours and those people wont take nonsense,” he said.

“These are the people that went out in Tahrir Square, Tunis and Libya and bred havoc,” he added.
tors warned ‘time’s up’
The businessman’s remarks come as his foundation awards its annual prize for good governance and leadership in Africa.

It has been two years since the Mo Ibrahim Foundation has awarded the accolade, which goes to candidates based on their “exercise of leadership and the performance of their country during their time in office,” according to the Mo Ibrahim Foundation website.
The committee, made up of former leaders and Nobel Prize winners, said that there had been no worthy candidates in the previous two years.

“They have a strict criteria, this is not a pension, this is a prize for excellence in leadership, it’s not easy,” said Ibrahim.
Former Cape Verde President, Pedro Verona Pires, who stepped down in August after 10 years in power, was recognized this year.
The group said that the leader had turned the cluster of islands off the West African coast into “a model of democracy, stability and increased prosperity.”
I think the quality of leaders coming to Africa now are really improving a lot and what is important in Africa is the rise in civil society [says Mo Ibrahim]
The chair of the prize committee, Salim Ahmed Salim, said. “Under his 10 years as president, the nation became only the second African country to graduate from the United Nation’s Least Developed category and has won international recognition for its record on human rights and good governance.”

The Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership is one of the world’s most valuable individual prizes. Ibrahim made a fortune in the cell phone industry, established the foundation bearing his name in 2006.

Previous winners include Mozambique’s former President, Joaquim Chissano and Botswana’s President, Festus Mogae.

The $5 million award is paid over 10 years and $200,000 annually for life thereafter. The Foundation will also consider funding good causes supported by the laureate.

Ibrahim says the prize is needed as leaders in African countries can sometimes be tempted to hang on to power for monetary reasons.
He says he had to start the foundation because leaders were not doing the job they were supposed to do.

President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea and Angola’s President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos are two of the longest running leaders in Africa. Both have been head of their respective countries for 32 years. While Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe has been in power for 31 years since 1980.

The foundation uses an 84-criteria index to grade governance in Africa. The top-governed African nations, according to the index, are Mauritius, Cape Verde, Seychelles, Botswana and South Africa.
But while there may not have been an award in the previous two years, Ibrahim predicts the foundation will be giving out more money in the future.

“I think the quality of leaders coming to Africa now are really improving a lot and what is important in Africa is the rise in civil society,” he said.

“The pressure from civil society, I’m sure is going to bring forward and produce more and more wonderful leaders for our future,” he continued.

The hope of the foundation is to help the continent move towards greater democracy and peaceful transitions of power.
However, Ibrahim believes that the game is up for leaders who cling to power for 30 to 40-years. His cites Libya’s former leader for 41-years, Moammar Gaddafi, as an example.

“The message is clear to all this kind of generation of leadership: gentlemen time is up,” he said.

“Please retire, otherwise Tahrir square is coming to your country.”

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11 COMMENTS
  • TokaE October 16, 2011

    I love when he said, “Please retire, otherwise Tahrir square is coming to your country.”
    Essayas are you listening?

    • Beles October 16, 2011

      abey emo? hizbi enda hademe Tahrir square badimuuu eyuuuuu

  • Weldit October 16, 2011

    “African dictators warned: ‘Your time is up’ ”
    Amen!

  • neguse October 16, 2011

    They are taking the people down eventualy no place to hise they will be hunted the first who stand against him when the wind blows are the one who worship him like God

    • Baree October 16, 2011

      Abdi,

      Your remeber what I told you, african enterpreneurs globally succcessful even echoeing to the endo fo dictatorship.
      Time you bailed out of your cocoon supporting a dictator like DIA. Ah!

  • denden October 16, 2011

    The dogs bark the camels marches.!

    • Haqqi Nezareb October 16, 2011

      I don’t know why, the camels start running instead of marching.

  • Dawit Tsehaye October 16, 2011

    The camels are runing,marching while the dogs bark. we believe our people not the ethiopian regime.

    • Huluf, October 18, 2011

      Dawit,

      Quit saying what I use to say some time in the mid 1990s( gemel yimresh kelbi ynebeh….) ….Now I laugh at myself how wrong I was….Come to think of it you are noveau Higde…I will bet my money you were in Hafash Wudubat thus you do not what EPLF was and what HIGDEF is.

  • aderosso October 17, 2011

    Mo, spend some doe for the cause. Leave the taking to the poor

  • Yohannes October 17, 2011

    One can make all the analogies he/she wants with every member of animal kingdom, but the fact remains to be that in this day and age it is total ignorance and disgrace to humanity to see people being deprived of their God/Allah given basic rights. Please have the courage to ask yourself the following questions;
    1. Would I be happy to live and work all my life/24/7, 365 days under such a system/regime.
    2. How would I feel if I am subjected/faced with primitive/unnecessary/corruptive nature of bstacles/challenges/difficulties
    in trying to feed my family or better my familiy’s life.
    3. Do we have people who believe that ” All animals are created equal and some are created more equal than others”?
    4. What is my moral compass on the very basic rights of human beings to live/work in dignity, get paid for their day’s work,
    earn a living wage, speak their minds, run their family’s life without fear, conduct
    trade/commerce/farming/crafting..etc freely.

    Shikuren Jezilen/Thank you so much Ibrahim for your inspirational award, as you said it in many ways, it has to be EARNED!

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