Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,095 members, 7,811,069 topics. Date: Saturday, 27 April 2024 at 10:25 PM

Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe (7131 Views)

Ortom’s Commissioner, Dennis Ekpe Ogbu Kidnapped In Benue (Pictures) / When Festus Adedayo And Others Killed Tolerance By Sola Fasure / Ibok Ibas Locks Emmanuel Ekpe Owen Up For Uncovering Fraud (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (Reply) (Go Down)

Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:05pm On Sep 08, 2023
The memories of the April 22, 1990 military coup in Nigeria have refused to leave me. I left my house in Ojodu, Lagos that morning for a church service in Ikeja, oblivious of the historic operation underway. My decision to first visit a cousin in Ikeja led me into the gathering of his neighbours listening attentively to the voice of Gideon Orkar who was addressing the nation “on behalf of the Nigerian armed forces.”

After digesting the broadcast, I came to the conclusion that the plan to unseat the administration of General Ibrahim Babangida would not stand. And I told my fellow listeners so. There was something silly about plotting to dismember Nigeria in a coup announcement.

That attempt lacked some critical elements the two successful ones in the 1980s, namely those announced by generals Sani Abacha and Joshua Dogonyaro, had. Orkar and his gang had hoped that Nigerians would troop to the streets and celebrate their liberation from heaven knows what.

Whatever their projections and objectives were, they simply fell flat and failed to resonate with the generality of the people. That misadventure, in addition to its own tactical deficiencies, clearly did not pass the popular test. It also marked the last time the khaki boys made open moves to wrest political power from civilians in Nigeria.

Since then, however, some other countries in Africa have been reminding the world that the very act of grabbing seats of government via the gun may not become extinct soon. For the record, our continent has for so long held the unenviable position of the region with the highest number of coups.

In a report published by two American researchers – Jonathan Powell of University of Central Florida and Clayton Thyne of University of Kentucky- last month, of all the 486 coup attempts recorded globally from 1950 to 2022, Africa alone accounts for 214, of which 106 were successful. Its closest rival, Latin America, has 146 attempts with 70 successes. Out of the 54 African nations, 45 have witnessed political power seizure drama at least once.

If this profile is discomfiting, a panorama of the continent’s coups just within the last four years can be really concerning. Riding on sustained mass protests in Sudan, its ex long-time ruler, President Omar al-Bashir, was sacked in 2019 by the armed forces under Ahmed Ibn Auf. Two years later, Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan sent Auf packing. Now, the hostilities between government soldiers and paramilitary rebels have brought the once prosperous country to its knees while struggling to prosecute a transition to civil rule programme.

President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita of Mali was removed in 2020. The following year, another coup took place in the francophone nation. Its strongman, Col. Assimi Goita, still holds the reins in Bamako. It was the turn of Chad in April 2021 when President Idriss Deby who had held onto power for 31 years was gunned down while visiting his troops engaged in prolonged battles against rebels in the northern part of the country. His son, Gen. Mahamat Idriss Deby, then succeeded him immediately.

Tunisia registered what’s popularly called self-coup in 2021. President Kais Saied utilised the violent unrest in many parts of the nation to oust the government of Hichem Mechichi. It was the turn of Burkina Faso in January 2022 as President Roch Marc Christian Kabore’s time was ended by Lt. Col. Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba who was also kicked out in September by Capt. Ibrahim Traore for failing to frontally tackle the nagging challenge of Islamist insurgency.

Today, the coup king in Ouagadougou and his Malian counterpart are the staunchest sub-regional supporters of the new junta in Niger which overthrew President Mohamed Bazoum in July this year. As if to achieve some regional balance in the continuing equation of leadership turmoil, Gabon, in truth an overdue candidate for change at the helm, has now stepped forward from the Central African zone.

President Ali Bongo who had led the oil-rich country since 2009 and whose father, Omar, had virtually pinned the former French colony down from 1967 till Ali took over, was only denied the opportunity to enjoy another rigged term in office occasioned by twisted constitutional provisions and massively flawed elections.

A man whose health is visibly compromised and in dire need of delicate nursing, who ought not to even be a local councillor, had enough time to shoot a video while under house arrest, appealing to his supporters to “Make noise! Make noise!! Make noise!!!” on his behalf. Such pitiable sight.

So, the fellow actually felt that there were numerous people out there who genuinely loved him and his family. The delusion caused by absolute, unending power must be deep indeed. Students of power succession especially at the national level should find Africa’s resurgent coups intriguing, if not worrying.

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo who was also a military head of state in the 1970s expressed his apprehension and the minds of many close watchers of the African political scene some days ago in an interview with TheCable online.

He recalled what he observed in 2021 in Guinea Conakry after the overthrow of President Alpha Conde. The coup executioners led by Col. Mamady Doumbouya had the full support of the young people and looked set to be in power not for few years but a generation. Conde, lest we forget, had manipulated his country’s constitution to enable him to run for a third term – a practice that has since caught the fancy of autocrats across the continent.

Troubled by that experience, Obasanjo travelled to Addis Ababa to bare his thoughts to the chairperson of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, who was also deeply worried about similar situations in his home country, Chad, and also Mali and Burkina Faso.

Obasanjo made a sobering submission on the subject: “I was the one who in 1999 advocated that if you are not a government backed by the constitution, you should be suspended from the African Union, and these chaps (soldiers in government) don’t even mind any suspension.

I told him (Mahamat) that all the instruments we had used in the past would not work and asked what he would do about it. He told me about his challenges, especially with his country. So, we have a situation where we have a continent where we have to rethink democracy. The liberal democracy we are copying from settled societies in the West won’t work for us.”

Even diehard optimists won’t argue with that viewpoint coming from someone who had also toyed with the idea of getting the Nigerian National Assembly to make room for a third term, for his own benefit, when he was supposed to be winding up his tenure in 2007.

Apparently in response to the intervention in Libreville, President Paul Kagame of Rwanda and President Paul Biya of Cameroon tinkered with the military hierarchies of their own countries to forestall such a surprise. But how long can panic measures go in injecting stability into the architecture of power changes in a continent already saddled with all sorts of challenges?

It doesn’t help that ours is a place where colonial masters who handed over political power to us long ago still wield huge influence and, in strange ways, authority in some cases. But Africans can’t afford to wallow in complaints and excuses.

The leaders should do peer checks as none exists at the moment. Its limitations notwithstanding, true democracy doesn’t have viable alternatives. Matters shouldn’t degenerate further before the African Union (AU) and regional groups start issuing lame communiques. If the current trend graduates to full-scale coup craving, going down the cliff will become inevitable.

Ekpe, PhD, is a member of THISDAY Editorial Board.
https://www.thecable.ng/africas-growing-coup-tolerance/amp

1 Like

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by TemplarLandry: 2:06pm On Sep 08, 2023
cool As for Nigeria, our case is different.
We move from glory to glory.

Yes!

22 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:06pm On Sep 08, 2023
President Ali Bongo who had led the oil-rich country since 2009 and whose father, Omar, had virtually pinned the former French colony down from 1967 till Ali took over, was only denied the opportunity to enjoy another rigged term in office occasioned by twisted constitutional provisions and massively flawed elections.

A man whose health is visibly compromised and in dire need of delicate nursing, who ought not to even be a local councillor, had enough time to shoot a video while under house arrest, appealing to his supporters to “Make noise! Make noise!! Make noise!!!” on his behalf. Such pitiable sight.
The power desperate tyrannical and autocratic power despots ehen! The military governments in Mali, Sudan,Niger, Burkina Faso and now Guinea are more legitimate than what is down here at the moment. What do we call the government in Nigeria?

9 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:07pm On Sep 08, 2023
The solemn truth is that the immediate and remote causes of military incursion into African politics are still plaguing the continent;

-Sit tight mentality to political power.
-Subversion of democratic & constitutional processes as they crave absolutism or totalitarianism in govt.
-Criminalization of state capture; military, judiciary, legislature, demonisation of opposition elements( no room for participatory democracy).
-Connivance of relevant region or subregional bodies in legalising the illegality/unconstitutional govt who subvert constitution, democratic will of the people etc.

11 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Opintiwa: 2:07pm On Sep 08, 2023
The only way to understand and curb a confusion in Nigeria Is to blame another tribe/ethnic group

Chinua Achebe

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:10pm On Sep 08, 2023
TemplarLandry:
cool As for Nigeria, our case is different. We move from glory to glory. Yes!
Which glory? Same stagnation over 63 years of forced but failed nationhood? It is just the same situation as elsewhere. A sick urine leaking, mental incapacitated heroin running baron and old geriatric who only have a warped emilokan mentality

7 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by mrvitalis(m): 2:14pm On Sep 08, 2023
You cant have questionable elections and not expect coup

no popular president can be removed via coup...its impossible

7 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:15pm On Sep 08, 2023
"....It doesn’t help that ours is a place where colonial masters who handed over political power to us long ago still wield huge influence and, in strange ways, authority in some cases. But Africans can’t afford to wallow in complaints and excuses....."

1 Like

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:20pm On Sep 08, 2023
mrvitalis:
You cant have questionable elections and not expect coup no popular president can be removed via coup...its impossible
Exactly! An illegitimate president can not command respect. AU and ECOWAS are grossly useless. Meanwhile, we are still counting

2 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by TemplarLandry: 2:20pm On Sep 08, 2023
Mr Rodent or sorry Racoon, rest.

19 Likes

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Racoon(m): 2:49pm On Sep 08, 2023
TemplarLandry:
Mr Rodent or sorry Racoon, rest.
franchasofficia:
EXPOSURE 4: Uploading of Election results to INEC server using BVAS machine at the polling units.

Final Ruling of the PEPT Judges: It is not necessary for INEC to transmit the election result on iREV.

EXPOSED LIES
The only thing that differentiated 2023 General election from previous elections in Nigeria is the use of electronic transmission of votes cast from polling units.The major reason Nigerians rejoiced over the 2022 Electoral Act was the introduction of electronic transmission of votes cast from polling units to a central INEC server known as iREV from which every Nigerian can view the results from any part of the world without waiting for usually compromised manual collation method.


To this effect, INEC produced a preelection guidelines stipulating how they will conduct 2023 General election, and the highest point in their guidelines that gave every reasonable Nigerian hope was their promise to use electronic transmission to transmit results from polling units to a central INEC server known as iREV. INEC went around singing this to the hearing of every Nigerian and even went abroad at Chatham house United Kingdom to also tell the whole world the same thing that all polling unit election results will be uploaded direct from the polling units to INEC central server as soon as election is completed at each polling unit.


News broke out a day to the election that INEC was planning to ditch electronic transmission and use manual transmission of election result, what did INEC do? INEC Chairman came out again a day to the election reiterating that there was no going back on the use of BVAS machine to transmit election results to INEC central server direct from the polling units, he assured Nigerians this and told Nigerians not to panic, the PEPT Judges cannot deny that they read that news and watched INEC Yakubu made these repeated promises.

It is so daring for the compromised PEPT Judges to damn all consequences and lie that electronic transmission of results was never necessary, it is well oh.

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Chibuzoripob: 3:43pm On Sep 08, 2023
sad
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Theunbothered: 3:44pm On Sep 08, 2023
Coup tolerance is the result of good governance intolerance
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by JudelucanMagazi: 3:45pm On Sep 08, 2023
Well well
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Kinop: 3:45pm On Sep 08, 2023
TemplarLandry:
cool As for Nigeria, our case is different.
We move from glory to glory.

Yes!
grin
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Whitecoal711: 3:46pm On Sep 08, 2023
politicians causing it
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Taxon0my: 3:47pm On Sep 08, 2023
LEARN (A.I ART AND ANIMATION) AND MAKE MORE MONEY ONLINE.
AI art (Artificial Intelligence art) is a form of digital art created or enhanced with AI tools.  A.I videos are human-like, they are far better than cartoons as they look and perfom like real human/Animals.
A.I art works with tools ( it doesn't require knowledge of programming, painting or drawing skills)
WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH IT:
* Helps in Marketing ( Video ads)
* Content Creator ( like YouTube and Tiktok) etc
* Enhance Teaching Materials
* Comic Book Creator

HOW YOU CAN MAKE MONEY WITH IT:
* Freelance Services (it's highly demanded)
* create and sell video contents
* Promote Your brands
* Have a YouTube channel and focus on a nice niche .
* Advertise for Print on Demand video.
* Atimes sacrifice your time, create promotional videos for big brands, approach them with, I bet you, about 90% of them would compensate you.
* With A.I art skills, you are already an artist. Just think about wall arts
* Create Children books
* As the knowledge is not yet saturated, you can teach others and make money also .
The course consists of 16 detailed videos and they are not heavy. Also, children can learn this.
Price is slashed to N4,500.
There's certificate

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by Ola9ja23: 3:48pm On Sep 08, 2023
Ok
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by TyProd: 3:50pm On Sep 08, 2023
Okay o
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by ShoeWorld1(m): 3:52pm On Sep 08, 2023
I don't know what's wrong with Nigerians who are praying for a coup to happen in this country.
Our pattern of governance and leadership has successfully eradicated the chances of a military coup.
Top military and police officers are now in the eating arrangement and you will not be thinking of a coup when you have money and also have power.

Those people doing a coup only have power but don't have the key to their treasuries. That's why they are angry. All the countries that ousted their leaders via military coups, how are they now faring? Does it mean they are now better than the rest of the African countries?

If the person you're supporting loses the election, that is not the reason you should be praying for a military coup to happen because it will create a lot of instability and armed conflict in Nigeria.

1 Like

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by MANNABBQGRILLS: 3:53pm On Sep 08, 2023
Peace is all we want in our continent.

For the evil and wicked ones,
The children of perdition that pray for war and coup in our nation,
The evil and deaths they pray for will forever be at their door steps.

God bless Nigeria 🇳🇬
God bless Africa 🌍
God bless the World 🌎 🌎
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by fineboynl(m): 3:53pm On Sep 08, 2023
grin coup alway encounter counter coups
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by nkemoma(m): 3:54pm On Sep 08, 2023
We are expecting one major one here....
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by id4sho(m): 3:55pm On Sep 08, 2023
Make noise! Make noise! Make noise! Make noise! cheesy grin smiley smiley wink
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by hisexcellency34: 3:56pm On Sep 08, 2023
Even Tinubu don tire
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by theophorus(m): 3:56pm On Sep 08, 2023
To the children raise with Hatred and requesting a Coup, I hope they are ready for what they are asking for?

Well, they should relax, we would soon go regional and gradually set the line for Segregation, then they can do anything with their region.

But for this Obodo NG, make dem forget ooo, nothing like military takeover again na to set the Nation on the part of Greatness.

1 Like

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by AllBlack: 3:59pm On Sep 08, 2023
Why is everyone acting surprised? like it was unexpected with all the evils done in the name of democracy.
Just like Obasanjo asked "How many African countries have benefited from Democracy"?
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by seunlayi(m): 4:01pm On Sep 08, 2023
Nigeria should be added to the number of countries with coup. Ours is just democratic systemic coup.


Population of 213m
Over 60% are of voting age
93m registered voters
Less than half of 93m voted
Winner got less than 9m vote.......

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by AImiron: 4:03pm On Sep 08, 2023
Wherever bad governance dey, coups are inevitable.
Re: Africa’s Growing Coup Tolerance By Monday Philips Ekpe by OgunleyeA1: 4:04pm On Sep 08, 2023
Regardless of the military coup Africa is still striving, take a look at massive construction projects in Africa that will surprise the world

(1) (2) (Reply)

Lagos Council Election: LASIEC To Announce Results At Collation Centres / INEC Transfers PVC Collection To Registration Areas, Wards / Lagos PDP Crisis: Youths Protest, Insist On Adegbola Dominic As Party Chairman

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 50
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.