Gambia News
Home | Gambia Chat | Sitemap Set Gambia News as homepage | Add Gambia News to favorites
  Search Gambia News     » Advanced Search » Exchange Rates
Gambia News
Gambia Archive
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031
Syndication
Newsletter
Poll: Homosexuality In Gambia
Yes
No




Govern Africa well and win

Nov 03,2006 by

gambia Gambia’s President Yahya Jammeh, reelected last month to a third term with a 67-percent majority, is not likely to ever win the Mo Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership. He is a stereotypical African “big man” ruler, which is precisely what the prize seeks to eliminate.

Jammeh came to power in a military coup 12 years ago. He has won his terms in more or less free elections on the strength of his lavish spending (of borrowed money) and his control of the police (who wore Vote Jammeh badges at his election rallies). He is not a monster, and his small West African country has escaped the horrors that devastated other countries in the region. But you would definitely not trust him with the rent money.

Mo (short for Mohammed) Ibrahim is a very different sort of person.

When I first met him in 2004 I thought he had a very good idea and practically no chance of turning it into reality, but money opens many doors. On October 26 in London, he launched a prize so rich that it puts the Nobel Peace Prize in the shade.

To qualify for the Mo Ibrahim prize, you have to be a democratically elected African ruler who handed over power peacefully to a similarly elected successor, and did good things for the country while you had power.

The prize is worth US$5 million in the first 10 years, and more if the ex-leader enjoys a very long retirement.

Ibrahim was born 60 years ago in Sudan, grew up in Egypt, and moved to Britain in 1975 to study telecommunications. In 1989 he set up Mobile Systems International, and he sold it to Marconi in 2000 for $900 million. Then he created Celtel, to bring mobile phones to all the countries in Africa.

Last year the Kuwait-based mobile operator MTC bought Celtel for $3.4 billion—and Ibrahim started looking for something useful to do with his money. Most Africans would agree that bad governments are one of their continent’s biggest problems, so what might be done to encourage powerful people in Africa to behave better? He focused on just one key aspect of the problem: African presidents and prime ministers cannot afford to quit.

Ibrahim’s solution—and he would admit that it is only partial—is the prize. As things stand now, if an African leader is legitimately elected, serves honourably, and quits when his time is up, he faces ruin.

“Suddenly all the mansions, cars, food, wine is withdrawn. Some find it difficult to rent a house in the capital. That incites corruption; it incites people to cling to power. The Prize will offer essentially good people, who may be wavering, the chance to opt for the good life after office,” Ibrahim told the Financial Times.

The prize, for which only retiring African presidents and prime ministers are eligible, is $500,000 a year for 10 years for their personal use, plus an additional $200,000 a year to give to charity. That deal ends after the first decade of retirement, but the ex-leaders continue to get $200,000 a year until they die. Some may call it cynical; Ibrahim would prefer to call it pragmatic.

To help choose the winners, the Mo Ibrahim Foundation is creating an index of good governance. It will be similar to Transparency International’s corruption index, but it will measure how well African leaders deliver security, health, education, and economic development to their people and how well they respect human rights and democratic process.

The index will be produced annually by an independent team based at Harvard University—and it may actually be the most important component of the project.

Almost half of Africa’s 53 heads of state have been in power for more than 10 years, and 15 of them have been in power for over 15 years. At most, the Mo Ibrahim prize can persuade only one of them each year to retire. But if the index by which the lucky one is chosen becomes a widely accepted measure of the quality of governance in Africa, it will become an immensely useful tool in the hands of a younger generation of Africans who desperately want to break with the “big man” traditions of the first generation of postcolonial leaders. Which is doubtless what Ibrahim really has in mind.


893 times read

Related Gambia News Below


» Gambia News : Gambia slides on Mo Imbrahim governance scale

by lamin posted on Oct 10,2008

» Gambia: Gambia wins exhibition award

by Anna posted on Mar 15,2007

» Gambia News: Gambia’s Badjie Optimistic About Future

by editor posted on Sep 15,2007

» Gambia News : Captains Day for Fajara Golfers Observed

by Anna posted on Feb 01,2008

» Many Give Annan High Marks as UN Chief, Despite Flaws

by editor posted on Dec 14,2006
Rate this Gambia Article
Rating: 5.00Rating: 5.00Rating: 5.00Rating: 5.00Rating: 5.00 (total 2 votes)


More Top News
General
News
Business
Sport
Health
Education
Technology
Entertainment
Open Forum
Opinions
Analysis
Travel
Gambia Chat Room
Gambia Real Estate
Most Popular News
Most Commented
Featured Gambia News Author

Tijan Johnson

image
News writer and journalist . Worked in past with Reuters , Africa Comm, Dstv and Africa Telegrahp

Gambia News is an online Gambian News portal that aggregates the latest Gambian news from reliable sources & Gambian newspapers .