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Ibrahim
blasts Africa's ageing leaders
Daily News
August 26, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/08/26/ibrahim-blasts-africas-ageing-leaders
Sudanese-born
billionaire Mo Ibrahim has castigated Africa’s ageing leaders
for crowding out young blood.
The philanthropist
said the average age of leaders on the African continent was around
60 years, yet half of the population was under the age of 19.
Speaking at
a lecture in honour of South Arica’s first black president
Nelson Mandela, the businessman drew comparisons between African
and American leaders.
“(Barack)
Obama became president when he was 47 years old, actually Bill Clinton
beat him, he became president when he was 46 years old.
“People
in their 40s are being elected to run a country which is not only
the greatest superpower, but has a GDP ... of $15-trillion dollars
a year, 15 times the total economy of Africa.”
“And here
we have somebody in a neighbouring country, at 90 about to start
a new term. What’s wrong with us?” Ibrahim said, alluding
to Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe, who at 89 was last
month re-elected
in disputed polls that extended his 33-year rule by a fresh
five-year term.
Ibrahim said
had Obama’s father taken him back to Kenya when he was still
a boy, “where would he be today? My guess, he would never
(have) been president of Kenya.”
He urged Africa
to create space for young people to help in running and developing
the continent.
“That
is the challenge we need to think of,” said Ibrahim, who is
in his sixties.
Ibrahim also
said South Africa should show the quality of leadership befitting
the continent’s wealthiest economy.
“We look
up to you. We have a serious deficit. South Africa needs to step
up and play a better role,” he said. Adding that leadership
was not about having a seat on the UN Security Council or chairing
the African Union.
South Africa’s
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma was last year elected chairperson of the
AU.
“This
is the least equitable country in the whole world. After 20 years
of independence (from apartheid rule), one can ask ‘what is
going on here?’, said Ibrahim.
His foundation
annually ranks African countries according to 88 indicators, and
South African had improved in terms of rural development from 31
in 2000 to 22 last year.
That is a “marked”
improvement, but “not fantastic,” he said.
The telecoms
tycoon has set up the Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership,
the world’s biggest individual prize, awarded to a democratically-elected
African leader who has served their mandated term and left office
in the last three years.
Last year it
was not awarded for a third time in four years as no suitable candidates
were found.
Launched in
2006, it carries a $5 million prize paid over 10 years and $200
000 annually for life from then on, with a further $200 000 per
year available for 10 years for good causes backed by the winner.
The inaugural
prize went to former president Joaquim Chissano of Mozambique in
2007 and Botswana’s ex-president Festus Mogae won in 2008.
Former Cape
Verde president Pedro Pires won the 2011 prize.
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