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Ignore the African Union, Arrest Murmur Gaddafi
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Five months into the Libyan crisis that seeks to nurture
democracy by clearing out the long-running Murmur
Gaddafi dictatorial regime, the Libyan leader digs in
precariously. Part of the reasons is the environment
Gaddafi finds himself in – Africa, where he has
like-minded leaders.
The June 29 to July 1 African Union (AU) Summit in
Malabo, Equatorial Guinea that said African leaders
“will not subscribe or respect the recent arrest
warrant” smacked on Gaddafi by the International
Criminal Court (ICC)” for crimes against humanity is
inopportune for Africa’s democratic growth.
The AU’s stand on Gaddafi isn’t surprising. The Gaddafi
lobby had recruited ex-Ghanaian dictator President Jerry
Rawlings, who has weak democratic credentials and was
helped by Gaddafi in 1981 to topple the democratically
elected President Hilla Limann, to Malabo to talk some
African leaders to disregard the ICC warrant. Similar
arrest warrant slapped on the Sudanese President Omar
el-Bashir on July 12, 2010, whose forces have killed
over 300,000 civilians in Sudan’s Darfur, has not been
enforced by AU members. In fact, Gaddafi had earlier
arm-twisted fellow African leaders to ignore the ICC
warrant whacked on el-Bashir.
African leaders do not share common democratic purpose.
This is nauseating. They are tyrannical playactors
against Africa’s real democratic needs – the rule of
law, freedoms, social justice, equality and deep
decentralization as harbingers for authentic
advancement. This has made the swaggering AU a forum of
unrealistic dictators at collision with realistic
democrats. This is putting Africa’s emerging democracy
and progress at risk.
Another bad omen for African democrats was the fact that
Malabo, unlike Accra (Ghana) or Port Louis (Mauritius),
wasn’t a positive democratic venue for their struggles.
The dark, nightmarish undemocratic forces in Malabo were
too strong for the burgeoning African democrats. The
gloomy autocratic forces were able to disable the
blossoming African democracy. Teodoro Obiang, the
President of Equatorial Guinea, who hosted the AU summit
and was elected the new chair of the AU, is horrific
premonition for African democrats.
Equatorial Guinea is practically a one-party system
despite multiparty democracy enshrined in its 1991
constitution. With only a population of 668,225,
Equatorial Guinea may be oil rich but majority of
Equatorial Guineans survive on less than US$2.00 a day.
This is despite the fact that the US State Department
reports, “the 2010 government revenue was about US$6.739
billion.”
Irrationally believing he is a God-sent, like Gaddafi
and other African leaders, Teodoro Obiang has ruled
Equatorial Guinea wistfully for 31 years, luckily
dodging off attempts to overthrow him. With one of the
worst human rights violations in Africa, Obiang tortures
and has killed hundreds of Equatorial Guineans to
contain opposition.
Whether in Malabo, Teodoro Obiang or Gaddafi, at issue
are democratic values driven by Africans’ experiences
and history. Malabo, Teodoro Obiang or Gaddafi is
allergic to democratic ideals. They cannot put up with
democratic daylight beamed onto their dark authoritarian
practices by African democrats.
In this sense, at the heart of the tussle between the AU
and the ICC are Africa’s democratic enlargement and its
implications for Africa’s progress - based on Africa’s
dark history of tyranny, social injustice and corruption
by its leaders such as Gaddafi. The ICC incursion into
Africa’s democratic growth, as Cote d’Ivoire’s President
Alassane Ouattara indicated when he asked the ICC to
“investigate allegations of serious human rights crimes
committed during the country's recent turmoil,” is that
years of dictatorship have made the African legal system
frail and at the mercy of dictators like Gaddafi.
Against this backdrop, it isn’t surprising that Gaddafi
thinks the pro-democracy campaigners are possessed with
evil spirits and should be ritually killed to cleanse
Libya. But for NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization) Gaddafi would have engaged in mass
butchering of the Libyan pro-democracy campaigners. In
the fashion of African style-human sacrifice, Gaddafi
had planned to purify the Libyan society with the blood
of the Libyan democrats.
While the world condemned Gaddafi, most African leaders
did not. The reasons are obvious, most African leaders’
mind-set aren’t different from Gaddafi. Over the years,
Gaddafi has gleefully bankrolled a good number of them.
Despite this some African countries and institutions
such as the main opposition party in Ghana, the National
Patriotic Party, has asked for global support for
Libya’s pro-democracy campaigners. The grand old Liberia
has sided with Libyan democrats, following the heels of
Senegal and Mauritania. Chad, which has suffered over
the years from Gaddafi’s disorder, too, “supports
efforts to drive Muammar Gaddafi from power.”
African watchers such as the Geoffrey York, of the
Toronto-based The Globe And Mail, thinks part of the
reasons why African leaders are soft on Gaddafi and
shown no support for Africa’s pro-democracy
revolutionaries is that democratic “revolution is often
a luxury of an educated middle class, and much of Africa
is too rural and too poor to sustain a national uprising
… Dictators in sub-Sahara Africa often defend their
power through a politically loyal military …”
Gaddafi’s legendary use of his family and his Bedouin
ethnic group that dominated the Libyan military to
violently suppress Libyans quest for democracy and
freedoms in the past 42 years is open secret. This is
the African “Big Man” syndrome at work, either in the
Malabo AU summit or Tripoli’s Green Square, aided by
prevailing armies and an unfeeling readiness to use
brutality against democracy and freedom activists.
Still, some of the motives for the muted African voices
are technology and ethnic and religious. Geoffrey York
argues that limited technologies such as internet make
it difficult for Africans to rally for Libyan democrats
(Cell phones are hugely common but other forms of
technology are limited). “And the ethnic and religious
rifts in many African countries are huge obstacle to the
organization of national” democratic “protest.” This has
restricted civil society.
Gibril Koroma, the Sierra Leonean publisher of the
Vancouver-based www.thepatrioticvanguard.com argues that
by not giving higher thoughts to Africa’s democratic
evolution and supporting Gaddafi’s violent attacks
against Libya’s democrats, the African Union “pumps
oxygen into Gaddafi.” That’s sad and inhuman considering
Gaddafi’s history of brutalities against Libyans and
other Africans. In Gibril Koroma’s own native Sierra
Leone, Gaddafi destructively helped finance and traine
the murderous Revolutionary United Front that killed,
maimed, raped, fire-boomed property, looted diamonds and
amputed Sierra Leoneans - cutting off their limbs,
noses, ears and genitals.
Other reasons why African leaders constantly keep quiet
about Gaddafi’s dictatorial attitude, Gibril Koroma, in
an op-ed piece in the Toronto-based Digital Journal
argued, is “Gaddafi has used Libyan money to help most
of the cash-strapped African countries and has been
financially supporting the political and economic
unification of the continent. Most African leaders are
grateful for this and will stand by him through thick
and thin.”
That’s untoward for a continent which progress has been
stunted by the likes of Gaddafi. The nascent African
democratic experiences reveal that democracy and
freedoms will bring indestructibly superior advancement
for the struggling Africans. Ghana, Botswana, Cape
Verde, Mauritius, Mali, South Africa and Benin Republic
attest to this. But majority of other Africans are still
suffering under authoritarian regimes like Gaddafi’s.
Plausibly, this makes Gibril Koroma’s other argument
that African leaders are cool with Gaddafi because of
his make-believe mission of a United States of America
and some Western leaders are “hypocrites,” some of whom
aren’t “even a signatory to the ICC agreements,” off
tangent. Yes, these may be true to some points. But the
critical issue is Africa’s healthier democratic fruition
for its progress informed by the contemptible political
records of African leaders such as Gaddafi.
For their greater progress, Africans should ignore the
wobbly African Union’s stand on Gaddafi and arrest
Gaddafi if they locate him anywhere on the African
continent for the International Criminal Court, for his
crimes against Africans.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Academic / Writer, Canada
August 4, 2011
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