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Old Leadership, New Leadership
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Leadership has become a buzz word for practitioners,
bureaucrats and theorists of African development. The
term variously means a process of getting work done
through people. Leadership may not be science but it is
committed responsibility. Africans in civil service, in
business schools, in NGOs, in the mass media, in think
tanks, in academic, in State Houses, in opposition
political parties use leadership as a sort of reality
refiner - a way of contrasting past and present, an
implement for cataloging out history at a moment of
African changes, the flowering of The African Century.
African leadership, being heavily over burdened and
scatterbrained, is part of the Old Leadership. For the
past 50 years, Africa has been sorting itself up into
categories of Old Leadership and New Leadership. We see
this in one of Africa’s foremost leaders, Kwame Nkrumah.
Prof. A.K.P. Kludze, former Justice of Ghana’s Supreme
Court, observes that although President Kwame Nkrumah
was a freedom fighter and committed Pan-Africanist, he
later succumbed to the Big Man syndrome, turned Ghana
into a one-party state and became the life chairman of
his ruling Conventions People's Party and general
secretary of the party’s Central Committee. It was
considered treason to challenge him. Nobody could stand
as a candidate unless his candidature was approved by
the General Secretary of the party (read-himself).
The 1960s to the 1990s have become a transforming
boundary between one age and another, between a format
of things that has crumbled and another that is taking
shape. A millennium has come, a celestial divide. Kwame
Nkrumah’s era of autocracy of the 20th century is dead;
the 21st is a kernel, revealed in continental giant
Nigeria’s Goodluck Jonathan. New Leadership-Old
Leadership makes a match of lists: what’s in, what’s out
in the African experiences. More imperative, it is a way
of considering what works (New Leadership) and what
doesn't work anymore (Old Leadership).
The horrible Central African Republic’s Jean-Bedel
Bokassa was the Old Leadership. The New Leadership is
what we are seeking for – Liberia’s Ellen Sirleaf-Johnson.
One-party system and military juntas are Old Leadership.
African communism as seen in Ethiopia’s Menghistu Haile
Mariam is Old Leadership. Big one-party systems,
military juntas and Jerry Rawlings’ emotionally charged
aggressiveness style are dead. Democracy brewed from
within African experiences is becoming more and more
alive as a development fertilizer. Botswana is one
example; Mauritius is another.
With over 45 years in Ghana’s and Africa’s turbulent
politics, ex-president John Kofi Kufour is more than
qualified to examine Africa’s leadership from very close
range. His analysis: “Leadership is key to unravelling
the problems of Africa. With the right leadership, good
policies would be enacted that will create the right
condition for economic growth, respect of the rule of
law and the conducive atmosphere for business to
thrive," observed Kufour. Kufour said this in South
Africa during the launch of “Why Africa is Poor and What
Africans can do about it,” written by Greg Mills,
Executive Director of the Brenthurst Foundation of the
Oppenheimer and Son Group.
Kufour diagnosed the awful Old Leadership this way:
“Africa's problem was that people assumed leadership
positions without being adequately prepared for it and
they lacked the vision and drive to pursue policies to
the benefit of their people … Studies of individual
historic leaders exemplified in the likes of Biblical
Moses, among others, would show conclusively that each
one of them had come through relevant experiences to be
imbued with epochal visions of great and abiding
development of their nations … The time when people just
jumped into leadership positions should be by-gone.
Budding leaders must bide their time and go through the
apprenticeship exposures and institutions to better
prepare them to assume the rightful role expected of
them.”
Old Leaderships: Mobutu Sese Seku, military juntas,
one-party and communist systems, Sekou Toure, Mamadou
Tandja, the Big Man syndrome, tough talk, imperially
threatening attitude (Yaya Jemmeh), arrogance (Idi Amin),
centralized bureaucracy and Big government, the leader
as a massive juju-marabou dabbler (Samuel Doe), the
leader mired in extreme superstitious believes (Marcias
Francoise Nguema), the leader under the control of
warped spiritualists (Sani Abacha and Bokassa),
refurbished ancient paternalism (Siaka Stevens),
dictatorship, “God has destined me to be leader” (Jerry
Rawlings), heavy cultural inhibitions (all Africa),
charisma, tribalistic blood-feud payback, primordial
corporate loyalties, Guinea Bissau, and Gen. Ibrahim
Babangida (the military politician as the face of the
unrepentant African traditional autocracy).
New African Leadership: Humility. God fearing. Deep
decentralization so much so that decision-making is
pushed down as much as possible to the people affected.
Truthfulness. High sense of African history and
traditions. Traditional consensus building mixed with
modern leadership practices. John Kufour. Evans Atta
Mills, Nana Akufo Addo, Ian Khama. Balances. Democratic
tenets, human rights, freedoms, social justice, the rule
of law. Goodluck Jonathan, Ernest Koroma, Jakaya Kikwete.
The African Union, the Economic Community of West
African States. Television news network, participatory
communication, information, facebook, fax machines,
tweeter, myspace and other new media. David Mark (the
Nigerian soldier greatly democratized). The new Liberia.
Pluralism. The new Sierra Leone. Kwasi Pratt Jr.
Botswana.
In the African context, Old Leadership is a mixed bag.
New Leadership isn’t necessarily the best. There are
sham democracies and leaderships – The Gambia and Yaya
Jammeh. The New Leadership is an on-going project that
needs a lot of socio-political engineering constructed
from within Africa’s traditional values, but better than
Old Leadership. New Leadership is about output instead
of input. The assessment of the New Leadership is what
works. It Africanizes Botswana’s leadership skills, the
capability to mix the traditional with the modern so as
to refine any inhibitions within the traditional.
Old Leadership and New Leadership are often
intermingled. Jerry Rawlings and Jacob Zuma as awkward,
stalled in stupidity, complete dumbness, are Old
Leadership. Foolhardiness is New Leadership, as seen in
Central African Republic’s Francois Bozize and the
entire leadership of Guinea Bissau, can be different
style - small-minded, dishonorable, blank, and
uninformed of Africa’s painful past of agony and
sadness. New media, the medium of the New Leadership,
has an overwhelming addiction to the mediocre that it
constantly wrestles with. The New Leadership is a
distraction that sometimes reveals simple-mindedness.
In Emilio Mwai Kibaki’s mind, Old Leadership and New
Leadership circle each other suspiciously, as Kenya
struggles for better leadership and governance. Kibaki
is often New Leadership in regional issues but Old
Leadership in domestic affairs. Under his watch, Kenya’s
2008 general elections descended into fatal violence and
saw over 1,300 people killed and over 300,000 homeless.
The International Criminal Court coming into Kenya and
planning to put six top Kenyans on trial saw Kibaki
dashing back toward patriarchal conclusions.
Rawlings and Atta Mills? Object lessons on how Old
Leadership and New Leadership clash with each other.
Dictatorial Rawlings wants members of the opposition
National Patriotic Party arbitrarily arrested for
suspicion of being corrupt. With enormous pressure from
Rawlings, Mills reveals how fragile the New Leadership
could be, how it could be menaced by Old Leadership.
Rawlings sticking to Old Leadership despite the fact
that its time is gone has become a dilemma for Mills.
The trouble is there is no New Leadership for Rawlings
to migrate to. Maybe never.
Either in the analysis of Kufour’s African leadership
impasse or Botswana’s and Mauritius’s ability to mix
modern leadership practices with their traditional ones
that has paid off remarkably, the Ghanaian Joseph
William Addai argues in Reforming Leadership in Africa
that transformations in African leadership, as a way of
improving the quality of governance, should start from
African traditional values and then mixed with global
governance practices. This means African leaders should
have a high sense of African traditional leadership
values in relation to global governance ideals.
In this sense, Africa’s leadership struggles are
rationalized from within Africa’s soul. It is a new
intellectual construct to make things work. A way of
thinking about change. For long, Africans have taken
their leadership for granted seeing the likes of Bokassa,
Doe, and Amin mount power and destroy their countries.
The New Leadership is above all struggling toward a
working model for the progress mechanisms of The African
Century.
Short of this, there will be huge imbalances in the
quality of leadership and governance, and this will
impact negatively on Africa’s progress. Kenya’s and
Nigeria’s struggles for better governance practices, as
progress act, seen in their attempts to reform their
constitutions, illustrates Africa’s tussles to grapple
with its leadership challenges.
Fifty years after freedom from colonial rule, Africa is
largely still Old Leadership. But as the flowering of
The African Century reveals, Africa’s brilliance would
be how it renew itself, how it improvise itself,
technically how it quickly grow New Leadership as a
replacer of Old Leadership, as part of its
transformative endowment. This means New Leadership
should be the overarching idea, the signature of The
African Century.
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