My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Gabon: Mr. Bongo, your time is up

posted Monday, 8 June 2009

Breaking News: 17:56 Monday, 8th of June - It has been confirmed that the longest serving ruler in Africa who ruled Gabon for 42 years has died in a foreign hospital in Spain. May the hopes and aspirations of the Gabonese arise.

Is he dead or not?

In what is turning out to be like the Soviet era long drawn out dying throes of leaders like Brezhnev, Andropov and Chernenko, we are suffering the same uncertainties regarding the leader of Gabon.

Since yesterday, the French press opined in quotes and offered the news that the 73-year old eternal incumbent leader of Gabon, El Hadj Omar BONGO Ondimba [1] had passed on [2] from immortality of absolute power to the mortality of succumbing to cancer. []

With Gabon being a former French colony, one would expect that any serious events about that country would be truthfully and verifiably reported by the French press.

However, the rump of what is left of the government in Gabon suggests that false information is being peddled and that Mr. Bongo is “alive and well”. Maybe, Mr. Bongo is alive, the aspect of well is seriously debatable.

The rape of Gabon

The poor people of Gabon who unfortunately have not had the express freedom and right to choose who leads them for the 42 years of this atrocious regime have now been on tenterhooks as turmoil within the government is trying to resolve who steps into the dynasty shoes of the dying king before they probably announce that the President died tomorrow when probably maggots have borne generations of descendants already.

However, one has not begun to touch the travesty of this longest serving ruler in Africa until one explores the circumstances around his eventual demise.

Gabon [3], is an oil-rich country which with the resources it has and the finances that have come into the country could have been a different place, but a majority of its population remains poor.

If a person has been in power for 42 years and the life expectancy of his country is just 53.11 years, there should be a court of justice somewhere on earth to indict the person with a crime against humanity.

In power but not for the people

The President languishes in pain probably ameliorated with morphine in a Spanish hospital with the hope that the probability of his being “alive and well” is a miracle in the making – the Grand Despot of Africa in Zimbabwe is at least 10 years older and seemingly in rude health.

How, anyone could have been in power for 42 years and not been able to establish a first-class hospital along with necessary infrastructure of power, roads and transport as well as the resources of highly trained staff from first class educational institutions in his country escapes me.

This, in the end represents the failure and travesty of leadership in Africa, people who are in power but only for their own self-aggrandisement.

Rulers at home dying abroad

As these leaders have converted their leaderships into life monarchies the sadness of the story reads in a very unAfrican context. As I wrote in a comment I left on AfricanLoft when it was first announced that President Bongo had taken ill and was in hospital in Spain.

Kings in days of yore died in their own beds surrounded by their families and subjects outside the palace walls praying for the safe recovery of their monarchs.

The context being the best medical help was available to the monarch and at his beck and call in his own comfortable and familiar setting.

The irony for the African variation of kings who rule without the express and free consent of their people is that they do not have the best medical help available to them in their own countries all because they failed to serve the interest of their people due to the fact that they could use the resources of the country to jet out to any good hospital abroad at the slightest hint of discomfort.

In the end, they lay in exclusive wards with expensive beds surrounded by strange people and dying in foreign lands far away from where they have ruled with a rod of iron and had given their people no respite in freedom, justice, liberty or choice.

They may have ruled for an eternity, I was hardly 2 years old when Mr. Bongo assumed office, but all we would know of this leadership is squandered opportunities to make something great of what they had control of for all those decades.

Surely, there are others better

To suggest that there are not a thousand other Gabonese if given the opportunity who would not have made a better country of that place than Mr. Bongo is disingenuous at least and contemptible at worst.

This horrible hubris of eternal incumbency [4] unfortunately inflicts Africa badly like a plague as you have Santos in Angola for 30 years, Biya in Cameroon for 27 years, Nguesso in the Congo for 30 years, Mubarak in Egypt for 28 years, Bongo in Gabon for 42 years, Gaddafi in Libya for 40 years, Mswati III in Swaziland for 22 years, al-Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia for 22 years, Museveni in Uganda for 23 years and Mugabe in Zimbabwe for 29 years.

The unasked question is, which of these countries have been made better by any of these leaders? I would hate to read the CIA – The World Factbook [5] assessments of each country, but I provide the links for your perusal and judge for yourselves.

Their demise brings no respite

But as long regimes do, it would have bred a corrupt class of self-serving snouts in the trough, it is unlikely that the Gabonese would at the eventual demise of Mr. Bongo find true representative leadership that serves their interests.

However, this is an opportunity that should be seized upon by the good minds of Africa to sue for a clear free democratic representation of the Gabonese where the policies of those who seek office would clearly begin to reverse the entrenched patronage and corrupt establishment to deploy Gabonese resources to the general welfare and emancipation of the people.

The last thing Gabon needs is the son of this dying despot who happens to be the defence minister assuming power, unchallenged and without his father’s tenure having been scrutinised for its successes and failings.

Meanwhile, if Mr. Omar Bongo is dead, it is time to bury him and everything he represented that kept the people of Gabon from fully pursuing their happiness and freedom, if he is still being propped up, somebody should pull the plug and well, if he is still “alive and well”, he should return to the country and start to make amends for the failures highlighted.

But the most important message in all this stretched out dying throes is Mr. Bongo, your time is up, if not on earth, at least as the President of Gabon.

Sources

[1] BBC NEWS | Africa | Profile: Omar Bongo

[2] BBC NEWS | Africa | Gabon leader Bongo's death denied

[3] CIA - The World Factbook - Gabon

[4] FACTBOX: Africa's longest-serving leaders | Reuters

[5] CIA - The World Factbook – The links on the countries mentioned are to the CIA – The World Factbook and acknowledged as such.

tags:                        

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




1. SOLOMONSYDELLE left...
Sunday, 14 June 2009 9:22 pm

Am I wrong for wondering why a one-month period of mourning was instituted for Mr. bongo's passing? My poor heart is hardening...


2. Akin Akintayo left...
Monday, 15 June 2009 5:39 am :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

Hello SolomonS,

I think you are being rational but maybe the 30 days of mourning is to wean the people off 42 years of rotten rule.

That then leaves the interim President just 15 days to really work on the snap elections, does that mean no one can campaign or get their act together for a succession?

I begin to understand why Jesus said, "Let the dead bury the dead", because the lying have lives to get on with - your heart is not hardening, not by any measurable means I can note.

Thanks for commenting.

Regards,

Akin


Tag Related Posts

A primer on cancer and chemotherapy

Monday, 26 October 2009
A basic primer on cancer and chemotherapy to help understand what it is and how it is treated.

The importance of nurses, bedpans to my career

Saturday, 17 October 2009
Within my professional comfort zone, I viewed bedpans in derogatory language bordering on disgust until I found out through experience in hospital that doing bedpans was essential to my recovery.

The nurses @ OLVG have my deepest gratitude.

In hospital to kill the pain

Wednesday, 23 September 2009
Suddenly, I am admitted for treatment in the hospital.

Ghana: No antibodies for this virus - Obama's speech

Sunday, 12 July 2009
What we should not lose sight of from President Obama's speech to the Ghanaian parliament is that it is the first time a Western leader has been able to speak the truth to African leaders and not have blow-back. Against Obama they have no antibodies.

Nigeria: On transparency about Yar'Adua's health

Saturday, 20 June 2009
A court barred the President from suing for defamation on a report that suggested he was ill.

If the President refuses to be transparent about his health, the rumours would continue and going to court might just expose the truth about his health.

Gabon: Mr. Bongo, your time is up

Monday, 8 June 2009
The prospect of Mr. Bongo demise or impending demise brings into focus the problem with long-serving African leaders who have brought no progress to their countries.

Dead Aid - Review

Sunday, 10 May 2009
I review Dambisa Moyo's Dead Aid:Why Aid is not working and how there is another way for Africa.

Cover your mouth

Tuesday, 28 April 2009
Covering your mouth when you yawn or cough is just plain good manners, but it even matters more today including a covering when you sneeze.

Nigeria: Surely not a wobbly president

Tuesday, 14 April 2009
Concerns about the president's health create more concerns for the future of Nigeria, economically and politically.

Nigeria: Obasanjo's Hard Talk

Friday, 20 March 2009
The ex-president of Nigeria - Olusegun Obasanjo was on Hard Talk and failed to answer the real questions.

Nigeria: The crude franchise of stones

Thursday, 12 March 2009
The President's convoy gets pelted with stones as he visits to pay his condolences on the death of the Gbong Gwom of Jos.

Nigeria: The embarrassment of maternal mortality

Wednesday, 25 February 2009
It is not the fact that a woman gave birth to sextuplets that is of concern but that too many Nigerian women needlessly die at childbirth and Nigeria ranks second on the whole wide world.

100 Best Blogs for Learning About Africa

Friday, 6 February 2009
Named as one of the 100 Best Blogs for Learning About Africa

Obama Inauguration: The message to Africa

Monday, 19 January 2009
If President Obama's inauguration speech touches on Africa, it should be the opportunity to speak the truth.

Guinea: African leaders are indeed mortal

Tuesday, 23 December 2008
The death of President Lansana Conté of Guinea brings us back to an analysis of the problems of leadership in Africa.

Why I Blog About Africa

Sunday, 21 December 2008
I have been tagged about Why I Blog About Africa

Nigeria: Torture defended as standard police procedure

Thursday, 4 December 2008
The case of a man who supposedly committed suicide in police custody after reporting a crime seems to reveal more about abhorrent police practices that make you sick. Torture is defended as a necessary toll of detective work.

Nigeria: Palm, Panic, Pandemonium - Yar'Adua's Lesser Hajj

Tuesday, 9 September 2008
Between a lesser Hajj and a major kidney transplant, the health of the President of Nigeria appears to be a pendulum the swings without the assuredness of the truth.

Pursuing a cause greater than self

Saturday, 9 August 2008
To have a cause greater than self is to be able to fix your vision on that goal and refuse to be tempted by desires of the flesh in order to pursue that cause to its conclusion.

Zimbabwe: Ready for Re-Colonisation

Tuesday, 17 June 2008
Does Zimbabwe offer anything that would make it worthy of re-colonisation? I think not.

So why the delusions, lies and falsehoods of Robert Mugabe?

They shall not grow old

Saturday, 24 May 2008
11 elderly people are burnt to death by a mob after being accused of practising witchcraft in Kenya - the law should go after the leaders of the mob and make them face charges for murder.

Nigeria: Yar'Adua interviewed by the FT

Tuesday, 20 May 2008
I review the interview the Financial Times conducted with President Umaru Yar'Adua of Nigeria.

Nigeria: The Senate Health Bill is rejected

Saturday, 10 May 2008
We probably have the most distinguished set of senators ever selected to oversee the issues of health in Nigeria and they failed to present a bill fit for purpose to the Senate.

Grand Inga Project: Another White Elephant for Black Africa

Monday, 28 April 2008
The Grand Inga Project that involves building that largest hydro-electric dam in the world in DR Congo is sounding like exciting news but it has nothing for Africans in general. It should be aborted forthwith.

Nigeria: Yar'Adua healthy from Germany with love

Sunday, 20 April 2008
President Yar'Adua is bundled off to Germany in haste for an allergic reaction - it seems there is no one to treat the President for any simple ailment in Nigeria.

Nigeria: Senator frogjumps her back wall

Friday, 18 April 2008
The more Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello garners newsprint inches the more embarrassing her case becomes, it is an utter disgrace to say the least.

Nigeria: Senate safety from blame not guns

Monday, 14 April 2008
The Senate clears a senator from blame about receiving money for a junket but that did not stop a policemen from blowing his head off where the Senate President was partying for being made the custodian of guns.

Zimbabwe: Mugabe's epitaph by a little girl

Wednesday, 2 April 2008
With bated breath and great anticipation we wait for a new dawn in Zimbabwe.

After every vote is counted, the man must know that his time is up and time has now passed him by.

Zimbabwe: Thanks Mugabe, Now Give Way

Saturday, 29 March 2008
Keeping faith with Zimbabwe that today they shall be freed from the clutches of the Grand Despot of Africa.

Nigeria: The resignation of Adenike Grange

Wednesday, 26 March 2008
I conduct an analysis of the issues surrounding the resignation of Professor Adenike Grange - The Nigerian Minister for Health after allegations of graft

John McCain with a fistful of ashes for Castro's grave

Sunday, 24 February 2008
Senator McCain, 71 wishes Fidel Castro, 81 dead, when people play around with such ideas of mortality like that, their feeling of invulnerability might betray them beyond redemption.

Lucky is on the loose

Thursday, 21 February 2008
Due to varied bail conditions, Lucky Igbinedion has escaped prison to be welcomed by his deluded people.

Nigeria: Governor's reputation goes up in hospital flames

Sunday, 17 February 2008
A new hospital in Maiduguri completed in June 2006 had stayed closed because the state governor was waiting to get the President to cut the tape.

It has now been razed and the governor laments the loss of his reputation, he has more to lose.

Nigeria sets no good examples for Africa

Tuesday, 5 February 2008
Some of the problems in Africa exist because countries like Nigeria set bad examples which take away their moral authority to tackle other problems in the continent.

Rogue Trader II - 4 times Bigger

Thursday, 24 January 2008
A 31-year old "rogue-trader" loses $7.1 billions at Société Générale Bank - questions and no answers to satisfy me yet.

Iowa is not Bethlehem of Judea

Friday, 4 January 2008
The results of the Iowa State caucuses gives the laurels to Huckabee and Obama. I am however not convinced that these two successful gnetlemen represent the immediate future after this George W. Bush Presidency.

Zoe's wrecked ark

Saturday, 29 December 2007
The convicted workers of Zoe´s Ark have been returned to France but what does this mean for adoption in Africa and the standards to be followed for ensuring things are done right?

Between Smith and Mugabe - no difference

Wednesday, 21 November 2007
The death of Ian Smith allows us to reflect on his life and the regime of the man who succeeded him.

It would appear apart from race, Robert Mugabe may now be hearing what would be said of himself through what is being said now of Ian Smith.

Nigeria takes Big Tobacco to court about kids

Wednesday, 7 November 2007
Nigeria is suing international cigarette companies on their complicity in allowing their cigarettes to fall into the hands of children. They do have a cause, but maybe not a case.

I remember this tummy ache

Monday, 29 October 2007
A tummy ache this morning reminds me of many heakth experiences as a kid and the way I was shielded from the truth about what was happening to me.

Gallantly relinquished the Rugby World Cup

Saturday, 20 October 2007
A review of the end of the Rugby World Cup 2007

Nigerians: Ngozi at World Bank, Ibrahim in Burma

Friday, 5 October 2007
Nigerians that make me proud and what they are doing around the world. I salute Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Ibrahim Gambari.

The unacceptable cult of death

Friday, 7 September 2007
An 11 year old was buried yesterday after being shot in an English town - much as there were witnesses, the criminal is still at large. When would our societies be outrahed enough to find this completely unacceptable?

$6Billion to keep youth in Africa with boring and farming

Wednesday, 22 August 2007
$6 Billion is earmarked to encourage the youth to stay in West Africa rather than emigrate to the West with boring holes and farming. I think not!

Damn the Mugabe apologists

Sunday, 19 August 2007
I could not believe that the SADC leaders in Zambia could not bring any pressure to bear on Robert Mugabe about the problems in his country. How come?

That Thabo Mbeki Collective

Thursday, 16 August 2007
The sacking of the South African Deputy Minister of Health points to a deeper symptom of celebrating African incompetence championed by African leaders.

Obituary: Shambo, the loss of respect

Saturday, 28 July 2007
The theme of the sanctity of life, links the death of Shambo to the death of a gentleman boxer - James Oyebola.

Clothes line or clothes nurse

Tuesday, 12 June 2007
Clothes to keep tabs on your health, nice idea - where next?

The Pfizer Drug Trial

Wednesday, 23 May 2007
Another set of comments and clarifications on my first blog on Humanitarian Pfizer.

Humantarian Pfizer fed Nigerian kids poison drug - allegedly

Monday, 21 May 2007
Kano State sues Pfizer for administering unapproved drugs under the guise of humanitarian aid. What prize would they pay for this rotten exercise.

Sustaining bad reports from Africa

Wednesday, 16 May 2007
Zimbabwe is given the chairmanship of a UN commission on sustainable development - surely, this is a joke.

Jerry Falwell goes to meet the Lord

Tuesday, 15 May 2007
Reverend Jerry Falwell died today, he leaves an interesting legacy.

Is Nigeria a model for Africa?

Friday, 4 May 2007
A number of articles in the Economist about the Nigerian elections are painting us as a country rapidly losing respect, influence and clout - a model we are not.

Nigeria: They were burnt like tinder to cinder

Wednesday, 28 March 2007
Another petroleum death which happened on Monday and got reported on Wednesday - a lament of many wrongs in Nigeria.

The Yar'Adua website - not impressed

Tuesday, 20 March 2007
A visit to the Yar'Adua website leaves me seriously unimpressed.

Mind-bending yesterday, mind-mending tomorrow

Friday, 16 March 2007
How drugs have changed as we find new uses for things our parents would not touch.

Healing on a jet plane

Tuesday, 13 March 2007
Another presidentail candidate jets off to Europe for treatment - Why can they not get treatment in Nigeria?

Yar'Adua crests the stairway to heaven

Wednesday, 7 March 2007
If indeed Yar'Adua has passed on, we have happened upon rather inconvenient times.

Yar'Adua - Catching his breath in Germany

Wednesday, 7 March 2007
Yar'Adua has spoken to the BBC, he was breathless, he dis not collapse and he is in Germany for a check-up - he would run in the elections in April.

The invisible Minister of Trade resigns

Sunday, 4 March 2007
The prime minister of DR Congo appoints a name to the trade portfolio, the name resigns in secret without having taken up the post. The plot thickens.

The presidential library lends out colouring book

Friday, 9 February 2007
A university might as well reject hosting the George W. Bush Presidential Library. The propensity for secrecy might make research as interesting as reading blot outs but it would not change history.

AIDS cure or homosexual lure in Iran

Tuesday, 6 February 2007
Iranian scientists have claimed to develop a complimentary treatment for HIV/AIDS. I am concerned that those who would appear from treatment might get more than they bargained for, if homosexual.

A turkey flight between England and Nigeria

Monday, 5 February 2007
3 Avian flu deaths and nothing like panic or nothing happening at all in Nigeria, one does hope somehow there is more good fortune on our side.

A Gambian Cure for AIDS or An Epidemic of Stupidity

Friday, 2 February 2007
The President of Gambia declared before foreign diplomats that he could cure AIDS in 3 days - somehow we still have mad people in African presidential palaces or I am just being too cynical.

The ‘pause’ of Benji in bereavement

Tuesday, 16 January 2007
Pets can get mentioned in obituaries, why not?

Verdonk in leadership slam dunk - Update

Tuesday, 28 November 2006
With the numbers in for the Dutch Elections, Mrs Verdonk has another go at grabbing the leadership of her party because she polled more votes than the leader. This would be interesting.

Rape-bait without the veil

Friday, 27 October 2006
The veil from another perspective gives us a great cause for concern, as it reads like the incitement to rape.

The Oscar for Best Leader in an Actor's Role?

Thursday, 26 October 2006
A prize for best African leadership is noble, but there is really a leader out there around the world that is worthy of an exemplary leadership prize in the first instance? Who would the contenders be?

The real world of John le Carré

Tuesday, 17 October 2006
A recent interview with John le Carré about his latest book the Mission Song and a few other contemporary issues.

Finest quality Ecstasy from the Police

Tuesday, 17 October 2006
Immigration, asylum seekers and law enforcement - just some of the political tools to hammer the electorate before the November elections and it is not looking good at all.

Rotten journalism ruins obituary

Friday, 22 September 2006
Reading about the death of a famous Nigeria, I am left to read poor copy that should have suffered better scrutiny before publication.

An admission in remission

Friday, 8 September 2006
Admitting the CIA secret prisons did exist leaves one wondering how many more admissions would completely destroy the last ounce of respect America can show.

Needing aid for those in charge against AIDS

Thursday, 13 July 2006
It appears the man in charge of the fight against HIV/AIDS in Nigeria does not understand his demographic or the context of homosexuality and has garbled a useful message on issues that would kill the message of safer sex.

Clambering from the ruins of World Cup 2006

Thursday, 6 July 2006
The seedings are awry, the referees are the news and then we have one more controversial referee for the final - FIFA is doing so much to make us hate the beautiful game.

The World Cup now excites me

Saturday, 1 July 2006
Being in Paris as France gives Brazil a lesson in football, I am utterly elated. Now, the Europeans have put paid to South American football arrogance for 4 years - we can have a seriously European encounter.

Unhealthy directors of Nigerian Health

Saturday, 10 June 2006
Having just watched Bad Medicine on BBC World about couterfeit drugs trade in Nigeria and I have come away thinking the men in charge should be charged with culpability. Dr Dora Akinyuli is definitely on the ball sorting this mess out.