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Tuesday, 17 September 2013
why are africa leaders sooooo OLD
Editor's note: Mo Ibrahim is founder and chair of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation.
The Foundation will announce the 2013 Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in
African Leadership and the Ibrahim Index of African Governance on
October 14.
(CNN) -- Africa is in the middle of an amazing
demographic shift. Our continent is the only one where the size of the
younger generation is rising significantly.
Our population is already 16 years younger than in China, and this is only the beginning. Within less than three generations, four out of ten of the world's youth will live on our continent.
This demographic dividend
-- and the energy and enthusiasm it brings -- offers us a unique
advantage which other continents facing the prospect of a rapidly aging
population and dwindling workforce can only envy. In a world changing
with breakneck speed, it is young people who are best equipped to
identify and deliver fresh solutions to our problems.
Mo Ibrahim.
But we will only fully
reap these benefits if we listen to young people, engage with them and
provide the education, skills and support they need to prosper. Despite
progress, we continue to fail to rise to this challenge. Young people,
all too often, find their interests overlooked and their voices ignored.
There can be no clearer
symbol of this disconnect than the age of those who continue to set the
direction of our countries and their citizens. For while the median age
of Africa's population is now 20 and falling, the average age of our continent's leaders is around 60.
Africa must ask itself why our continent appears so frightened of giving the younger generation a chance.
Mo Ibrahim
I am not arguing, of
course, that teenagers should be put in charge of countries. Experience
counts in government even more than in business. But Africa must ask
itself why our continent appears so frightened of giving the younger
generation a chance.
After all, David Cameron
and Tony Blair both became UK Prime Ministers for the first time when
they were 43. Barack Obama first became President of the United States
at the age of 47. Even more importantly, he will step down, because of
the constitution, eight years after he entered the White House.
In contrast, Africa has just witnessed an 89-year old sworn in
as President of Zimbabwe, a post he first gained 25 years ago. And this
was after he had already led his country as Prime Minister for nearly a
decade.
The truth is that it is
not so much the age that our leaders first come to power which is the
problem but their reluctance to relinquish it. Where necessary,
constitutional terms are altered to allow them to continue long after
they were supposed to step down.
The result is that
political power lies in the hands of aging leaders who have little
knowledge or interest in the ambitions and concerns of younger
generations -- and sadly even less interest in passing on the reins of
leadership.
It is why, when we set up the Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership
in 2007, we made it a condition that only those democratically elected
leaders who hand over power voluntarily at the end of their
constitutional term would be eligible.
Even in countries where
leaders do not confuse their own interests with those of their country,
our young people can find themselves locked out of decision-making and
debate. They react, not surprisingly, by turning their backs on the
political process. Electoral turnout is falling among the young and
political apathy is on the rise.
The danger is that, denied the chance of peaceful change, despair and anger is fostered. Mo Ibrahim
The danger is that,
denied the chance of peaceful change, despair and anger is fostered. We
must at least enable our young people to play a more active part in the
decision-making process. If we do not, we will see even more leaders
overthrown.
The risk of creating a
marginalized youth only seems to increase when you look at the job
market. Our young people are better educated but enjoy less employment opportunities than their parents. We can't just rely on their numbers to drive Africa's continued economic progress.
We need renewed efforts
to provide them with the skills they need to fill the jobs of the
future. We urgently need to foster national debates involving
businesses, education specialists and young people themselves to build
the skilled workforce Africa requires to compete globally.
It's time Africa started
listening to our young people, instead of always telling them what to
do. It is their potential, after all, which will decide our continent's
future. Let's not waste it.
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