Sunday, October 6, 2024

Guinea’s leader defends coups but juntas are failing to solve problems

In Burkina Faso, economic growth slowed to 2.5 per cent in 2022 after a robust 6.9 per cent the year before.

The recent coups in Africa are attempts by militaries to save their countries from presidents’ “broken promises,” the head of Guinea´s junta, Col. Mamadi Doumbouya, said as he accused the West of “boxing in” the continent of more than 1 billion people.

Doumbouya, who declared himself interim president following the coup in 2021, told the UN General Assembly that beyond condemning the coups, global leaders must also “look to and address the deep-rooted causes.”

“The putschist is not only the person who takes up arms to overthrow a regime,” he told the gathering of world leaders in New York.

“I want us all to be well aware of the fact that the real putschists, the most numerous, are those who avoid any condemnation – they are those … who cheat to manipulate the text of the constitution in order to stay in power eternally.”

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Guinea is one of several nations in West and Central Africa that have experienced eight coups since 2020. The others are Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Gabon.

The military takeovers, sometimes celebrated by citizens in those countries and condemned by international organisations and foreign countries, have raised concern about the stability of the continent.

Doumbouya accused some leaders in Africa of clinging to power by any means – often including amending the constitution – to the detriment of their people.

In Guinea, he said he led soldiers to depose then-President Alpha Conde in the September 2021 coup to prevent the country from “slipping into complete chaos.”

He said the situation was similar in other countries hit by coups and was a result of “broken promises, the lethargy of the people, and leaders tampering with constitutions with the sole concern of remaining in power to the detriment of collective well-being.”

While true of the situation in Guinea and Gabon, recent military takeovers in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger were not against sit-tight leaders.

Doumbouya also rebuffed attempts by the West and other developed countries to intervene in Africa’s political challenges, saying that Africans are “exhausted by the categorisations with which everyone wants to box us in.”

“We Africans are insulted by the boxes, the categories which sometimes place us under the influence of the Americans, sometimes under that of the British, the French, the Chinese, and the Turks.

“Today, the African people are more awake than ever and more than ever determined to take their destiny into their own hands,” the Guinean leader said.

Failing to solve problems

While the Guinean leader defended the coups in his country and elsewhere, concerns remain about the effectiveness of such military takeovers in addressing the challenges they claimed made them “intervene.”

In Mali, where soldiers have been in power since 2020, the Islamic State group almost doubled the territory it controls in less than a year, according to UN experts.

And in Burkina Faso, which recorded two coups in 2020, economic growth slowed to 2.5 per cent in 2022 after a robust 6.9 per cent the year before.

“Military coups are wrong, as is any tilted civilian political arrangement that perpetuates injustice,” said Nigerian President Bola Tinubu.

As the leader of West Africa’s regional bloc of ECOWAS, he is leading efforts of neighbours to reverse the coup in the region.

“The wave crossing parts of Africa does not demonstrate favour towards coups.

“It is a demand for solutions to perennial problems,” he said.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

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