Business
Obasanjo Lists Path To Africa’s Dev
A political leadership with
vision and capacity to manage the process of change is crucial in tackling Africa’s development challenges and transformation.
Nigeria’s former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, said this in a paper he presented on Tuesday in Havana, Cuba, and made available to newsmen in Abuja.
In the paper entitled, “Africa: Looking Back and Moving Forward,” Obasanjo said African leaders must demonstrate the necessary political will in the transformation of the continent.
“ Those who aspire to lead must have an irreducible minimum and reasonable level of education, experience, exposure, moral strength and character,” Obasanjo said.
He said Africa’s friends must recognise certain peculiarities of the African environment that are crucial in “enabling us realise the best that is embedded in us.”
Obasanjo said such understanding could forge the mutually-beneficial partnership that could accelerate the development of the thinking process as well as engender progress in Africa. He said a democratic society founded on equity, truth and egalitarianism was fundamental to economic progress.
The former president said empirical evidence suggested that inequity and injustice breed conflict, strife and war.
He said countries with deficient basic governance would never be able to undergo sustained economic development.
“Apart from some dots of darkness here and there, Africa can be said to be exiting from all the vices which had befallen it in the past,” he said.
Obasanjo said the most worrisome crises facing the continent like civil strife and collapsed states were being tackled.
He cited Rwanda, Liberia and Sierra Leone as some states being rebuilt in this drive.
Obasanjo further said that democratic institutions were being rebuilt as the culture of war was being replaced with that of peace in many other countries.
“ Africa presently has a new opportunity to reposition itself in the world economic and social equation,” he said.
He described the current century as an ecological one, adding that predictions indicate that it would favour Africa.