{"id":368117,"date":"2017-11-03T18:41:50","date_gmt":"2017-11-03T18:41:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/citifmonline.com\/?p=368117"},"modified":"2017-11-03T18:41:50","modified_gmt":"2017-11-03T18:41:50","slug":"mahama-delivers-lecture-on-challenges-of-democracy-in-africa-full-text","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citifmonline.com\/2017\/11\/mahama-delivers-lecture-on-challenges-of-democracy-in-africa-full-text\/","title":{"rendered":"Mahama delivers lecture on challenges of democracy in Africa [Full text]"},"content":{"rendered":"

Former President John Dramani Mahama on Thursday delivered a lecture on challenges of democracy in Africa.<\/p>\n

He gave the lecture when he spoke at a graduation ceremony at the Institute of Security Studies in Abuja, Nigeria.<\/p>\n

[contextly_sidebar id=”DfaIqYamW3OLEUymEhfYYCzeT0Lf6wc3″]He touched on a number of\u00a0issues\u00a0 including his life after handing over power to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, as well as the slow pace of democracy in some African countries.<\/p>\n

Below is John Mahama’s\u00a0full lecture:<\/strong><\/p>\n

Challenges Of Democracy & Development In Africa<\/strong><\/p>\n

Thank you for the very kind words used to introduce me this afternoon.<\/p>\n

Mr. Chairman, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and my friend Mr. Geoffrey Onyeama; the Director-General of State Security, Alhaji Lawal Musa; and the Director of the Institute of State Security, Mr. M.B. Seiyefa, I thank you all for the kind invitation to deliver today\u2019s graduation lecture.I also acknowledge the presence of the High Commissioner of Ghana to the Federal Republic of Nigeria.<\/p>\n

I am particularly honoured that you graciously accepted to shift today\u2019s event from the original date of October 31, to enable me participate in a roundtable conference of the African Presidential Leadership Center in Johannesburg.The event saw seven former leaders drawn from across the continent sharing our experiences on how to improve educational outcomes on the continent. Former President of Nigeria, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, was one of the participants at this roundtable, and his contributions to the discussion were very insightful and revealing of the challenges and opportunities facing Nigeria, the world\u2019s most populous black nation, when considering policy options in the education space.<\/p>\n

The meeting in Johannesburg revealed the value of expertise one garners from having the privilege of serving as the leader of one\u2019s nation.It also gave life to the words President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf spoke at the inauguration of my successor, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. She said to me, \u201cPresident Mahama, you have indeed demonstrated that there is life after the Presidency\u201d.<\/p>\n

It gave me a sense of pride to hear these words. Of course, she said these words because of the work we did together in resolving the Gambian stand-off and aiding the advancement of democratic consolidation in the Gambia, even at a time when I had accepted defeat in Ghana\u2019s election of 7th<\/sup> December, 2016.I think that that was what my friend Geoffrey Onyeama was referring to, when he spoke about the work we did together in The Gambia with President Buhari, President Koroma and Her Excellency, Johnson Sirleaf.<\/p>\n

Indeed, I think the main reason why I was added to that delegation was to serve as a good example to President Yahya Jammeh. He had lost the election and he had conceded and called the victor and congratulated him. Then a week after, he reneged on the congratulations and refused to hand over. I had also lost an election; I had conceded. So, I guess I was added to serve as a good example for him to let him follow my example.<\/p>\n

I therefore wish to thank President Buhari for the privilege of working alongside him and President Johnson Sirleaf in unravelling the Gambian impasse. I wish the people of Gambia every success in the journey of consolidating their fledgling democracy. Since leaving Office, I have been involved in many assignments both to do with the consolidation of democracy on the African continent and also in election observation on behalf of the Commonwealth and, lately, ECOWAS.<\/p>\n

I remember the day after I had handed over \u2013 this was the 8th<\/sup> of January \u2013 I woke up in the morning and remembered there was no Office to go to. So, I relaxed in my bed and turned on the TV, watching CNN.I spent the whole day watching TV at the time Donald Trump was the President-elect, and they were going through the transition, waiting to hand over; so, I just kept watching what was going on.<\/p>\n

My daughter, Farida, who had gone to school in the morning arrived in the afternoon. She found me lying in bed which was unusual, because when I was President we could go a whole week without seeing each other.<\/p>\n

She leaves the house early in the morning to be able to get to school on time, by which time I probably had not gotten out of bed. She gets back home late afternoon and I am in the Office and I get back in the night when she is asleep. So, we could go the whole week without seeing each other. For the first time, she came back from school and there I was lying on my bed and watching television.<\/p>\n

She asked me, \u2018\u2018Daddy, didn\u2019t you go to the Office?\u2019\u2019 I said \u2018\u2018No, don\u2019t you remember that I handed over to President Akufo-Addo yesterday.\u2019\u2019 She said OK; so it means you are not going to the Office anymore? I said \u2018\u2018No, I have no Office to go to.\u2019\u2019 And she said, \u2018\u2018then I am happy!\u2019\u2019 She added, \u2018\u2018so will I be coming home from school and meeting you in the house? I said yes and she said, \u2018\u2018then I am very happy that you lost the elections!\u2019\u2019<\/p>\n

Let me extend my warmest thanks to H.E. President Muhammadu Buhari GCFR and the staff of this esteemed college for the honour done me in extending an invitation to deliver the graduation lecture on this auspicious occasion.The role of your Institute is important in building that corps of critical and strategic thinkers who we need to help transform the fortunes of this continent and especially our sub-region.<\/p>\n

Your students are therefore a very special group of people who have been primed by their study here to play a vital role towards the development of not only Nigeria but the continent and beyond.<\/p>\n

Let me say congratulations to the graduating students!<\/p>\n

May I also congratulate the national directors present here, the eminent members of faculty and the non-teaching administrative staff for producing these fresh graduates, who, I am confident, would illuminate the African continent and beyond with productive, ground-breaking contributions that would make our world a more secure place than it is today.<\/p>\n

Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Chairman, I thank you all for prioritizing to share your time with me as I attempt to do justice to the topic of today \u2013 to tell you what I think are the challenges of democracy and development in Africa.<\/strong><\/p>\n

In 2012 I launched a book, my memoir, entitled \u201cMy first coup d\u2019etat and other true stories from the lost decades of Africa.\u201d<\/p>\n

The book captures my coming of age in the late sixties until the early 1990s \u2013 a period when the initial euphoria of independence had faded and we had become entrapped in a revolving door of military dictatorships. A period when Africa saw a general decline in its economic fortunes.<\/p>\n

In Ghana, the experience was particularly traumatic and saw a massive migration of our nationals to sojourn here with our cousins in Nigeria.<\/p>\n

It is a period during which our countries were still cooking in a governance cauldron \u2013 a kind of laboratory in which different experiments in governance were being carried out. We went through three decades in which we saw brief periods of constitutional rule interrupted by military dictatorships.<\/p>\n

Ladies and gentlemen, our continent Africa, like many other parts of the world, has gone through these leadership experiments, and has been struggling to find the best solution for advancing the hopes and aspirations of our people.<\/p>\n

This quest has been fraught with various setbacks and reversals, sometimes dimming all hope that this high natural resource-endowed region will ever find the right governance mix to actualize the dreams of our people for a better life.<\/p>\n

In this short lecture, therefore, I will endeavour to highlight a few of the challenges confronting Africa’s governance and development with the hope that it will add to the ever-raging debate on a myriad of perspectives and solutions.<\/p>\n

In my view, this continent\u2019s challenges are focused around a few issues:<\/p>\n