President Bio calls on African leaders to urgently address the underlying causes of unconstitutional change of government

Sierra Leone Telegraph: 01 June 2022:

President of Sierra Leone, Dr Julius Maada Bio who also is the Chairman of the African Peer Review and Monitoring (APRM) Forum, addressed his fellow African Union Heads of State and Government  last week at the AU extraordinary summit on terrorism and unconstitutional changes of government, held in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea.

With recent rise in the number of military coups and civilian uprising across the continent, African leaders are worried about their own fate and the potential for military intervention in their countries, especially as economic downturn and rising costs of living continue to bite.

President Bio told his colleagues, “We should not ignore the subjective factors that lead to citizens celebrating rather than condemning a coup. We should also reflect on whether those unconstitutional changes of Government are acts of popular uprising; what precipitous factors may have led to those changes; and, most importantly, what are our efforts at preventing and responding to unconstitutional changes of government as the AU and as regional economic communities.

“It is imperative therefore for us to urgently address the underlying causes of unconstitutional changes of government, including governance deficits, mismanagement of diversity, marginalisation, violation of human and peoples’ rights, refusal to accept electoral defeats, and the illegal review of constitutions, among others.”

“We should not allow any form of disunity to impede our resolve to address these issues around unconstitutional changes of Government on the African Continent. We must speak with one voice and act in concord.”

You can read President  Bio’s statement below:

Your Excellency, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, President of The Republic of Equatorial Guinea; Your Excellency, Paul Biya, Chairperson of the Peace and Security Council; Excellencies, Heads of State and Government; Your Excellency, Moussa Faki Mahamat, Chairperson of the AU Commission; Excellencies, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen; Good morning.

Let me, from the outset, thank His Excellency, President Nguema, for the excellent hospitality accorded me and my delegation since our arrival, and the outstanding facilities he has so generously put at our disposal. I also wish to thank your Excellencies for the confidence reposed in me for appointing me as Chairperson of The African Peer Review Forum of Heads of State and Government.

I wish to commend my predecessor, His Excellency, President Cyril Ramaphosa, for the excellent manner in which he chaired the proceedings of the forum during his tenure. We have made great progress and we will continue building on our successes.

I embrace this weighty task not just with gratitude, but with modesty. I spend time thinking of what this illustrious body, the African Union, has come to mean to us, especially in a fast-changing world. But beyond that, I dwell constantly on what great potential exists through this body.

We are not here to wag fingers at fellow leaders or member states; I am not one, who, in the words of Theodore Roosevelt, “points out how the strongman stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. I am actually in the arena, my face is marred by dust, sweat, and blood; striving valiantly.”

We have made commendable gains in advancing democracy and human rights for our people since attaining independence. With the reintroduction of multiparty democratic politics, we further consolidated those gains.

Democracy is not necessarily sustaining. Its survival depends on consistent, conscious efforts; on the blood, sweat and tears of patriots who ensure that questions of governance and resource distribution, as well as disputes, are resolved through democratic processes. Accordingly, the Constitutive Act of the African Union is underpinned by key principles that condemn and reject unconstitutional changes of Government, impunity and political assassination, and acts of terrorism and subversive activities.

To concretise those principles in our states, we have put in place AU Shared Values as contained in various instruments and normative frameworks such as the Lomé Declaration on the OAU/AU Response to unconstitutional changes of government; the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance; the Peace and Security Protocol; and, the APRM, as an African-owned and African-led platform for self-assessment, peer-learning, and experience-sharing in democracy and good governance.

Excellencies, you will recall that in its report to the 35th Ordinary Session of the Assembly, the African Peer Review Forum of Heads of State and Government, denounced and condemned the resurgence of military coups d’état on the continent.

As Heads of States and Governments, we must stress that all kinds of unconstitutional changes of government undermine the gains the continent has realised so far in the areas of good governance, democracy, peace, security, and stability, and the collective quest to silence the Guns in Africa by 2030.

In this regard, as Chairperson of the African Peer Review Forum of Heads of State and Government, I would like to submit the following. Firstly, we should not view the resurgence of unconstitutional changes of government as broadly indicative of democratic regression or the collapse of our AU Shared Values. Instead, we should see these incidents as new challenges in the development of political pluralism and the consolidation of our AU Shared Values.

These new situations are an opportunity to address the gaps in our normative framework and our response measures to unconstitutional changes of government. In this Summit, we should generate ideas and a roadmap to address these gaps.

Next, there is a need for deep and holistic introspection, at the country level, on factors that breed conditions supportive of changes of government in Africa. Unconstitutional changes of government may be occasioned by both internal and external factors. The internal factors could include socio-economic factors putting pressure on our people, and political contestations prevailing within our countries.

We should not ignore the subjective factors that lead to citizens celebrating rather than condemning a coup. We should also reflect on whether those unconstitutional changes of Government are acts of popular uprising; what precipitous factors may have led to those changes; and, most importantly, what are our efforts at preventing and responding to unconstitutional changes of government as the AU and as regional economic communities.

It is imperative therefore for us to urgently address the underlying causes of unconstitutional changes of government, including governance deficits, mismanagement of diversity, marginalisation, violation of human and peoples’ rights, refusal to accept electoral defeats, and the illegal review of constitutions, among others.

In our engagements on each country that has seen unconstitutional changes of Government, our objective interpretations must be unique to each country’s situation while focused on ensuring strict adherence to our cardinal principles and normative frameworks.

For external, non-African factors that lead to unconstitutional changes of Government, it is imperative that we, as a Union, engage with governments and multilateral institutions within and outside the continent ready to receive feedback that we must internalise and contextualise in order to inform solution-finding.

Further, Your Excellencies, the APRM can play a critical role in initiating and moderating dialogue between countries under suspension as a result of unconstitutional changes of government and regional blocs and the AU. Done in a timely and structured manner, these dialogues can help contain incidents of unconstitutional changes of Government or facilitate the restoration of constitutional order on the African continent.

Excellencies,  there is agreement within our Peace and Security Council on an urgent need to undertake an in-depth analysis of both the 2000 Lomé Declaration on unconstitutional changes of government, and the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance, with a view to ensuring that these frameworks and instruments respond appropriately to the challenges that we are currently facing as a Union and as a continent.

We should also enhance the capacity of our Africa Governance Architecture Platform Members (including the APRM and our African Peace and Security Architecture Pillars). Thus, they can continue supporting Member-States in the promotion of democracy, good governance, peace, security, and stability with a view to preventing constitution-related crises.

Your Excellencies may recall numerous decisions by the Assembly, that the APRM, in collaboration with the African Governance Architecture (AGA), should develop the Africa Governance Report. That report can provide us with in-depth, evidence and expert-based analysis of existing instruments and normative frameworks.

In that regard, on behalf of the APRM, I, therefore, propose that this Summit mandate the APRM, in collaboration with AGA, to develop the Africa Governance Report 2023. Member-States affected by unconstitutional changes of government should be encouraged to collaborate and cooperate with the APRM and AU-APRM AGA to conduct targeted reviews and develop the African Governance Report 2023.

The targeted reviews are a collaborative and facilitative approach that has been used to address specific issues related to governance challenges. It ensures that outcomes, findings, and recommendations are African-driven and African-owned. This is critical in building resilience and strengthening the capacities of our states in addressing the catalysts and triggers of unconstitutional changes of government.

We should not allow any form of disunity to impede our resolve to address these issues around unconstitutional changes of Government on the African Continent. We must speak with one voice and act in concord. I thank you all Excellencies, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, for your kind attention. Happy Africa Month.” END.

Political commentators say that African leaders should not only be worried about the massive impact of the rising cost of living on society, but the abuse of power by leaders with impunity, such as; the killing of unarmed citizens in cold blood by their security forces, the arbitrary arrest and detention of opposition politicians, massaging of population census data to gain political advantage, the rigging of election results, and the use of Cyber laws to clamp down on freedom of speech.

1 Comment

  1. President Bio is not as stupid as he looks .Here is an African leader like an evangelical president preaching a message of change to fellow African despots about the need to address the underlying causes of military interventions in African politics.More like preaching to the unconverted .Bio is always at his best when he is on the international stage .He always hit the right tone .He is never ashamed of saying things that he doesn’t believe in. You will never catch him singing from the wrong hyme sheets .But you’ve got the message.He knows what he is talking about because when it comes to corruption , abuse of power ,suppression of free speech , abuse of the criminal justice system and pursuing his so-called enemies real or imagine, he ticks all the right boxs .

    Bio the angel with his self righteousness will put the Pope in to shame .Do as I say don’t do as I do. After all we Africans don’t need to be reminded why our continent is one of the few continent’s in the world that are still grappling with security challenges, that is left to our former colonial powers to come to our aid to stop Black Africans killing Black Afrinans in the name of what? Who ever coin the phrase the dark continent most have thought about it .This is the 21st century, with driverless cars , and the rest of humanity busy exploring the most remote galaxies outside our atmosphere about the meaning of life yet some of us are still carrying bow and arrows and hunting ourselves like wild animals . .Our mindset in some parts of Africa where human sacrifice is prevalent in this day and age is no different from the mindset of those Africans that sold their fellow Africans to salverly more than four hundred years ago.

    The killing of young or human sacrifice in some parts of Nigeria, DRC and Albino people in some East African countries doesn’t makes us civilised any more than what has gone on before us .That unhinged behaviour full of hate for fellow Aficans is just being encouraged and practice in an other forms but the suffering remains the same . As Africans we could do better .The jihadist wars in the shahel , Boka Haram in Nigeria, Mali , Niger , Boukina Fasso , the wars in Cameroon between the English speaking minoritis and the majority speaking French population , Islamic state in Mozambique, Central African Republic, M23 in the DRC , AL Shabbah in Somalia , South Sudan , the on going wars in Ethiopia, and Dafour, Libya,Chad and many other places ,the word peace and development is in short supply in large parts of our African Continent .

    Thanks to out corrupt and fat cat politicians .But if we look at it beyond the human suffering and deaths , one common thread that seemed to run in all these countries that forced desperate people to take up arms against their government or the military been forced to take matters in their own hands , is the lack of ,infrastructure, environmental degradation, lack of employment opportunities, state resources been diverted to private bank accounts by those that are elected to look after the welfare of the people and to add insult to injury making promises that they know they will not able to deliver .Also lack of a free press,effective opposition , suppression of individuals rights and undermining the rule of law,and above all else a corrupt judiciary .After all it is not rocket science.The issues highlighted might just be the issues we need to address to overcome the Democratic defiect In Africa.

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