TheCitizen - It's all about you
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
TheCitizen - It's all about you
No Result
View All Result

People power: Algeria, Sudan’s change of guards – Punch

The Citizen by The Citizen
April 28 2019
in Public Affairs
A A
0

The ranks of Africa’s “big men” thinned further as popular uprisings in Algeria culminated in the ouster of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s regime and that of his counterpart in Sudan, Omar al-Bashir, this month. These dictators rode roughshod over their people for decades, caused serious economic hardships and ran utterly corrupt governments. Now, their time is up.

The political events in the two countries were unpredictable. Bouteflika, 82 years old, had since 2013 been a recluse, having been struck down by a stroke. As a result, he has been confined to a wheelchair. Despite this debilitating health condition, which rendered him an ineffectual president, he still indicated interest in running in the presidential election, earlier billed for this April, to the chagrin and fury of his people. That bid was his fifth, having assumed the mantle of leadership in 1999. This obsession with power sowed the immediate seed of the six weeks of rebellion that began in February. On April 3, sensing danger as the military joined the masses to ask him to quit, he resigned. The president of the upper house – Council of Nations – Abdelkader Bensalah has stepped in for 90 days as an interim leader, pending the election that will produce Bouteflika’s successor.

The tidal waves of the Arab Spring in 2011 that swept President Zine Ben Ali of Tunisia, Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Muammar Gadaffi of Libya out of power missed Bouteflika’s scalp, because of his deft manoeuvres in response. He suspended an extant two-year state of emergency and met other key demands of the protesters. But the latest event has proved that “people power” is a sword an unpopular regime cannot duck for too long.

Algeria under Bouteflika was in the hands of what was described as a “System,” the nexus of compromised politicians, businessmen and the military, who had kept democracy firmly at bay. A reckless election bid on a wheelchair might have pulled the trigger, but the periodic convulsions from spikes in prices of basic food items, unemployment and stagnant economy that bred cuts in public spending with the fall in oil prices laid the foundation. Other toxic elements were reduction in social services and lack of freedom of speech. The outcry of political restructuring is now the ultimate demand of the protesters.

As the Bouteflika regime was crumbling in Algeria, the Sudan scenario was unfolding in a more dramatic and daring manner.  Al-Bashir superintended over the country for 30 years, ravaged by war, genocide, soldiers’ notoriety for raping women, torture, famine, corruption, rising costs of food and international isolation.

The political situation in the two countries again, are in fact, lessons in nation-building  to citizens asphyxiated by crass leadership failure that folding their arms in resignation is not the ideal solution; after all, the philosopher, Joseph de Maistre, underscored it, that people get the leaders they deserve. It is another confirmation that protest is so fundamental for human rights.  Events in Algeria and Sudan show that public demonstrations and marches empower people by showing them that there are thousands of people who think the same.

For the disgraced Sudanese ruler, nemesis simply caught up with him when his government toyed with the idea of an increase in the price of bread in the twilight of 2018. The move was greeted with a national protest, which he tried to quell. The protesters hit the bull’s eye by demanding an end to his regime in February. It is an audacious dig no dictator tolerates. His response was true to type: In February, he declared a state of emergency; sacked all state governors and replaced them with his loyalists in the military and reshuffled his cabinet.

But the more he dug in, the more he became insecure as the protest gathered momentum. So committed and fearless to the cause, Sudanese daily thronged to the front of the military headquarters in Khartoum with the same plea. On April 11, Sudan’s military announced that they had taken over from al-Bashir. The defence minister, Awad Ibn Auf, announced a two-year interim government headed by him; released all political prisoners, suspended the constitution and imposed a nation-wide curfew.

Impressively, defiance to this order of things has remained resonant. A military government, replacing al-Bashir’s pariah regime is well defined in one of the chants that belched out from the crowd: “we do not replace a thief with a thief.” Indeed, the military hierarchy’s replacement of Auf, an ally of al-Bashir, with another army general, Abdel al-Burhan, is a sleight of hand.

Military rule is no longer fashionable or acceptable across the world. With the messianic pretentions of their helmsmen at inception, promises to hand over power to democratically elected governments within a short while; they end up transmuting themselves into so-called democratic leaders; leaving their countries in total ruins when they are eventually humiliated out of office. The Democratic Republic of Congo and The Gambia are good examples. This is why the rejection of diarchy – a transitional government comprising the military and civilians by the Sudanese Professional Association that provided the intellectual undergird for the uprising – is commendable.

Al-Bashir is an archetype of a villain, linked with $9 billion of looted funds by Wikileaks, according to a report by the whistle-blowing website in 2010. The $130 million found in his house seems to further strengthen global perception of his crookedness or notoriety.  He must also pay for his bloody role in the Darfur genocide in which about 300,000 lives were lost, according to United Nations estimates. The International Criminal Court had ordered his arrest and trial while in office, for committing crimes against humanity. The only fitting epilogue to his reign should be to hand him over to the ICC for trial.

Africa’s big men are terrors to their countries, they should go. They should learn some useful lessons from the fates of their fellow travellers in Algeria and Sudan. As the late Walter Rodney, a prominent Guyanese historian, political activist and academic, once said, “Human spirit has a remarkable capacity of rising above oppression.”

 

Previous Post

Lagos govt pardons 14 inmates after 20 years in prison

Next Post

Social degeneration – The Nation

Related Posts

Curfew in Abuja today for LG council elections
Public Affairs

Hidden cost of elections – Punch

April 17 2026
Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts
Public Affairs

As Nigeria moves away from oil dependency – Punch

April 13 2026
Easter gets bloodier – Punch
Public Affairs

Easter gets bloodier – Punch

April 12 2026
Security chiefs’ discordant tunes – Punch
Public Affairs

Security chiefs’ discordant tunes – Punch

April 10 2026
NASS: Withdraw MDPA amendment bill – Punch
Public Affairs

NASS: Withdraw MDPA amendment bill – Punch

April 9 2026
Anti-immigrant protests in South Africa – Punch
Public Affairs

Anti-immigrant protests in South Africa – Punch

April 8 2026
Next Post
Police IG announces new postings for AIGs

Social degeneration – The Nation

Healthcare delivery and ‘surplus doctors’ – Thisday

Healthcare delivery and ‘surplus doctors’ - Thisday

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

FROM THE GRASSROOTS

Police launch manhunt for killers of Imo traditional ruler

Police launch manhunt for killers of Imo traditional ruler

by The Editor
April 11 2026
0

...

Lassa fever deaths rise in Nigeria

Lassa fever deaths rise in Nigeria

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

...

Oyo govt installs Sen Alli, two Ibadan High Chiefs as monarchs in absentia

Oyo govt installs Sen Alli, two Ibadan High Chiefs as monarchs in absentia

by The Editor
April 3 2026
0

...

Abia traditional rulers endorse Gov. Otti for second term

Abia traditional rulers endorse Gov. Otti for second term

by The Editor
March 25 2026
0

...

APPOINTMENTS

416 nurses, midwives get automatic appointments in Yobe

416 nurses, midwives get automatic appointments in Yobe

by The Editor
April 8 2026
0

...

Tinubu renews Bugaje’s appointment as NBTE boss

Tinubu renews Bugaje’s appointment as NBTE boss

by The Editor
April 2 2026
0

...

Kwara governor congratulates new CAF General Secretary

Kwara governor congratulates new CAF General Secretary

by The Editor
April 1 2026
0

...

Senate confirms Magnus Abe as NUPRC board chairman

Senate confirms Magnus Abe as NUPRC board chairman

by The Editor
March 31 2026
0

...

ODDITIES

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

I had throat surgery after Al Jazeera interview – Daniel Bwala

by The Editor
April 11 2026
0

Robbers cut off teacher’s hand in Kano

Robbers cut off teacher’s hand in Kano

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

Cross River actor dies after cannon malfunction at rehearsal

Cross River actor dies after cannon malfunction at rehearsal

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

GLOBAL NEWS

Iran warns US military vessels, others to avoid Strait of Hormuz

Iran military command closes Strait of Hormuz again

by The Editor
April 18 2026
0

...

Trump threatens to end Iran ceasefire if no deal by Wednesday

Trump threatens to end Iran ceasefire if no deal by Wednesday

by The Editor
April 18 2026
0

...

Italy suspends defence agreement with Israel as Lebanon attacks stoke tensions

Italy suspends defence agreement with Israel as Lebanon attacks stoke tensions

by The Editor
April 14 2026
0

...

Ghanaians pray daily for Nigeria’s success, says Pres. Mahama

Ghanaians pray daily for Nigeria’s success, says Pres. Mahama

by The Editor
April 14 2026
0

...

Benin Republic elects 49-year-old Wadagni as new president

Benin Republic elects 49-year-old Wadagni as new president

by The Editor
April 14 2026
0

...

State of the States

Delta govt urges youths to join Army

Delta govt urges youths to join Army

by The Editor
April 11 2026
0

...

21,452 applicants jostle for 1,000 rural teaching Jobs in Nasarawa

21,452 applicants jostle for 1,000 rural teaching Jobs in Nasarawa

by The Editor
April 10 2026
0

...

Police begin statewide offensive after deadly Kebbi attacks

Police begin statewide offensive after deadly Kebbi attacks

by The Editor
April 10 2026
0

...

Edo deputy governor’s mother dies at 95

Edo deputy governor’s mother dies at 95

by The Editor
April 8 2026
0

...

Plugin Install : Widget Tab Post needs JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Shell/NNPC, partners, delivers Landmark Geosciences Centre of Excellence at UNILAG

Shell/NNPC, partners, delivers Landmark Geosciences Centre of Excellence at UNILAG

April 18 2026
African Refiners & Distributors: Forging the way forward to deliver a unique, sustainable African downstream energy Transition and Finance Plan

ARDA 20th Annual Conference: Energy security tops bill as African oil refiners resolve robust defences against int’l market fluctuations

April 18 2026
APC kicks as Atiku tags Tinubu’s economic policy prescriptions shambolic

Atiku slams Tinubu over rising, ‘unbearable’ cost of living

April 18 2026
FG budgets N135bn for 2027 election lawsuits

Nigeria not a poor country, says Presidency

April 18 2026

EDITORIAL REVIEW

Curfew in Abuja today for LG council elections

Hidden cost of elections – Punch

by The Editor
April 17 2026
0

Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts

As Nigeria moves away from oil dependency – Punch

by The Editor
April 13 2026
0

Easter gets bloodier – Punch

Easter gets bloodier – Punch

by The Editor
April 12 2026
0

Security chiefs’ discordant tunes – Punch

Security chiefs’ discordant tunes – Punch

by The Editor
April 10 2026
0

NASS: Withdraw MDPA amendment bill – Punch

NASS: Withdraw MDPA amendment bill – Punch

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

Opinion

Even INEC admonishes the media?

Even INEC admonishes the media?

by The Editor
April 12 2026
0

...

Enugu: Gov Mbah presents N521.5bn budget for 2024

Mbah: From contested mandate to constructive governance in Enugu

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

...

Tinubu finds his own demons

How will Tinubu campaign in Plateau State?

by The Editor
April 9 2026
0

...

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

Bwala, Hasan and the art of the political interview

by The Editor
April 6 2026
0

...

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2026 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Headlines
  • Latest News
  • Governance
  • Business
  • Financial Crimes
  • Opinion
  • Editorials

© 2026 TheCitizen Ng. All Rights Reserved.