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Por: Forbes/Drowski3.blogspot.com
Num artigo assinado pelo seu
correspondente, Mfonobong
Nsehe, a prestigiada revista norte-americana, Forbes,
considerou o Presidente da República de Angola, como o segundo pior presidente em
África, a seguir do seu homólogo, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, da República
da Guine Equatorial.
O relatório, publicado na língua
inglesa, classifica o presidente Robert Mugabe de Zimbabwe, o rei Mswati II da
Swazilândia e o presidente do Sudao, Omar Al-Bashir, na terceira, quarta e
quinta posição, respectivamente.
A revista reconhece que a boa governação está a ganhar
terreno no continente africano embora em passos lentos e apesar dos pesares.
Mas, a Forbes enfatiza que existem ainda “alguns ovos podres”
e na base de um inquérito feito pelo seu correspondente Mfonobong Nsehe na rede social Twitter, a revista teve mais de 800 respostas
que resultaram na classicação destes chefes de estados como os piores de África.
Confira na íntegra, o artigo da revista Forbes em língua
inglesa:
The Five Worst Leaders In Africa
Good
governance is gaining ground in Africa. It’s happening at snail speed, but it’s
happening nevertheless. African leaders are becoming increasingly democratic
and are recording significant progress in liberalizing the political
environment. They are more accountable to their citizens, and showing more
respect for human rights and civil liberties.
But
the bad eggs still linger – and there are quite a number of them. Late last
year, I put a call through to my African followers on Twitter to nominate the worst
African leaders of our times. I received over 800 responses. Based on those
responses, these are the five worst African leaders of today.
Teodoro
Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, President of Equatorial Guinea
Teodoro
Obiang Nguema Mbasogo is Africa’s longest serving ruler. He has ruled Equatorial
Guinea, a tiny, oil-rich West African country, since August 1979 when he
overthrew his uncle, Francisco Macías Nguema, in a bloody coup d’état.
Equatorial Guinea is one of the continent’s largest producers of oil and has
one of the highest per capita incomes in the world, but this doesn’t
necessarily translate into prosperity for its people. The country ranks very
poorly in the United Nations human development index; the vast majority of
Equatorial Guineans hardly have access to clean drinking water. The country
also has one of the world’s
highest under-5 mortality rates: about 20% of its children die before the
age of five. Many of the remaining 80% of the children don’t have access to
quality educational and healthcare facilities. Meanwhile, the first son of the
president, Teodorin Obiang (who is in line to succeed his father), spends
millions of dollars of state funds financing his lavish lifestyle which
includes luxurious property in Malibu, a Gulfstream jet, Michael Jackson
memorabilia and a car collection that could easily make billionaires go green
with envy.
José
Eduardo dos Santos, President of Angola
José
Eduardo dos Santos is Africa’s second longest serving president. He took the
reins of power in September 1979 following the natural death of his predecessor
Agostinho Neto. To his discredit, Jose Eduardo has always run his government
like it’s his personal, privately-owned investment holding company. His cousin
serves as the Angola’s vice president, and his
daughter, Isabel Dos Santos is arguably the wealthiest woman in the country.
Angola is extremely resource-rich. According to the United States Agency For
International Development (USAID), the country is the second-largest oil
producer in sub-Saharan Africa and the seventh-largest supplier to the United
States. Angola also has massive diamond deposits and occupies an enviable
position as the world’s fourth largest producer of rough diamonds.
But
for all its resource wealth, the vast majority of Angolans still live in the
most horrid socio-economic conditions. 68% of the country’s total population
lives below the poverty line of $1.7 a day, while 28% live on less than 30
cents. Education is free, but it’s practically worthless. Most of the schools
are housed in dilapidated structures and there is a severe deficit of skilled
and qualified teachers. According to the U.N. Children’s Fund, 30% of the
country’s children are malnourished. The average life expectancy is about 41
years while child and maternal deaths are extremely high. Unemployment levels
are very high. But José Eduardo dos Santos is unaffected. Rather than
transforming Angola’s economic boom into social relief for its people,
he has channeled his energies towards intimidating the local media and diverting state
funds into his personal and family accounts. Dos Santos’s family
controls a huge chunk of Angola’s economy. His daughter, Isabel Dos Santos
has amassed one of the Angola’s largest personal fortunes by using proceeds
from her father’s alleged corruption to acquire
substantial stakes in companies like Zon Multimedia, a Portuguese media
conglomerate and in Portuguese banks Banco
Espírito Santo and Banco Português de
Investimento among others.
Robert
Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe
Many
Zimbabweans seem to think Mugabe is doing a stellar job. The country is on an
economic rebound after several years of decline. GDP growth in 2011 was over 7%
and the Southern African state has experienced single-digit inflation since
2009. The country’s agricultural sector is fast recovering after years of food
shortages fueled by disruptions caused by Mugabe’s infamous seizure of
white-owned commercial farms. Mugabe’s government has also recorded significant
achievements in education as a result of extensive teacher training and school
expansion projects: At over 80%, the country has one of the highest literacy
rates in Sub-Saharan Africa.
But
Mugabe’s inadequacies overshadow his achievements. For one, he has failed to
deal with the ever-present problem of employment. The country’s high literacy
rate does not necessarily translate into employment opportunities for its
people. Zimbabwe’s
unemployment rate is the highest in sub-Saharan Africa: it’s over 60%.
Despite
entering into a power-sharing agreement with the former opposition party, the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), Mugabe still wields almost total control
over government institutions – a
feat he has been able to achieve through his use of violence and subjugation.
He remains reluctant to allocate substantial political powers to the MDC, and human
rights abuses in the Southern African country are rife. The 87 year-old
megalomaniac has vowed not to step down despite having ruled the Southern
African state for over 24 years. He is seeking re-election in the country’s
presidential polls slated for later in the year. Analysts
expect the election to be besieged by fraud as the previous one.
King
Mswati III, King of Swaziland
Sub-Saharan Africa’s last absolute monarch
presides over a country which has one of the world’s highest HIV prevalence
rates: ver 35 percent of adults. Its average life expectancy is the lowest in
the world at 33 years; nearly 70 percent of the country’s citizens live on less
than $1 a day and 40 percent are unemployed. But for all the suffering of the
Swazi people, King Mswati has barely shown concern or interest. He lives
lavishly, using his
kingdom’s treasury to fund his expensive tastes in German automobiles, first-class
leisure trips around the world and
women. But his gross mismanagement of his country’s finances is now having
dire economic consequences. Swaziland is going through a severe fiscal crisis.
The kingdom’s economy is collapsing and pensions have been stopped. In June
last year, the King begged for a financial bailout from South Africa, and the
country is at a dead end, so badly that it recently announced its withdrawal
from the 2013 Africans Nations Cup, citing lack of finances as the principal
reason.
Omar Al-Bashir, President
of Sudan
Sudan’s President seized power in 1989 in a bloodless military coup against the government of Prime Minister Sadiq al-Mahdi- a government which was democratically elected by the people of Sudan. Soon after seizing power, Al-Bashir dispersed all political parties in the country, disbanded the country’s parliament and shut down all privately-owned media outlets. His reign has been characterized by a civil war in which over one million have been killed, while several millions have been displaced. Al-Bashir is still wanted by the International Criminal Court for instigating crimes against humanity, particularly in directing and funding acts of violence against the Southern Sudan. Famously corrupt, a diplomatic wikileaks cable revealed that Al-Bashir likely siphoned some $9 billion of his country’s funds into his private bank accounts in the United Kingdom.
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