Tag Archives: Kagame

Nguema takes power in Gabon

General Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema was sworn in as president of Gabon Saturday after winning almost 95% of votes in April 12 election, having served as interim president since taking power in a 2023 coup. Nguema, 50, won the election with 58,074 votes, which accounts for 94.85% of votes cast, according to the final results announced by the Constitutional Court.

He was expected to win the election, being widely seen in the Central African country as the man who put an end to the Bongo dynasty, which ruled the country for more than 50 years. Nguema, the former head of the country’s Republican Guard, toppled President Ali Bongo Ondimba nearly two years ago. Following the coup, soldiers proclaimed Nguema, a cousin of deposed president Ali Bongo Ondimba, as president of a transitional committee to lead the country.

Many accused the Bongo family of living in oil-funded luxury while much of the population struggled. The inauguration was held in the Angondjé stadium and was attended by several high profile African leaders, including both President Felix Tshisekedi of Congo and President Paul Kagame of Rwanda, who have been in peace talks in recent months due to the ongoing conflict between Congolese forces and Rwanda-backed rebels in Congo’s east.

This year’s election was seen as a crucial election for the central African nation’s 2.3 million people, a third of whom live in poverty despite its vast oil wealth. Nguema gained support on a platform of anti-corruption and promised to develop the country, focusing on key campaign promises including improving the healthcare sector, building roads, and giving jobs to young people.

Source: Africanews

Kehinde Wiley Redefines African Leadership in ‘A Maze of Power’

American artist Kehinde Wiley unveiled a series of large-format portraits of African leaders in Morocco earlier this month, building on his now famous 2018 portrait of former U.S. President Barack Obama sitting casually amid a wild cascade of leaves and flowers.

His exhibition, entitled “A Maze of Power,” opened at the Mohammed VI Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Rabat, Morocco’s capital, after previously showing in Paris and Dakar, Senegal. The artwork borrows from classical easel painting techniques, posing African leaders in a style mainly associated with European royalty and aristocracy.

The maze “is a series of daily challenges of how to wield that power, how to negotiate their offices,” Wiley said. In one portrait, Hery Rajaonarimampianina, former president of Madagascar, is depicted sitting confidently astride a horse. And Alassane Ouattara, president of Ivory Coast, is seen clenching his brow as he grips a sword in his right hand.

“It’s about them and their personal decisions. And if we pull really far back, it’s about the representation of power for hundreds of years that starts in Western Europe,” Wiley told The Associated Press at the opening of his exhibition.

“A Maze of Power” arrived in Morocco seven months after first showing at Paris’ Musée du Quai Branly — Jacques Chirac. It’s part of the Moroccan museum’s efforts to become a hub for African art ahead of the next year’s opening of the Museum of the African Continent, across the street in Rabat.

Wiley said that after his Obama portrait, he was able to leverage his connections to gain audiences with leaders from across Africa and persuade them to sit for him. In addition to Obama’s, the portraits also echo Wiley’s earlier works, in which young Black men appear in poses most associated with paintings of kings and generals.

Showing his would-be subjects a book full of classical paintings to draw inspiration from, Wiley said he prepares for painting by taking hundreds of photographs of each leader and then placing them in settings both real and abstract.

Although he wanted to show political power, the leaders’ individual political choices were not relevant to the series, Wiley said.

The leaders depicted include some marred by corruption scandals and others who ignored presidential term limits and repressed protestors. There are also two whose militaries are fighting each other in eastern Congo: Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame and Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi.

Source: Africanews

Kagame orders troop withdrawal amid alleged South African threats

By Twink Jones Gadama

President Paul Kagame of Rwanda has ordered the withdrawal of all Rwandan military forces from Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) border towns, effective immediately.

The troops will regroup in the capital Kigali, according to a letter from the Rwandan Prime Minister. The stated reason for the withdrawal is to protect Kigali and critical infrastructure.

However, sources within the South African government suggest that the real reason for the retreat is to avoid a full-scale military confrontation with South Africa. Tensions between Rwanda and South Africa have been escalating since the death of 13 South African soldiers in the region.

South African insiders claim that the country was prepared to deploy its full military might, including long-range ballistic missiles, Navy Seals, and Commando Units, in retaliation for the loss of its soldiers. This alleged threat has sparked concerns about the potential for a large-scale conflict in the region.

The situation is complex, with multiple actors involved. The United Nations Secretary-General has called for the withdrawal of Rwandan forces from the DRC, citing concerns about the escalating violence.

Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame wants to stay in power for another 20 years

Rwanda’s President, Paul Kagame has declared his intention to stay in power for another 20 years despite serving for two decades already.

Mr Kagame came to power in 1994 after his rebel forces helped end a genocide that same year.

He has since been praised by many for bringing enormous development to his country but his critics say he is authoritarian and suppresses those who oppose him.

In 2015 the constitution was amended to allow him to seek re-election until 2034.

He subsequently won presidential election in 2017 by 99% of the vote, according to official figures.

When he was asked if he would seek re-election, Mr Kagame, who is 64, said “I would consider running for another 20 years. I have no problem with that. Elections are about people choosing.”

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p id=”piano-inline1″>One of his prominent critic has even stronger words, Charles Kambanda was quoted by the BBC as saying that “If he continues for another 20 years Rwanda will be real hell.”

Charles Kambanda, a lawyer and university lecturer is now based in the US.

President Kagame has always defended Rwanda’s record on human rights. At the recently held Commonwealth summit in Kigali in June this year, he did same.

In April this year the UK announced controversial plans to send some asylum seekers who reach its shores to Rwanda for processing and potential asylum there instead.

Despite the several criticisms against the move even from the United Nations, President Kagame’s government said those criticisms were misplaced.

Source: Africa Feeds

Paul Kagame accuses the West of hoarding Covid-19 vaccines

Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame has accused the West of hoarding Covid-19 vaccines and “purchasing many times more doses than they need.”

In an opinion article published on the news website The Guardian, the outspoken African leader “the current situation with regard to the access and distribution of Covid-19 vaccines vividly illustrates the decades-old contradictions of the world order.”

“Rich and powerful nations have rushed to lock up supply of multiple vaccine candidates,” Kagame said adding that “leaves African and other developing countries either far behind in the vaccine queue, or not in it at all.”

President Kagame also writes that “there are worrying signs of vaccine nationalism in Europe and North America.

The pressures on political leaders to vaccinate all their citizens before sharing supplies with others is understandable. But forcing smaller or poorer countries to wait until everyone in the north has been catered for is shortsighted.”

The Rwandan leader further writes that “delaying access to vaccines for citizens of developing countries is ultimately many times more costly. The pandemic will rage on, crippling the global economy.

New mutations may continue to emerge at a more rapid pace. The world risks reversing decades of human development gains and eclipsing the 2030 sustainable development goals.”

According to Mr. Kagame, “the Covax facility, led by the World Health Organization, was supposed to ensure doses for 20% of Africa’s people – right from the start and at the same time as richer countries.”

“However, nearly two months after the first vaccines have been administered, it is still not clear when African nations will be able to start immunising people, though the first doses may begin reaching the continent later this month,” he writes.

President Kagame is proposing that the rich world helps “developing countries get the same fair prices that they have already negotiated for themselves.”

“The African Union and Afreximbank have set up the Africa Medical Supplies Platform to help countries secure financing by providing advance commitment guarantees of up to $2bn to manufacturers.

The platform has negotiated an initial order of 270m doses, but this is still very far from the 60% coverage Africa needs to achieve some measure of herd immunity, and there is no telling when those supplies will be available,” President Kagame explained.

He concludes that “Africa is not sitting back and waiting for charity. We have learned our lessons from the past. All we ask for is transparency and fairness in vaccine access, not the protectionism currently in play.”

Zambia alarmed by surge in suicide and passion killings among youths

Source: Africafeeds.com

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