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    Obama didn’t live up to African expectation

    Chronicle EditorBy Chronicle EditorJanuary 17, 2017No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Barack Obama failed to live up to expectation in Africa despite been seen as Africa's prodigal son who would understand the continent in a way white US presidents never could (AFP Photo/Georgina Goodwin)
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    Barack Obama failed to live up to expectation in Africa despite been seen as Africa’s prodigal son who would understand the continent in a way white US presidents never could (AFP Photo/Georgina Goodwin)

    It was always going to be hard for outgoing US President Barack Obama to live up to expectations in Africa.

    Born to a Kenyan father who once herded goats, the first black US president was seen as Africa’s prodigal son who would understand the continent in a way white presidents never could.

    Nelson Mandela said Obama’s historic victory was proof everyone should “dare to dream” and Africans gave the new president a hero’s welcome.

    Six months after taking office in 2009, Obama travelled to Ghana to lay the foundations for future policies that emphasised responsibility and trade.

    “Africa’s future is up to Africans,” he said in a speech in the country’s capital of Accra.

    “Africa doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong institutions,” he added, referring to the countless leaders who cling to power and enrich themselves in countries where poverty is rampant.

    The speech electrified the crowd but the thrill wore off. The trip was his last visit to Africa in his first term.

    He took a different approach in his second term, launching his signature Africa initiative in 2013 after a visit to Robben Island, the apartheid-era prison outside Cape Town that held Mandela for more than 20 years.

    His Power Africa programme to double access to power in sub-Saharan Africa was designed to bring governments and the private sector together.

    “That’s a big part of his legacy, to change that perception that Africa is not the dark continent, it is rising and there is opportunity there,” US-Africa specialist Scott Firsing told AFP.

    “Obama changed aid to trade,” added Firsing, from the University of North Carolina.

    – Growing terror threat –

    Obama, who has said that one of his greatest achievements in office was “taking out” Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, also took the fight against rising Islamist extremism to Africa.

    He ordered an expanded military presence against Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in Mali, Boko Haram in Nigeria and the Shabaab in Somalia.

    Drone bases were set up in Niger, which borders both Mali and Nigeria, and northern Cameroon, while there were targeted strikes in Somalia.

    “Frankly the US military didn’t have much cause to focus on Africa, but now, unfortunately, there is cause to be there,” said the former head of US Africa Command, retired general Carter Ham.

    The breakdown in Libya following the death of strongman Moamer Kadhafi in 2011 saw weapons and radicalised fighters spread across Africa.

    “There clearly was a follow-on effect that was detrimental,” said Ham, who led the initial military intervention against Kadhafi.

    Tackling the threat was a priority for Obama, he said, adding: “I think he was genuinely concerned for stability and security in Africa.

    “If left unaddressed it was only a matter of time before those organisations would fulfil their stated intention of attacking the West.”

    Shabaab gunmen confirmed those fears in 2013 when they killed at least 67 people at Nairobi’s Westgate mall, a favourite shopping destination for Westerners.

    – ‘Transcendental awareness’ –

    Obama’s tenure has by no means been perfect.

    His administration faced heavy criticism for supporting countries such as Ethiopia with poor human rights records.

    Sometimes he misjudged the mood. Senegal cheered in 2013 when its president Macky Sall rebuffed Obama for hitting out at discrimination against gays.

    And detractors say Power Africa is also falling short of its goals.

    Obama is generally seen as having advanced US interests in Africa and deepened relationships, not least by continuing his predecessors’ flagship projects.

    George W. Bush’s President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) is credited with having given life-saving treatment to millions of people.

    Bill Clinton’s African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) has boosted trade with sub-Saharan Africa.

    Bur arguably Obama’s most enduring legacy is his example.

    “Having a leader like him has an important psychological effect on Africans,” said Mzukisi Qobo, associate professor of politics at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa.

    “Despite his weaknesses and shortcomings, there is a sense of pride in seeing someone like Obama.

    “He seemed to have a more transcendental awareness of the challenges of the world rather than looking at it through a white Western lens.”

    In Accra in 2009, Obama declared he had “the blood of Africa” within him.

    Last month, Ghanaians remembered his words when president John Dramani Mahama lost an election to opposition leader Nana Akufo-Addo.

    The vote was hotly contested but generally peaceful. Mahama conceded and the transition was smooth, just as in Nigeria, when Muhammadu Buhari beat incumbent Goodluck Jonathan in 2015.

    “I remember Obama’s famous speech ‘we don’t need strongmen’,” said 28-year-old Daniel Apau Ofori as he celebrated outside Akufo-Addo’s house.

    “It had an impact. This has been the most free and fair election.”

    AFP/YAHOO

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    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police nab 42 miners over abduction of Kwara monarch

    April 20, 2026
    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police confirm kidnap of UTME candidates, others by pirates in Calabar

    April 20, 2026
    NYSC warns corps members against night travel as 2026 Batch A orientation dates and safety guidelines are announced.

    NYSC issues call-up letters for 2026 Batch ‘A’ Stream II

    April 20, 2026
    Retired Nigeria Police Force men and their families blocked a gate at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on Monday to protest their continued inclusion in the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). The demonstrators, led by the Police Retired Officers Forum of Nigeria (PROF), branded the program as "fraudulent, illegal, inhumane, and obnoxious" and urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign the Police Exit Bill. According to the retirees, if signed into law, the bill, which was passed by the National Assembly on December 4, 2025, and transmitted to the president on March 16, 2026, would remove police personnel from the CPS. The National Coordinator of PROF, CSP Raphael Irowainu (retd.), led the protest and stated that the goal was to get the president to act on the legislation. “Our major aim here is to prevail on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign our bill—the bill exiting the police from the Contributory Pension Scheme—passed by the National Assembly on 4th December 2025 and transmitted to him on 16th March 2026 into law, nothing more than that,” he said. Ads by Irowainu bemoaned that while other security agencies have been removed from the scheme, police personnel remain included. “The soldiers have been exited, the SSS has been exited, the Air Force has been exited, the Navy has been exited, and the National Intelligence Agency has been exited. The police, who are the father of them all, are trapped in this obnoxious Contributory Pension Scheme,” he added. The pensioners maintained that the CPS had a negative impact on their wellbeing, calling it a "slavery and untimely death-inducing pension scheme." Monday's demonstration is not the first time retired police officers have raised the issue. In July 2025, retirees held a similar demonstration at the National Assembly, seeking their expulsion from the plan. Some demonstrators, many of whom were elderly, also protested at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, expressing their dissatisfaction with the CPS's pension arrangements. The latest protest reflects rising frustration among retired police officers with pension reforms and their exclusion from benefits provided to other security organizations.

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