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  • In 2016, the African countries Djibouti, Gambia and Chad held elections.

  • The results largely came as expected.

  • In Djibouti, the incumbent President was re-elected for his fourth termin Chad his fifth.

  • And although the opposition won in Gambia, incumbent president Yahya Jammeh refused to

  • concede, crushing hopes for the country’s first ever peaceful transition of power.

  • This is an all too common trend is calledthird termism”, where many leaders extend

  • their presidential terms beyond reasonable limits, often overstaying their welcome.

  • For as long as many African countries have existed they have been plagued with rigged

  • elections, corruption and so-called sit-tight leaders.

  • So how exactly did the continent become so undemocratic?

  • Well, during the industrial revolution, European powers colonized roughly 90 percent of Africa,

  • drawing the borders that largely remain today.

  • Instead of ruling over their colonies directly, European countries instituted local politicians

  • to act as proxies.

  • Their purpose was to keep control of the population and ensure that natural resources were being

  • exploited to the colonizersfavor.

  • This resulted in an authoritarian, top-down approach to governance, and instilled the

  • idea that the only legitimate way to rule was by force.

  • After World War Two, Africa began to decolonize, and proxy-leaders were left to rule independently.

  • But by then, these leaders were largely distrusted by the people, as they were seen as members

  • of the elite and co-conspirators with former western colonizers.

  • After popular uprisings and in many cases, violent coup d’etats, the continent saw

  • an entirely new wave of leaders, many of whom had little or no political experience.

  • For instance in 1980, newly independent Zimbabwe elected former teacher and revolutionary Robert

  • Mugabe as its Prime Minister.

  • Seven years later, Zimbabwean parliament created a completely new role for Mugabe, combining

  • head of state, head of government and commander-in-chief.

  • After nearly four decades, 92-year-old Mugabe is still in power.

  • Many of these new leaders were former military commanders.

  • For instance Equatorial Guinea’s president Obiang Nguema Mbasogo took power in 1979 after

  • ousting his uncle, who had transitioned the country out of the Spanish colonial government.

  • Like many other long-running African rulers, Obiang was initially considered to be more

  • just and humane than his predecessor.

  • However over the years, he turned Equatorial Guinea into what some consider to be the most

  • corrupt, oppressive and undemocratic country in the world.

  • Today, Obiang holds all governing power and is the world’s longest serving president.

  • European colonizers not only left a precedent for authoritarianism and one party rule, but

  • they largely failed to prepare African nations for post-colonial autonomy.

  • Many countries didn’t have proper institutions in place for governance and were left with

  • under-educated populations.

  • For instance when the Democratic Republic of Congo gained independence from Belgium

  • in 1960, the country had just 16 college graduates out of a population of more than 15 million

  • people.

  • When French colonizers left newly independent Guinea in 1958, they completely dismantled

  • the government and destroyed all paper documents, leaving new rulers with no structure whatsoever.

  • Following decolonization, Africa was largely left with inadequate infrastructure, lack

  • of financial resources, insecure governments and arbitrary borders surrounding rival ethnic

  • groups.

  • In order to pursue policies and restore order, most African governments consolidated power

  • into the highest office, even if that leader was undereducated and ill-fit for the challenges

  • that lay ahead.

  • Although colonialism has been gone for the better part of a century, its implications

  • still plague African politics today.

  • While ruling for decades in the highest office, many of Africa’s sit-tight leaders have

  • become excessively wealthy, benefitting from kick-backs, money laundering or other corruption

  • schemes.

  • Several initiatives have been proposed to tackle widespread corruption in Africa, but

  • can the problem really be fixed?

  • Find out in this video.

  • The researchers expected corruption to fall, but the exact opposite ended up happening.

  • Police officers would stop drivers more often in an attempt to extort even more money than

  • before, an increase in roughly 25 percent.

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In 2016, the African countries Djibouti, Gambia and Chad held elections.

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