
As some African
leaders are going all out to increase their terms in office, it is
gratifying that several are calling for reduced ones.
Manoeuvres to
prolong presidential terms have included holding referendums aimed at
changing constitutions to legalise incumbents' bids to hold onto power,
as happened Congo and Rwanda.
Ironically,
Rwanda's constitutional change that allows President Paul Kagame to
stand again next year also shortens the presidential term from seven to
five years from 2024.
It also allows Kagame two more terms, extending his rule to 2034.
Gratefully, leaders
like Liberia's President Ellen Sirleaf Johnson have come out strongly
calling for laws to cut presidential terms. She wants the term reduced
from six to four years, with the presidential terms limited to two.
In 2014, delegates
of the country's national constitution conference voted in favour of the
reduction of the presidential term limit from six to four years, while
also reducing the terms for senators from nine to six years and those of
MPs from six to four.
Ironically, the new
presidential terms are the same ones the country had before 1986, when a
Constitution Review Committee headed by Dr Amos Sawyer increased it
from two four-year terms to two six-year ones.
In the meantime,
Senegal President Macky Sall last week honoured a promise he made on his
election in 2012 by unilaterally announcing the reduction of his term
from seven years to five.
The statement said the reduction would take effect immediately, meaning the next presidential election will be in 2017.
The seven-year term that Senegal inherited at independence from France in 1960 has been controversial.
There were hopes of its reduction in 2000, when incoming president Abdoulaye Wade promised to make it five years.
He, however, did not do so throughout his 12-year-rule, which ended in 2012 after he failed to win a third term.
The announcement by President Sall came just months before an April referendum that was expected to resolve the issue.
The developments in
Liberia and Senegal came months after Benin's President Thomas Boni
Yayi announced in November that he would step down after two terms.
He said his
decision came out of respect for his country's constitution, which
barred him from seeking re-election during the country's polls next
month.
The 63-year-old Beninois leader was elected in 2006 and voted in again five years later.
He has been hailed
by his French counterpart François Hollande as a paragon of democracy in
Africa, and his announcement came at a time when there were mounting
concerns about leaders like Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe, Uganda's Yoweri
Museveni and the Republic of Congo's Denis Sassou-Nguesso, all of who
have been in power for decades and have shown no signs of stepping down.
Towards the end of
last year, President Sassou-Nguesso, who has been in power since 1979
provoked opposition protests when he pushed through a new constitution
allowing him seek a controversial third term this year.
The move came
despite chaos in Burundi, where President Pierre Nkurunziza's successful
quest for a third term in July, amid a dispute over whether he was
eligible to run again.
Unfortunately,
Nkurunziza's quest for a third term plunged Burundi into the worst
violence since the country's 1993-2006 civil war.
In the meantime, in
some countries, leaders defy nature to the extent of holding onto power
even when health makes it difficult for them to do so.
A case in point is
Algeria, where President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is struggling to
consolidate his hold on power despite being confined to a wheelchair.
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