Politics
Democracy failing, dying in Africa – Obasanjo reveals solution

Published
6 days agoon
By
Ekwutos Blog
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Monday declared that democracy has failed and is dying in Africa.
Obasanjo said to salvage the situation, democracy must be addressed in the context and content of Africa.
Speaking at the 60th birthday colloquium of former Imo State Governor, Emeka Ihedioha, the former president argued that it is not just failing but dying due to its disconnect from the continent’s values and realities.
He lamented that the judiciary has failed to salvage the situation.
According to Obasanjo, the African governance system has become one where leaders “grab everything illegally and corruptly” while telling the people to “go to court.”
He said: “If you are talking about democracy failing in Africa, democracy in Africa has failed. And why has it failed?
“Because in context and in content, it is not Africa. It does not have any aspect of our culture, our way of life, what we stand for, what we believe.
“Today, we have democracy, which is government of a small number of people, by a small number of people over a large number of people who are deprived of what they need to have in life. That is not democracy that will endure.
“It is, I am because I can grab. What sort of democracy brings you and you grab everything and then illegally, corruptly and you say go to court. When you know that even in the court, you cannot get justice.
“It’s not that democracy is failing, democracy is dying and if we are going to make democracy not to die, we have to look at democracy in the context and in the content of Africa. I hope that we will get to that stage so that democracy which will deliver will be the democracy that we will have in Africa.”
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Tory MPs bemoan Kemi Badenoch’s near ban on criticising Trump

Published
8 hours agoon
March 30, 2025By
Ekwutos Blog
Tory MPs are complaining about Kemi Badenoch‘s ‘controlling’ approach and her effective ban on criticising the Trump team.
Insiders said the party leader, pictured below, did not want her ministers doing too much press. ‘We feel we have to walk on eggshells,’ one MP told The Mail on Sunday, describing Mrs Badenoch’s office as ‘controlling’.
For her front bench, certain topics have been off limits – in particular, criticism for President Trump and his top team. ‘Kemi thinks she’s friends with (Vice-President) Vance and can influence the Maga crowd,’ one MP said. ‘It is delusional.’
Even backbench Tory MPs have refused to comment on stories for fear of being reprimanded amid being told not to do too much press.

Tory MPs are complaining about Kemi Badenoch’s (pictured) ‘controlling’ approach and her effective ban on criticising the Trump team

President Donald Trump has caused much controversy since he returned to the White House earlier this year

Last week MPs who privately rallied against Mr Trump’s chief negotiator Steve Witkoff’s (pictured) comments on Ukraine giving up territory said they did not go public because they knew the leader’s office would not approve
Another MP said: ‘I feel more worried about getting told off by my party than offending the US. Russia is getting a free pass. I don’t know why we’re not calling that out.’
Only senior MPs such as former foreign secretaryJames Cleverly, who writes in today’s The Mail on Sunday, feel they can criticise the Trump administration. Last week MPs who privately rallied against Mr Trump’s chief negotiator Steve Witkoff’s comments on Ukraine giving up territory said they did not go public because they knew the leader’s office would not approve.
Mr Witkoff was accused of ‘regurgitating Kremlin propaganda’ in an interview on the matter. Shadow Foreign Secretary Priti Patel declined to comment. Sources close to Ms Patel said they kept quiet because it is ‘not diplomatically helpful’.
A spokesman for Mrs Badenoch said: ‘Kemi has said foreign policy must act in Britain’s national interest. If our domestic industries are going to avoid punishing tariffs then we must act responsibly in our approach to the US.’

Shadow Foreign Secretary Priti Patel (pictured) declined to comment. Sources close to Ms Patel said they kept quiet because it is ‘not diplomatically helpful’
If we’re at odds with America, China will be licking its lips
Analysis by James Cleverly
When I went to China in 2023 as Foreign Secretary, I had a list of contentious issues to discuss, from Taiwan to Beijing’s cyber activity and sanctions against British MPs. Foreign Minister Wang Yi calmly defended his government and then moved on to a charm offensive, talking about areas of potential UK-China co-operation.

James Cleverly served as Foreign Secretary for the Conservative Government from 2022 until 2023
But two years on and the reality is President Trump risks delivering China’s aims by disrupting America’s relationship with its long-term friends.
The post-war networks built by Trump’s predecessors are being quickly eroded. Take the hollowing out of America’s main aid agency USAid, set up by JFK at the height of the Cold War to push back against Soviet influence. It is now Beijing rather than Moscow buying influence.
And, of course, there is a troubling question mark over the Trump administration’s support for Nato.Defence pacts rely on predictability, and our partners in the Pacific will not be encouraged by America’s behaviour to its European allies. The Marshall Plan pumped billions into post-war Europe to build Western capitalist economies, rather than Communist states linked through coercion.
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His point was the UK should come out from the ‘US’s shadow’ and not be dictated to by Washington – to drive a wedge between the UK and US, and to break what China sees as American hegemony.
Politics
Finland President Alexander Stubb boosts ties with Trump with round of golf in Florida

Published
8 hours agoon
March 30, 2025By
Ekwutos Blog
The meeting comes a day after Trump’s VP J.D. Vance accused Denmark – Finland’s close ally – of doing a poor job keeping Greenland safe
Finnish President Alexander Stubb made a surprise trip on Saturday to meet US President Donald Trump at his estate in Florida, where the two leaders discussed strengthening their countries’ bilateral partnership and played a round of golf.
“President Stubb and I look forward to strengthening the partnership between the United States and Finland, and that includes the purchase and development of a large number of badly needed Icebreakers for the US, delivering Peace and International Security for our Countries, and the World,” Trump said in a social media post.
The two presidents met for breakfast, played golf and had lunch together. They also discussed foreign policy issues, including Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky met with Stubb in Helsinki last week.
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The Finnish president’s office said in a statement that Stubb’s unannounced visit to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach, Florida, was informal.
The meeting took place a day after Trump’s US vice-president, J.D. Vance, made an uninvited visit to Greenland, a semi-autonomous territory of Finland’s close Nordic ally Denmark. Vance accused Denmark of doing a poor job keeping Greenland safe.
Trump has expressed interest in acquiring Greenland, part of a growing international focus on competition to control the Arctic. Denmark’s government opposes such a move, as do most Greenland residents.
Finland is the world’s leading producer of icebreakers. About 80 per cent of the ships have been designed by Finnish companies, and around 60 per cent of them have been built at Finnish shipyards.
In November, Canada, Finland and the administration of former US president Joe Biden signed a deal called the Icebreaker Collaboration Effort (ICE) to work “together to develop world-class Arctic and polar icebreakers through the exchange of knowledge, information, and resources”.
Before his visit, Stubb had said he hoped to play golf with Trump and that icebreaker diplomacy could help Finland maintain good relations with the US and Trump.
Finland shares the European Union’s longest border with Russia. After Russia invaded Ukraine, the country made a foreign policy U-turn after decades of military non-alignment, deciding to join Nato together with Sweden.
Trump’s frequent criticism of Nato allies and his shift toward normalising relations with Russia have some European countries scrambling to boost their own defence spending.
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Photos: FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, was absent as Vice President Kasheem Shettima, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, Deputy Senate President Jibrin Barau, and other dignitaries celebrated with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on his 73rd birthday at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Saturday. Did he collapse?.

Published
8 hours agoon
March 30, 2025By
Ekwutos Blog
Photos: FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, was absent as Vice President Kasheem Shettima, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, Deputy Senate President Jibrin Barau, and other dignitaries celebrated with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on his 73rd birthday at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Saturday.
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