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Leadership is Parenthood
A Memo to African Leaders
Professor Bedford Nwabueze Umez*
Introduction
World politics has several fundamental lessons to teach us about
leadership. Here is one of them: leadership is parenthood.
Parenthood entails the responsibilities of being a parent. Parents
nurture, support, and encourage their children to be triumphant in
life. Undeniably, parental support and encouragement pave the way to
producing successful children. Likewise, leadership entails the
responsibilities of a leader, nurturing, supporting and promoting
his/her country. Indeed, true leaders produce great, dynamic
societies, capable of producing successful citizenry. Therefore, to
grow, develop, and succeed in this realistic world, largely marked
by zero-sum games, leaders must be real parents of their people,
advancing, sustaining and encouraging their countrymen and women. If
leaders failed to embark upon these parental/leadership
responsibilities in their country, their country is bound to fail
miserably, and their people will lag far behind, and suffer
tremendous hardships.
In this article, an attempt is made to demonstrate that leadership
is parenthood, and that much of the failures and sufferings in
Africa, or what made Africa “the world's poorest continent,”
according to IMF, are rooted in a general lack of understanding that
leadership is parenthood among several African leaders.
Leadership is parenthood: the Proof
Who, among leaders in "developed" countries, will abandon the people
they are elected to serve only to serve African countries first? In
particular, who, among Swiss leaders, American leaders, German
leaders, British leaders, Canadian leaders, French leaders, Italian
leaders, Japanese leaders will be stealing from his/her own people
only to open bank accounts in Nigeria, Ghana, Sudan, Rwanda,
Somalia, Kenya, Zaire, Ethiopia, Uganda? Or, who, among leaders in
"industrialized" countries, will be buying plots of lands and/or
houses in Togo, Sierra Leon, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Gambia, Liberia,
or Zimbabwe? The answer to the above questions, and to innumerable
others similar to them, is NONE.
None of the Swiss, French, Canadian, American, British, German,
Japanese, Italian leaders has his/her country's money hidden in
African banks. These leaders wisely take care of their countries and
their people first. Indeed, "America first", we often hear from
American leaders, is not just a political cliché in America.
American leaders do not steal from American people only to hide the
loot in Nigerian or Sudanese banks, for instance. "French first" is
not an empty political phrase in France. French leaders do not fly
to Zaire or Somalia for a medical checkup or treatment; they are
treated in their own hospitals, built and maintained by themselves.
Similarly, "Japan first" is not a political rhetoric or gimmick in
Japan. Japanese leaders are bent on making their country the most
technological giant in the world. As such, they wisely invest their
country’s resources in their country and not in Uganda or Kenya.
All told, the leaders of these "developed" or "industrialized"
countries prudently take care of their countrymen and women first,
just as real parents take care of their own children first. This
rational thinking, “my family first,” is equally the norm within the
animal kingdom. Those of us who watch Discovery, Animal Planet,
Natural Geographic channels know quite well that animals wisely take
care of their own families first. Accordingly, a pride of lions does
not kill preys only to turn around and leave them for jackals to eat
when lion cubs are hungry. Similarly, jackals do not kill their
preys only to leave them for the fox family to eat when young
jackals are starving.
So, the conventional wisdom within “developed” countries and, yes,
within the animal kingdom, is “my family first,” demonstrating
clearly and loudly that leadership is parenthood.
Now, let us turn to Africa, and examine how several African leaders
understand the word, leadership. Specifically, do they, on a
collective sense, take leadership as parenthood? Let us see.
Is Leadership parenthood in Africa?
Behavior of several African leaders leaves no room for doubt; their
behavior clearly suggests that they do not take leadership as
parenthood. Leadership to them is the road to personal enrichment,
often at its worst, sustained and maintained by (a) stealing from
their own people only to hide the loot in their private bank
accounts in foreign countries, (b) traveling abroad for medical
checkup or treatment, instead of building and maintaining excellent
hospitals at home to serve their fellow citizens, and (c) sending
their own children abroad to study in better schools instead of
building and maintaining excellent schools to benefit the entire
population. A good number of African leaders have yet to understand
that leadership amounts to parenthood – improving, sustaining and
advancing their fellow countrymen and women.
When leaders do not understand that they are the parents of their
own people, leading the people from the status quo, the existing
condition or state of affairs, to a better life; when leaders do not
understand that world politics is mostly governed by realism of
zero-sum games, where each country is basically acting on its own
national interests; when leaders do not see the urgent need to
advance their country, socially, economically, and politically,
their country will lag far behind, and the people suffer
tremendously. The shameful backward nature of several African
countries today is clearly related to this general lack of
understanding (among several African leaders) that leadership is
parenthood.
The Solution
What then is the solution to this aberration? The solution is
actually a simple one. The solution is common sense – the real
education, far beyond nominal degrees or local titles.
When those looting Africa start using their common sense, they will
understand that leadership is parenthood, i.e., my country first.
Once common sense prevails, the futility of robbing their own people
only to maintain secret bank accounts in foreign countries will
become apparent. Once the senseless nature of this kind of robbery
becomes apparent, they will be building excellent educational system
for the entire population, instead of selfishly sending their
children to study in better schools abroad. Similarly, they will
start building and maintaining excellent hospitals, and staff them
with qualified doctors and staff, instead of selfishly flying to
foreign countries for medical checkup or treatment.
Here is the point. Rational thinkers, well informed by conventional
wisdom, know that it makes no sense for these looters to starve
their fellow Africans to death only to feed Swiss people with the
loot. They also know that poverty tends to correlate with violence.
Specifically, they recognize that the robbery of Africa only to hide
the loot abroad has continued to produce jobless, hungry men and
women, who find it difficult to live a decent, honest life in
several African countries. Therefore, being jobless, hungry, and
angry, some of them often resort to “eating” by crooked means. In
fact, Governor Tinubu’s frustration over the death of 200 Nigerians
in “Lagos pipeline fire” on Dec. 26, 2006, exemplifies this point.
Here is the report by Vanguard newspaper:
Governor Bola Tinubu of Lagos State blamed the officials of NNPC and
Federal Government. "You can see the shame of our nation. A country
that is ranked the 8th largest producer of oil in the world is still
made to suffer this kind of hardship," he said, adding: "You can see
what hunger has turned our people into. We need to be concerned
about the life of people not money. It is a sign of poverty." "What
has happened today again is not new; it is not strange to us. It is
a shame. Look at how dead bodies litter the whole place. It is sad."
"But how do we fight this menace? How do we stop it? Except we fight
unemployment, except we fight hopelessness in the country, except we
do things right in a good manner.” Vanguard, December 27, 2006 (www.vanguardngr.com/articles/2002/headline/f127122006.html).
It then goes without saying that common sense – the real education –
is the concrete solution to most of our problems.
Therefore, as a part of concrete solutions, African leaders must
organize series of economic summits to discuss and combat this
robbery of Africa by some of its leaders only to hide the loot
abroad. Concrete steps to combat this robbery, and other problems
evident in Africa, have been proffered in several works, including
the following: Nigeria: Real Problems, Real Solutions, "Educated" to
Feel Inferior, The Tragedy of a Value System in Nigeria: Theories
and Solutions, and Your Excellency. In addition, those found guilty
of corruption and looting, must be brought to justice, no matter
whose ox is gored.
A Note to the Critic
There is no doubt that some of us, especially those benefiting from
the looting of the present Africa, may react to this article with
some disdain. Instead of condemning this senseless behavior that is
currently destroying Africa, they may attempt to cover up the
atrocity by attacking the writer. Here is a few words to them:
Before exhausting your energy on ad hominem attack, it is crucial
that you first examine your conscience, and then critically observe
how leaders, across countries/continents, serve and treat their own
people. We must call a spade a spade. We must look evil in its eye,
and condemn it. Enough of the disgrace and the shame, being brought
to Africa by some of its leaders whose leadership style is to steal
from their own suffering people only to hide the loot abroad. This
robbery of Africa by some of her leaders only to pile up the loot
abroad does not make any iota of sense; it is not leadership, it is
total destruction of Africa and African people.
*Note: Dr. Umez is a Professor of Government, Lee College,
Baytown, Texas, and the founder of Liberating the African mind, LAM,
and Nigerian Leadership Council, NLC. His latest books include,
Nigeria: Real Problems, Real Solutions, "Educated" to Feel Inferior,
The Tragedy of a Value System in Nigeria: Theories and Solutions,
and Your Excellency. These books can be assessed from his web site,
www.umez.com or www.lee.edu/~bumez. His contacts are as follows:
Email: umez@nigerianleadershipcouncil.org or umez@umez.com; Phone:
832-731-7061 or 281-425-6368.
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