
Audio By Carbonatix
President Bola Tinubu of Nigeria has charged African leaders to stop clinging to their old habit of depending on foreign plans, saying the continent is in dire need of leaders who wield policy as a surgical blade instead of a slogan.
President Tinubu lamented what he described as “the tragedy of our time” whereby African leaders do not only confine themselves to foreign blueprints but refuse to emancipate themselves from client-state mentalities and governance by hashtag activism.
The President spoke on Thursday in Abuja during the Dr. Kayode Fayemi commemorative symposium and launch of the Amandla Institute for Policy and Leadership Advancement, with the theme “Renewing the Pan-African Ideal for the Changing Times: The Policy and Leadership Challenges and Opportunities.”
Represented at the event by the Vice-President, Senator Kashim Shettima, the President said, “Whatever our differences across the continent, one fact that can’t be eroded by our infighting is that we are in the age of machines, and we can’t fight our development dilemma with spears and arrows while the rest of the world is fighting the same battle with missiles and tanks. The world is not waiting for Africa to catch up.
“While we parse political rivalries, others parse datasets. While we litigate history, others engineer futures. The train of progress accelerates, yet too many of our leaders cling to old carriages. These are our client-state mentalities, our dependency on foreign blueprints, and our governance by hashtag activism. This is the tragedy of our time.
“The founding of Amandla Institute emerges as an antidote to this paralysis. We are here not only to generate more ideas but to create executors. We need leaders who wield policy as a scalpel, not a slogan. We need visionaries who see AI as a collaborator, not a competitor. We need a generation of Africans who recognise that Pan-Africanism, renewed for this age, must be rooted in actionable sovereignty.”
President Tinubu pointed out that it would be wishful thinking to hope that the renaissance of Africa will happen as a gift, maintaining that it must be built.
He regretted that for too long, leaders in Africa have outsourced their thinking, relying on institutions and ideologies that treat countries on the continent “as consumers, not creators,” just as he insisted that the youth must be empowered to innovate in tech hubs across the continent.
“But the post-idea world dissolves excuses. With the democratisation of knowledge, we must empower our youth to innovate in tech hubs across the continent, from Cairo, down through Nairobi, to Lagos, building unicorns without the permission of any gatekeepers. What they lack is not ideas but ecosystems—systems where policy, funding, and political will converge to scale their genius,” he noted.
The Nigerian leader further urged African leaders to “evolve from custodians of power to architects of platforms,” adding that their “imagination of Africa must be one where every government ministry houses.
“AI strategists, where continental trade policies are drafted by homegrown think tanks like Amandla Institute, not foreign consultants, and where “Made in Africa” signifies not raw materials but algorithms, green tech, and cultural capital.”
Latest Stories
-
Bond market: Turnover surges 559.42% to GH¢2.49bn
3 minutes -
Dagomba line residents begin rebuilding after Easter Monday inferno
3 minutes -
ECG substation upgrade exercise: parts of Accra to experience power outages
7 minutes -
IMANI petitions Mahama over alleged procurement breaches in state insurance placements
12 minutes -
First Atlantic Bank posts strong 2025 results as profit surges 30.5%
15 minutes -
Maguire signs contract extension with Man United
18 minutes -
The WTO is debating trade: The world runs on investment
44 minutes -
Minority questions gov’t purchase of fuel-powered buses, pushes for electric alternative
46 minutes -
GFA Executive Council to decide on new Black Stars coach ahead of 2026 World Cup
47 minutes -
One injured as fire destroys 14-bedroom house at Kwame Danso
55 minutes -
GACL struggling despite recording profit, levy needed for expansion – Agalga
58 minutes -
Kwahu Business Forum: Ghana Sports Fund calls for stronger corporate backing for sports dev’t
1 hour -
Suhum Children’s Health Centre: A story of collaboration, recognition, and global support
1 hour -
Polling is no longer measuring opinion, it’s manufacturing it – Opong-Fosu
2 hours -
Penplusbytes’ statement on police action against deepfake and misinformation activities in Ghana
2 hours