Audio By Carbonatix
The Mo Ibrahim Foundation has announced that the seven-member prize committee could not find a winner for the 2015 award because no President in Africa met the criteria.
The award which is to honor former African heads of state who have excelled in leadership has been awarded four times since it was established in 2006 but has not found a winner since 2014.
The business mogul Mo Ibrahim told the BBC the biggest concern is that there is a leadership challenge on the continent.
“There is an issue about excellence in leadership and it is not an African phenomenon but a global one. Look at Europe, look at Asia over the nine could they have picked up five exceptional leaders in Asia or Europe?” he said.
He told Sophie Ikenye that it is not an ideal situation that the Foundation is expecting that an African leader must win it every year.
“It is not that because we are Africans we have to accept some standards; excellence means excellence and it is a price for excellence. It is not an entitlement or a pension,” Mr Ibrahim explained.
According to him, the award is to give those leaders the opportunity to continue to serve the public ostensibly because “our leaders when they leave office they don’t have the opportunities leaders in Europe or North America have. They don’t have directorship in big organizations, banks, etcetera.”
Some past winners include; Joaquim Alberto Chissano of Mozambique (2007), Nelson Mandela also got an honorary award (2007), Festus Gontebanye Mogae of Botswana (2008), Pedro de Verona Rodrigues Pires (2011) and Hifikipunye Lucas Pohamba (2014).
In 2009, 2010, 2012 and 2013 the Prize Committee, after in-depth review, did not select a winner.
Price Criteria
The leader must be a former African executive Head of State or Government who should have left office in the last three years.
Also, the leader should have been democratically elected, served his or her constitutionally mandated term and demonstrated exceptional leadership.
Prize
The award recognises and celebrates African executive leaders who, under challenging circumstances, have developed their countries and strengthened democracy and human rights for the shared benefit of their people, paving the way for sustainable and equitable prosperity
Also, it highlights exceptional role models for the continent and ensures that the African continent will continue to benefit from the experience and wisdom of these exceptional leaders
It is an award and a standard for excellence in leadership in Africa and it is not a ‘first prize’, there is not necessarily a Laureate every year.
The Prize amount is $5million over ten years and $200,000 annually for life thereafter.
Latest Stories
-
Fuel relief unsustainable; Ghana must build long-term energy resilience — Kofi Bentil
11 minutes -
Adawudu backs ‘innovative’ fuel price intervention, urges long-term refinery strategy
13 minutes -
Vice President engages GB Foods on boosting Ghana’s tomato value chain and agro-processing
21 minutes -
Tricycles supplied to health workers are not ambulances – Mahama clarifies
26 minutes -
Thaddeus Sory writes: So, the law is once again the culprit?
38 minutes -
Ghana Health Service clarifies ‘misleading’ claims on tricycles procured under Free Primary Healthcare initiative
39 minutes -
ECG announces emergency maintenance in Ashanti Region
44 minutes -
Political culture incentivising abuse, reckless speech – Victor Adawudu
47 minutes -
President Mahama cuts sod for 24-hour economy market in Bimbilla
47 minutes -
Free SHS feeding talks end in deadlock as Minister, GETFund clash over procurement
2 hours -
Beyond the noise: Why journalism must be seen to be trusted
2 hours -
Goldblock party marks 6 Years of culture and community in Ghana
2 hours -
Prince Adu-Owusu: When the mind moves on, but the heart doesn’t
2 hours -
DR Congo accepts first set of deportees from the US
3 hours -
Wa West District Assembly commits GH¢500k to water projects; commissions 10 new boreholes
4 hours