Rwanda President Paul Kagame. PHOTO | COURTESY
BySummary
·
It is
clear that only Kagame will decide, at a time of his own choosing, when to exit
the political stage.
Rwanda’s ruling party, the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF), recently concluded its 16th congress. This also marked 35 years of its existence. The centre piece, however, was the election as chairman, yet
again, of the country’s president Paul Kagame. With 99.9% of the votes – 2,099 of the available 2,102 votes – Kagame was re-elected and put on course to potentially run for yet another electoral term in 2024.The constitution allows Kagame to
seek re-election until 2035. That’s a long way off and he has not indicated
when he would be willing to usher in a transition from himself. He has
acknowledged the need for change as he so often implores his party to reflect
on change in continuity. At 65, there is no sign that he will exit the stage
just yet.
Kagame who had been the driving
force behind the RPF Inkotanyi’s armed wing, took over the chairmanship of the
party in 1998. Since then, he has shown himself to be a shrewd political
operator, vanquishing political enemies (real and imagined). He has also built
a messianic persona and a reputation for being a no-nonsense statesman.
For all these reasons he has become
an international icon who is liked and loathed. In Rwanda, public sentiments
are largely supportive of his legacy.
It is also clear that only Kagame
will decide at a time of his own choosing when to exit the political stage. As
a long-term researcher and author on Rwanda’s political transformation, I
believe there are five reasons for this. They include the role of his party in
keeping him in power as well as personality traits.
1. Rwanda Patriotic Front an
economic powerhouse
The dominance and longevity of political
parties can sometimes boil down to one simple thing – finances. The Rwanda
Patriotic Front has demonstrated that it has plenty and has used it to eclipse
all other political actors. It has built a self-sustaining finance
infrastructure buttressed by its deep involvement in the economy. If real
estate were evidential, its over $10 million headquarters in the capital is
testament to this financial clout.
2. The disciplinarian
Many political observers around the
world have come to associate Kagame with a trait that some argue is simple
ruthlessness or otherwise strict disciplinarianism. Perhaps this is because of
his military and in particular intelligence background.
In Rwanda, he is known for having
very little time for government officials’ indiscipline and in particular
corruption. Cabinet members have been dismissed if implicated in corruption and
others made to account for lapses in performance. He has a very high work ethic
and abhors laxity.
It is this that endears him to even
those that disagree with his politics. As such, Rwanda is one of the least
corrupt countries, one of the easiest in doing business in Sub Saharan Africa.
Efficiency, less red tape and transparency being key to an enabling
environment.
3. The pragmatist
Longevity in Africa’s executive
office requires shrewd pragmatism and Kagame has proven adept at this. To
ensure dominance of his Rwanda Patriotic Front and himself, he has had to be
willing to adopt practical positions that further this interest. For instance,
while he has taken very stern public stance against those seen as disagreeing
with Rwanda’s actions or politics, he has been careful to mend bridges when it
serves his purpose.
The recent release of government
critic Paul Rusesabagina after US designated him as unlawfully detained and
imprisoned is a case in point.
4. Public strategist
For a tiny country of only 13
million people, Rwanda has secured outsize media coverage under Kagame’s
leadership. He has taken bold, some would say risky, decisions that have set
him apart from any domestic pretenders to the throne and international peers.
The country has been a sponsor of
some of the world’s biggest football clubs sports kits emblazoned with the
“visit Rwanda” logo. It has agreed to a humanitarian albeit controversial
gesture to host refugees repatriated from Libya and recently UK.
The FIFA world 73rd congress summit
held for the first time in Africa has recently concluded in Kigali while the
country will host, for an African first, the 2025 World Cycling Road
Championship.
5. The omnipresent force
There is no one in Rwanda more
omnipresent than Kagame in particular and his Rwanda Patriotic Front party in
general. He has personally dominated and defined the political space of the
country since the end of the genocide in 1994.
The Rwanda Patriotic Front, the
political wing of the then rebel force of the Rwanda Patriotic Army, has
established a dominant party system in which no other party contender stands a
realistic chance of over taking it. To do this the party used its parliamentary
dominance to pass strict rules that govern political parties. These have seen
the disbanding of parties like the Mouvement Démocratique Républicain (MDR)
while co-opting others into a coalition. This, the Rwanda Patriotic Front
argues, is the spirit of consensus governance rather than conflictual
competition.
The risks of dissension
Political commentators have argued
that for those involved in politics in the country, the risks of criticising
Kagame or his government are simply too high. According to Human Rights Watch
many critics have ended up in jail, exiled or assassinated.
This sends a rather chilling message
to anyone who dares challenge the status quo.
For now, Kagame appears to provide a
kind of certainty and predictability to the nations’ politics, allowing the
country to rebuild on a firm footing. But this doesn’t make him indispensable.
As Rwanda puts distance from its traumatic past, gains confidence in its
future, it may need or indeed demand a change of guard.
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