Africa is a continent of
so many talents and you have to be a concerned African to know some
of the unusual talents that our renowned leaders have, therefore it
is the duty of this article to illustrate some of the talents our
leaders possess, though my main focus will be the sleeping sickness
that has engulfed our old leaders' lives. Our old leaders seem to
possess a trait that is common, but shameful and makes most of us
wonder if in did the own homes that have beds since most times they
are caught dozing at public event or maybe our old leaders are too
spiritual such that they are always communicating to a spiritual
being through the comfort of closed eyes and a moment of silence in
dream land.
Regime of Sleep
Africa as a
continent has passed through a lot of phases and if am not mistaken
one of the many reasons that encouraged the scramble
of Africa in 18th
century by European powers was the mystery behind the name
'Dark continent' and greed though
the Europeans may argue out the latter reason under the pretense of
'Age of discovery'. And
I assume the sadden 21st
century scramble for Africa is due to the continent's new identity
which is 'Continent of Sleep' which
has been portrayed and proven by most African leaders.
And it’s important
to realize that Africa’s syndrome of sleep can be traced back to
the 1960s when Nigerian first United Nations (UN) Ambassador Jaja
Wachukwu shocked the world by his wonderful talent of sleeping at a
meeting in New York of heads of state in October 16th
1960. Furthermore, to most Ambassador Wachukwu may seem not to be the
perfect example, but I believe the Ambassador's weakness of sleeping
in public exposes and characterizes the kind of leaders we have on
the continent. In other words, Ambassador Wachukwu gesture of
sleeping is what is called 'sleeping on duty “in lay man language
and its shocking how the Wachukwu gesture is still haunting down
African leaders even after 55 years of its occurrence.
Even though, Wachukwu may
seem to be the pioneer, it’s important to understand that the
ambassador was just a beginner because his bosses such as Robert
Mugabe and Yoweri Museveni are experts in the department of sleeping
in public. For Mugabe and Yoweri have continued sleeping at public
events when pressing issues affecting the well-being of citizens are
been discussed and unbelievably deny of the sleeping but insist they
were meditating.
Not long ago, Mugabe was
fast asleep during a dinner that was held in his honor after becoming
chairman of the African Union (AU) while Museveni's entourage of
senior government officials which included second Deputy Prime
Minister Moses Ali were flat asleep while listening to the state of
the nation address and budget speech. With the above situation in
mind, I am reminded by a saying by Desmond Tutu and I court, 'When
the missionaries came to Africa they had the Bible and we had the
land. They said let us pray. We closed our eyes. When we opened them
we had the Bible and they had the land' at this moment I believe if
our leaders continue with this sleeping at important events a repeat
of history might occur at the expense of ordinary Africans.
For our leaders are
fountains of honor indeed, hence to protect they dignity it’s
important to encourage them to sleep at their own time and space
since taxpayers pay for they accommodation, for the public is not a
sleeping place, but a place of serious business.
Written and Edited by
Musanda Sishumba