Mussa
Ibrahim
As Gaddafi’s last spokesperson, I
saw what real African independence can look like: free education, universal
healthcare, interest-free housing, and no IMF interference

The
past few days have offered a brutal snapshot of Africa’s unresolved crisis. In
Burkina Faso, militants from Jama’at Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM),
affiliated with Al-Qaeda, overran the Diapaga military base in the east,
seizing most of the city and exposing the precarious state of security in the
Sahel. Meanwhile, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the M23 rebel armed
group, which has been fighting the government since the beginning of the year,
tightens its grip on Goma, leading to vulnerable political conditions in which
stolen minerals are funneled to foreign markets. In the diplomatic arena, South
African President Cyril Ramaphosa was treated with disrespect in the US when
President Donald Trump ambushed him with a crude, racist presentation about
so-called “white genocide,” using footage falsely attributed to South Africa.
Kenya now fears economic chaos as the US threatens to revoke the African Growth
and Opportunity Act (AGOA) trade deal, a reminder that many African economies
are still at the mercy of external powers.
This
is the continent’s daily reality. Behind the headlines lie patterns of systemic
violence, extraction, and manipulation. Whether it is Boko Haram in Nigeria,
Al-Shabaab in Somalia, or foreign security firms in Mozambique, the message is
the same: Africa’s enemies are armed not only with bullets but with contracts,
media narratives, and economic traps. The ‘post-colonial’ moment has long
expired – what remains is a managed crisis, policed by the IMF, militarized by
AFRICOM, and sanitized by the African Union’s silence.
And
yet, in the middle of this, we are told to celebrate. May 25th is Africa Day –
the anniversary of the founding of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) in
1963. Every year, flags are raised, speeches are delivered, and African leaders
sing songs of unity. But let’s ask the uncomfortable question: What exactly are
we celebrating?
When
Kwame Nkrumah, Gamal Abdel Nasser, Julius Nyerere, Ahmed Sekou Toure, and Haile
Selassie came together to form the OAU, their aim was not to build
bureaucracies. It was to liberate the continent – militarily, economically,
culturally, and ideologically. They envisioned a single army, a common
currency, a unified foreign policy, and a break from Western dependency.
Nkrumah
famously said: “Africa must unite or perish.” Today, we see more perishing than
unity. Sixty-two years later, Africa Day has been reduced to a symbolic
spectacle – flags without force, drums without direction. We watch parades
while our lands are auctioned. We hear Pan-African slogans while our central
banks answer to Paris. We commemorate independence while 14 African countries
still use a currency created by their former colonizer – the CFA franc, a tool
of economic control whose name itself means ‘Financial Cooperation in Africa’ –
but cooperation for whom?
Over
25 African countries are either in or near debt default. Collectively, the
continent owes over $650 billion to external creditors. Nigeria spends
substantial sums of its revenue servicing debt. Ghana, once called a rising
star, is back at the IMF for the 17th time. In Zambia, debt repayments have
choked investment in hospitals and education. This isn’t mismanagement – it’s
engineered subservience. The so-called development partners make billions while
entire generations are sacrificed to the gods of fiscal discipline.
Meanwhile,
Africa’s material wealth continues to flow outward. The DRC supplies more than
70% of the world’s cobalt, yet over 70% of its people live in poverty. Our
uranium powers Europe’s cities while Niger’s villages remain in darkness.
African agriculture – despite controlling 60% of the world’s uncultivated
arable land – is gutted by foreign subsidies and aid dependency.
We
import $40 billion in food each year, while our farmers are criminalized or
displaced by foreign agribusiness. It is no exaggeration to say: Africa is
being starved by design.
But
exploitation today is not only economic – it’s also digital. Foreign companies
dominate our telecom infrastructure, cloud storage, and digital platforms. Our
data is stored abroad, our elections influenced by foreign code, our children
fed algorithmic colonialism on social media. AI tools are trained on African
voices but controlled by Silicon Valley. The scramble for Africa 2.0 is here –
and it’s happening on screens.
Even
our culture is colonized anew. Our stories are funded by Western NGOs. Our
artists are rewarded for repeating narratives of trauma, not defiance. From art
galleries to film festivals, African creatives are often made to conform to
donor expectations. Real revolutionary expression is defunded, censored, or
drowned in an ocean of meaningless ‘diversity’ campaigns. Cultural sovereignty
requires more than visibility – it requires ownership.
What
makes this tragedy worse is that many of our own leaders are complicit. Elites
who benefit from foreign contracts, imported goods, and IMF handouts – pose as
nationalists while enabling neocolonialism.
Why
Russia needs an independent Africa READ MORE: Why Russia needs an independent
Africa
But
Africa is not silent. In Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, new governments are
challenging the old order. They have expelled French troops, broken from the
CFA zone, and are building a regional alliance rooted in sovereignty. Western
media calls them juntas. But to millions of Africans, they are a new hope.
These governments are not perfect – but they are confronting imperialism where
the African Union has capitulated. Their stand echoes that of Sankara, Nkrumah,
and Gaddafi.
As
Gaddafi’s last spokesperson, I saw what real African independence looked like.
Free education, universal healthcare, interest-free housing, and no IMF
interference. Gaddafi’s dream of a gold-backed African currency and a
continental defense force terrified the West – not because it was mad, but
because it was achievable. That is why Libya was destroyed. The lesson is
simple: When you challenge an empire, it fights back.
But
we must not retreat. Africa must forge new alliances – not with masters, but
with partners. Cooperation with China, Russia, India, and Brazil must be based
on mutual respect and shared interest – not dependency. We must demand
technology transfers, co-ownership of infrastructure, and the right to control
our natural resources. BRICS can be a platform of liberation – but only if
Africa enters as a united, self-respecting bloc.
Equally
vital is a revolution of the mind. Our educational systems still glorify
colonizers and marginalize indigenous knowledge. Our universities chase Western
rankings while neglecting community development. We need a new curriculum – one
centered on African languages, philosophies, history, and political economy. We
must build schools that produce thinkers, builders, and liberators – not
bureaucrats.
The
debt noose: Why does Africa remain trapped? READ MORE: The debt noose: Why does
Africa remain trapped?
The
African diaspora is another critical front. It contributes over $50 billion
annually in remittances, but its political power remains underused. We need
institutional pathways for diaspora participation – in elections, investment,
security, and culture. From Sao Paulo to London, Atlanta to Kingston, the
diaspora is not a spectator. It is a co-creator of Africa’s destiny.
Let
us also talk about the ecological front. Africa is on the frontline of climate
breakdown – but the solutions proposed often mask the same exploitation. Green
capitalism – carbon markets, climate finance, offset schemes – lets polluters
profit while Africa pays the price. We must fight for ecological justice rooted
in land reform, water sovereignty, and indigenous stewardship – not donor
agendas.
This
is the real meaning of Africa Day in 2025. Not celebration. Mobilization. Not
pageantry. Resistance.
The
African Union must rise from dormancy or be bypassed by movements and
governments that are willing to fight. Cultural organizations must reject NGO
dependency and build spaces for radical imagination. Our youth must refuse the
logic of escape and rebuild this continent with dignity. We need Pan-African
banks, Pan-African education, Pan-African defense. And above all, we need
truth.
Africa
is not poor. Africa is plundered.
Africa
is not backwards. Africa is blocked.
Africa
is not free. But Africa can be.
No comments:
Post a Comment