Former President Olusegun Obasanjo highlighted that Western-style democracy, imposed on Africa, doesn’t serve its people. Speaking at a consultation in Abeokuta, he emphasized that this system doesn’t align with the majority’s views. Obasanjo critiqued it as a governance model favoring a select few, rather than representing all citizens. He urged a departure from conventional norms to address Africa’s needs better.

According to him, African countries have no business in operating a system of government which they have no hands in its “definition and design”.


“The weakness and failure of liberal democracy as it is practised stem from its history, content and context and its practice.” he said

“Once you move from all the people to representative of the people, you start to encounter troubles and problems. For those who define it as rule of majority, should the minority be ignored, neglected and be excluded?

“In short, we have a system of government in which we have no hands to define and design and we continue with it, even when we know that it is not working for us.

“Those who brought it to us are now questioning the rightness of their invention, its deliverability and its relevance today without reform.


“The essence of any system of government is the welfare and well-being of the people: all the people.


“Here, we must interrogate performance of democracy in the West when it originated from and with us the inheritors of what we are left with by our colonial powers.


“We are here to stop being foolish and stupid. Can we look inward and outward to see what in our country, culture, tradition, practice and living over the years that we can learn from, adopt and adapt with practices everywhere for a changed system of government that will service our purpose better and deliver.


“We have to think out of the box and after, act with our new thinking. You are invited here to examine clinically the practice of liberal democracy, identify its shortcomings for our society and bring forth ideas and recommendations that can serve our purpose better, knowing human beings for what we are and going by our experiences and experiences of others.

“We are here to think as leaders of thought in the academia and leaders of thought with some experience in politics.”