Across the continent, elections have become coronations. From Tanzania to Guinea, power is recycled through manipulation, courts, and guns — not consent. The price is paid in instability, poverty, and the erosion of public trust.
In the language of politics, democracy in Africa still thrives — on paper. Constitutions proclaim it, parliaments echo it, and electoral commissions ritualize it every few years. Yet across much of the continent, the ballot box has been emptied of meaning. What we now witness is not popular sovereignty but political theatre — a choreography of control disguised as democracy.
In Tanzania, the October 2025 election returned President Samia Suluhu Hassan with nearly 98 percent of the vote. It was a landslide that few outside her ruling party regarded as credible. Opposition figures were jailed, disqualified, or chased into exile; journalists were muzzled; protests were crushed with curfews. What should have been a test of public confidence became a coronation of continuity.
In Cameroon, 93-year-old Paul Biya — in power since 1982 — claimed yet another term amid allegations of rigging and intimidation. His presidency has now outlasted every U.S. administration since Ronald Reagan’s, a living symbol of how power in Africa often turns into private property.
In Côte d’Ivoire, Alassane Ouattara re-engineered the constitution to justify a third term in 2020, and reports suggest he may seek a fourth. Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni continues to rule through a blend of security coercion and constitutional tinkering. Nigeria’s democracy is plagued by mass defections into the ruling party and endless litigation — it is now common to hear that “the courts, not the people, decide elections.”
And now, Guinea, where a coup-born junta leader who once promised a return to civilian rule has banned opposition parties yet announced that he himself will run for president. The farce completes the circle: military seizure of power followed by civilian pretense of it.
These are not isolated incidents. They are symptoms of a continental crisis — a collapse of accountability masked by the ritual of voting. Freedom House notes that two-thirds of African countries have declined in democratic performance over the past decade.
“What we now witness is not popular sovereignty but political theatre — a choreography of control disguised as democracy.”
The consequences are not only moral but material. When elections are stolen, economies bleed. Investors retreat; risk premiums rise; capital flees to safer ground. The World Bank estimates that countries with high political-risk ratings pay 1.5 to 2 percent more in borrowing costs, diverting billions from public investment. In countries where opposition is crushed, tax collection averages below 15 percent of GDP, limiting funds for health, education, and infrastructure. Patronage replaces policy; loyalty outweighs merit.
Tanzania’s current growth — officially around 5.4 percent — hides deep structural weakness: a narrow tax base, youth under-employment, and rural stagnation. Nigeria, despite oil wealth, has the world’s third-highest number of poor people. Uganda’s debt-to-GDP ratio has doubled in a decade. Cameroon’s infrastructure projects stall under corruption investigations. The economics of impunity is the most expensive policy Africa can afford.
Islamic economics offers a corrective lens. Its pillars — shūrā (consultation), ʿadl (justice), amānah (trust), and maslahah (the public good) — demand stewardship, not survivalism. The Qur’an commands: “Indeed, Allah commands you to render trusts to whom they are due and when you judge between people, judge with justice.” (4:58). Leadership is an amanah, a sacred trust — not a perpetual entitlement. When rulers rewrite constitutions, muzzle dissent, or militarize elections, they betray that trust before both man and God.
“The Qur’an commands justice — yet Africa’s rulers rewrite constitutions to serve ambition, not accountability.”
The remedy begins with constitutional honesty: no resets, no endless tenures. Regional bodies must treat the manipulation of term limits as seriously as coups. Election commissions need budgetary and legal independence. Courts must be guardians of justice, not instruments of incumbency. Campaign finance must be transparent, and the security forces must serve the law, not the ruler.
Economically, Africa must delink growth from graft. Fiscal reforms, fair taxation, and decentralised opportunity can only thrive under rule-bound governance. No sustainable development is possible where fear governs the ballot box.
The deeper change, however, must come from within society — from faith leaders, educators, business people, and journalists who refuse to normalise tyranny. In Islam, silence in the face of injustice is complicity. The Prophet ﷺ said: “The greatest jihad is a word of truth spoken to a tyrant ruler.” Africa needs that word now more than ever.
Democracy, stripped of justice, becomes decoration. Economics, stripped of ethics, becomes exploitation. For Africa to heal, it must return to first principles — of justice, consultation, and stewardship — where power serves the people, not the other way around.