The December 2007 presidential elections troubles in Kenya that saw over 1000 people killed reveals the unresolved “rage” of Africa’s ethnicity, as the Polish-born novelist Joseph Conrad will tell you in his famous “suppressed rage” phrase that fits some of Africa’s deadly ethnic conflicts. Despite attracting charges of racism and paternalism in the Heart of Darkness, Conrad’s observation of Africa mired in something primal and savage may be as relevant as practicable in certain ways as some African ethnic conflicts and bad governments show.
Ethnic conflicts show that African nation-states are not genuinely consolidated, some being creations of Western imperialists. The key challenge is how African elites can work with their European creation to appropriate the various ethnic groups’ histories and traditional values for peace and progress. As Daniel Tetteh Osabu-Kle makes clear in Compatible Cultural Democracy: The Key to Development in
In
Kenya’s post election conflict reveals
To avoid ethnic conflict between the Kikuyu (who had ruled
The Kenyan ethnic conflict also shows that for the past 50 years Africans have suffered from leaders who have a weak grasp of the traditional values, lack understanding of their nation-states or do not value peace. Calderisi argues that in the 1990s, as some of Africa’s states such as Sierra Leone,
As African nation-states face severe crises and appear to be crumbling because of the rupture between ex-colonial legacies and African indigenous values, the London, UK-based African Confidential newsletter (January 6, 1995) explained that “There are signs everywhere that the era of the nation-state is fading and nowhere is this clearer than in Africa, where its roots are shallowest. The awkward marriage of the ‘nation’ in the sense of an ethnic coalition and the ‘state’ as the principal source of political authority is coming under pressure from above and below.” The fact is, the roots of African nation-state are not shallow, for it stands firmly in African traditional values. What is shallowest is the “state” as ex-colonial creation, not skillfully and properly weaved into the “nation” as a development project.
In a way, as Jeffrey Herbst analyses in States and Power in Africa: Comparative Lessons in Authority and Control, the problem of state consolidation from the pre-colonial phase to the modern era of independent states is riddled with misunderstanding and many unresolved issues by African elites. As Kenya,
While former United Nations chief Kofi Annan, the African Union and the international community work to stop the
The idea isn’t only to avoid “ethnic rage” disguised under false peace but also acknowledging like Pogo, the Walt Disney cartoon character that "We have met the enemy and he is us." Africa’s troubles, as George Ayittey explains in Africa Betrayed should start from its elites’ bad behaviour and their inability to understand the continent from within its traditional institutions and values. That makes the African’s so-called enemy himself/herself first and any other second. The hard reality is that either in the Kenyan elections or the Togolese elections in 2005 that saw over 800 people killed, Africa’s ethnic conflict has much to do with Africans’ pre-colonial conditions as much as its colonial and post-colonial circumstances.