The world’s biggest individual prize — was not awarded for a third
time in four years as no suitable candidates were found, it was
announced Monday.
At a press conference in London, the Mo Ibrahim Foundation said it
was not going to compromise on its standard of excellence in a leader.
The award, set up by Sudan-born telecoms tycoon Mo Ibrahim in 2006,
carries a $5 million prize paid over 10 years and $200,000 annually for
life from then on, with a further $200,000 per year available for 10
years for good causes backed by the winner.
The award goes to a democratically-elected African leader who has
served their mandated term and left office in the last three years.
“You make your bed, you have to lie on it. If we said we’re going to
have a prize for exceptional leadership, we have to stick to that. We
are not going to compromise,” Ibrahim said.
“We are not just in the business of positive messages — we would lose our credibility.”
The Mo Ibrahim Foundation has awarded the annual prize only three
times since it was established, plus two special awards given to South
Africa’s Nelson Mandela and South African former archbishop Desmond
Tutu.
The prize committee said they reviewed a number of eligible candidates “but none met the criteria needed to win this award”.
“The award is about excellence in leadership. In the first six years
the prize committee has selected three very worthy laureates who
continue to be an inspiration and whose examples, we hope, will be
emulated.”
The inaugural prize went to former president Joaquim Chissano of
Mozambique in 2007 and Botswana’s ex-president Festus Mogae won in 2008.
The prize was not awarded in the following two years. Former Cape Verde president Pedro Pires won the 2011 prize.
The London-based foundation also publishes the Ibrahim Index, ranking
52 African countries according to 88 indicators grouped under safety
and the rule of law, participation and human rights, sustainable
economic opportunity and human development.
There has been no change in its top five this year — with Mauritius
topping the index with a score of 83 out of 100, ahead of Cape Verde
(78), Botswana (77), Seychelles (73) and South Africa (71).
Somalia remained at the bottom with a score of seven, behind
Democratic Republic of Congo (33), Chad (33), Eritrea (33) and the
Central African Republic (34).
Ibrahim said that while there had been major improvements in some sectors, the continent’s main players were lagging behind.
“Between 2000 and 2011 there is a marked improvement in governance across Africa,” he said.
“The major improvements were in health, the rural sector, the
economy. The interesting development was in gender. Gender has improved
amazingly over the last 10-11 years. The highest improvement in any
category in the index.”
However across the data, “the four main powerhouses in Africa —
Egypt, Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya — appear to be really stuttering.
They are not showing really convincing progress.
“East Africa is not doing that well. It has been over taken by west Africa in the category of sustainable economic development.
“In general, we see positive development in Africa. The economy is
moving forward relentlessly. Education and health is improving, there is
great development there. Gender issues are improving.
“We see, unfortunately, a little bit of decline in the issues of
human rights and participation. Economic development does not give us a
reason to be complacent about that.
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