No wonder it is hard to seperate the wheat from the chaffe. Of these, Nkrumah further notes “The intelligensia always leads the nationalist movements in its early stages.It aspires to replace the colonial power, but not to bring about a radical transfomation of society.The object is to control the system rather than to change it.
THE ROLE OF THE MILITARY IN AFRICA
Ask any African on the continent what he/she thinks about the military’s role in national development , and the majority would answer (1) Brutality , (2) Counter productive (3)Outlived its usefulness (4 ) Obsolute.The late Kwame Nkrumah, a victim of a military coup himself had this to say about military Coups d’etat in his book” Class Struggle in Africa.”
” Coups d’etat are forms of struggle the objective being the seizure of political power..Though carried out by a special organ of the state apparatus seemingly isolated from society, they reflect class interest and are part of the class struggle.They do not change the nature or content of the struggle, they only change its form.The politico-economic and social situation is in essence unchanged.”
Africans and their allies in Asia , Latin America, especially the majority of the down trodden masses of the poor are testimony to what a few ; or rather handful of indigenous peasants and workers in uniform calling itself armed forces can do to a nation — any nation including Gambia. But , we may also need to ask and understand how and why Coups take place ; and the effects and impact they have on our lives and Democratic institutions.
Nkrumah sums it thus “When neo-colonialist coups take place,members of the armed forces ,the police and the bureaucracy work together.This is not to say that they necessarily sit down together and plot coups,though this has sometimes been the case.But they have common interests and each needs the other.
Bureaucrats alone cannot overthrow a government; and the military and police have not the expertise to administer a country.Therefore they combine,and bring about a state of affairs similar to that which operated in colonial times, when the colonial government depended on the civil service,on the army and police, and on the support of traditional rulers.”
Military coups occur after a country gains independence from its colonial masters, or during what is commonly called the post Independence period. Africa alone does not have the monopoly share of military coups in the world . All territories of colonial empires of Europe, be they in South East Asia, Asia Minor,all of South and Central America (otherwise known as Latin America); have had their share of military coups.They all have experienced , to name a few brutal and atrocious killers like Idi Amin,Thieu,Bao Dhai,Pinochet ; these men created pain ,suffering,cannage, never before seen in the twentieth century on a helpless poverty stricken people.
How do military dictators gain the power and audacity to usurp power from a constutionally elected government? Osagyefo notes that ” In almost every case where a coup has taken place there has been no mass participation.The rank and file of army and police are from the peasantry.A large number are illiterate.They have been taught to obey orders without question. While to obey orders without question is a fundamental requirement of the ordinary soldier in most professional armies, it becomes extremely dangerous when those in a position to give orders serve the interest of only a small privileged section of society.It means that the rank and file soldier or policeman can be used to bring about, and maintain,reactionary regimes.In this , the ordinary soldier who is after all only a worker or peasant in uniform, is acting against the interest of his own class.”
Interestingly though, the military in England, France, Portugal ( she tried it briefly in the 70’s) but was short lived, the people sent them back to baracks; cannot usurp power.Likewise the U.S.A., but they can, and have in Africa, Asia, and South & Central America and elsewhere.In all these, especially Africa, the role of the intellegentsia and intellectuals acting as willing and unwilling collaborators with regimes inflicting pain and suffering, economically, politically, and physically, on the masses of people is something that makes us wonder why they continue to sell their souls for a mess of pottage.
May be, we might need to revisit what Nkrumah wrote in “Africa Must Unite”,which is :
“Africa needs a new type of citizen,a dedicated,modest,honest,
who submerges self in service to the nation and mankind.A man [and woman]who abhors
greed and detests vanity.A new type of man[and woman] whose humility is his [her]
strenght and whose integrity is his [her] greatness.