Abstract

“Never in my lifetime”: it has always been a risky sentence for political leaders, as the former Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith knows only too well. The astonishingly rapid evolution in Africa today has made the phrase sound almost suicidal. Zaire's President Mobutu, for instance, claimed at the beginning of 1990 that “never in my lifetime will there be multi-partyism in Zaire”; after he was forced to announce the lifting of all restrictions on 9 October of the same year, more than 100 political parties had become active by the beginning of 1991 and Mobutu's own prospects for political survival now seem increasingly slim. He is just one of the many heads of state in French-speaking Africa who have been forced into performing a drastic U-turn during 1990.Both single party rule and socialism have come under increasing strain over the last year. In Francophone Africa in particular, virtually no country has been untouched by the wave of political reform. A combination of factors accounts for this spectacular evolution.

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