By Abioye Tosin Lawrence
Bobi Wine did not pick up arms. He did not incite violence. He did not murder anyone. His only “crime” was daring to challenge a four-decade reign of power in Uganda. Yet, for that singular act of courage, he has been hounded, humiliated, brutalised, and politically suffocated, while Africa largely looks away.
That silence is not accidental. It is the loudest confession of our collective moral bankruptcy.
Across the continent, Africans passionately dissect elections in Europe and America, debate democracy on television panels, and flood social media with outrage when injustice happens elsewhere. But when oppression unfolds before our own eyes in Kampala, in Yaoundé, in Conakry, we retreat into apathy, excuses, and tribal detachment. We call it “their problem.”
It is not.
What Bobi Wine is facing is the fate reserved for anyone who challenges entrenched power in Africa without the protection of guns, foreign backing, or elite consensus. His ordeal is not uniquely Ugandan; it is a continental warning.
From Paul Biya’s Cameroon to electoral farces in Tanzania, from Guinea’s broken democracy to sit-tight leaders across Africa, the message is consistent: power is sacred, and challengers must be punished.
Even more damning is the role of African youths. A continent blessed with a massive youthful population has failed to translate numbers into courage, solidarity, or structure.
We mobilise effortlessly for football rivalries, insults, and online banter during the Africa Cup of Nations, yet we fracture into silence when one of our own is crushed for daring to imagine a freer society.
Poverty has been weaponised to keep us distracted. Hunger has become a leash. Many now believe that once they can eat, survive, and mind their families, nothing else matters, until insecurity arrives, until violence spills over, until power reminds them that silence offers no permanent protection.
Africa does not lack heroes. It lacks people willing to defend them.
The tragedy of Bobi Wine is not only his persecution; it is the frightening possibility that he may stand alone long enough for the system to break him, or worse, force him out of his own country. We pray for his safety, but prayers without solidarity are empty rituals.
A continent that cannot protect its reformers has no moral authority to complain about its tyrants. Until Africans learn that injustice anywhere on the continent is a threat everywhere on the continent, we will keep producing brave men for lonely battles, and calling it destiny.
History will not ask whether Bobi Wine survived.
It will ask why Africa watched, and did nothing.
About the Author:
Abioye Tosin Lawrence is the publisher of Oriontimes Online Newspaper and author of Voices From the Fire: My Journey Through a Hollow Empire. He is currently working on a memoir titled From Aluta to Aso Rock: The Myth of Struggle in Nigerian Politics.
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