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{UAH} UGANDA 95% FOR SAME. THATS WHY WE HAVE FOOLS IN PARLIAMENT

83% of Zimbabweans today were born under Robert Mugabe's presidency (in power since 1980).


He's all we've ever known! A new ranking for long-serving African leaders, relative to age of country population

08 SEP 2015 08:28CHRISTINE MUNGAI

In Angola and Zimbabwe, 80% of population born with the current leader in power; in relative terms, Burundi's Nkurunziza beats Algeria's Bouteflika

83% of Zimbabweans today were born under a Mugabe presidency. (Photo/ File).

83% of Zimbabweans today were born under a Mugabe presidency. (Photo/ File).

AFRICA has at least fifteen presidents who have served longer than a decade in office, and out of the top ten longest-serving leaders globally, African countries take up six slots. 

Still, the stereotype of the long-serving African despot who will do anything to cling to office is not entirely true; the continent has seen at least 19 peaceful transitions involving an incumbent president losing an election, and vacating office peacefully - the number rises to 25 once you factor in various transitional arrangements.

READ: Believe it or not, 19 African leaders have been defeated in elections. Welcome Nigeria

However, Africa is the world's youngest continent, with most countries south of the Sahara having a median age in the twenties. 

To get a "relative" picture of how long a president has been in power, Mail & Guardian Africa compared the length of its 15 longest-serving leaders, with the percentage of the population in that country born after the president assumed power. 

The data on population was obtained from population.io, an interactive population portal that allows you to determine your age relative to everyone else in the world, and to people in your country. 

Our comparison includes leaders who served as transitional leaders before being elected by popular vote - for example Rwanda's Paul Kagame, who assumed office in 2000 under a transitional regime, before being elected as president in 2003.

The same goes for Isaias Afwerki, who assumed power in 1991 with the victory of the Eritrean Peoples Liberation Front (EPLF), before the country officially became independent in 1993.

Under this picture, the "relative" presidential term has been longest in Angola, where 85% of the population was born after Jose Eduardo dos Santos came into power on 10th September 1979.

In second place is Robert Mugabe; 83% of Zimbabweans today were born under a Mugabe presidency.

In third place is Yoweri Museveni, where 79% of the population was born with Museveni as president. Even though Cameroon's Paul Biya has served longer than Museveni in absolute terms - Biya has been head of state since 1982 - Uganda has a younger population than Cameroon does, so Museveni beats Biya in relative terms.

Baker Mayambala's photo.


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IMG-20150324-WA003.jpgGwokto La'Kitgum
"Even a small dog can piss on a tall Building", Jim Hightower

"But this I know, UPC believed and still believes in
very high education. We can call Obote all bad names we have, but the bottom line remains that he got more scholarships for Buganda than all previous Uganda leaders combined. That includes Sir Edward Mutesa, President Lule, President Binayisa, up to and into Ssabasajja Mutebi. Who all happen to be Baganda leaders." Mulindwa

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