Put simply, the proposition that Western countries need to prioritize short-term 'security' and economic interests above democratic values and principles is entirely flawed and backward, says Jeffrey Smith, executive director of the Washington-based nonprofit Vanguard Africa.
Under Joe Biden, America Struggles to Reassert Itself in Africa (The Economist – May 9)
Jeffrey Smith, founder of Vanguard Africa, a pro-democracy outfit in Washington, bemoans what he considers Mr Biden’s dismal failure to speak out robustly against human-rights abuses in countries such as Ethiopia, Rwanda, Swaziland and Uganda. America’s overriding policy nowadays, he says, is “not to rock the boat”. … “I’ve never experienced such low perceptions of our foreign policy by Africans,” says Mr Smith.
BBC Focus on Africa (May 7, 2024)
Elections in Senegal: Commentaries from the Forum 2000 Network
Ex-President Clinton to Lead Rwanda Genocide Delegation Amid Tensions with U.S. (The Africa Report – April 6)
“We cannot allow the darkness of the past, nor the sins of previous generations, provide cover for today’s atrocities,” says Jeffrey Smith, a US-based democracy promoter who runs the advocacy firm Vanguard Africa. “The callous disregard that Washington exhibited in 1994 is alive and well today, and in many ways still shackles policymakers in a manner that allows violence and impunity to perpetuate.”
Why is Rwanda’s Asylum Policy Being Lambasted (The Africa Report – April 3)
Jeffrey Smith, the founding director of pro-democracy group Vanguard Africa, says Rwanda’s claim of selflessness in its refugee programme is akin to a serial arsonist cosplaying as a firefighter. “The irony here is striking. Paul Kagame is a chief architect of massive human suffering in eastern Congo due to his regime’s militarism and the ongoing direct support to paramilitary proxy groups, which has led to the second-largest displacement crisis globally , with over seven million people forced to flee their homes,” Smith says.
In DRC, ‘the immediate and unconditional release of journalist Stanis Bujakera is necessary’ (Jeune Afrique – January 12, 2024)
The Struggle for Freedom update: Jacob Ngarivhume released from prison (George W. Bush Presidential Center – December 14)
Ngarivhume’s arrest and release illustrates what Jeffrey Smith, founder of Vanguard Africa, a nongovernmental organization that supports democracy in Africa, calls “persecution by prosecution” – a well-honed tactic of Zimbabwean authorities. “They keep critics behind bars for months, sometimes years on end, and never successfully prosecute them because there is simply no evidence,” Smith says. “It serves a purpose, though. It’s a chilling effect for other would-be dissidents.”
US Strips Four More Countries of AGOA Trade Benefits (The Africa Report – October 31)
Beyond the direct economic impact, suspension from the AGOA deals a reputational blow to blacklisted countries, says human rights activist Jeffrey Smith. Smith’s Washington-based Vanguard Africa advocacy firm represents several clients including Uganda’s opposition figure Bobi Wine, who is under house arrest.
“The suspensions of CAR, Niger, Gabon and Uganda give them entry into a veritable Who’s Who of autocratic, highly repressive regimes to have had their AGOA eligibility stripped due to ongoing human rights concerns,” Smith tells The Africa Report. “Obviously, this is not a category that any country nor leader would wish to be in given the high reputational damage and public relations disaster that this designation necessarily entails.”
The Struggle for Freedom: Jacob Ngarivhume jailed in advance of anti-corruption protest – and Zimbabwe’s disputed elections
Jeffrey Smith, founder of Vanguard Africa, an NGO that supports democracy in Africa, told me that the United States should refrain from endorsing “a completely flawed, shambolic election and refuse new debt relief, new lending, or direct support to the ZANU-PF government until substantive political and electoral reforms” are adopted. Any engagement with the regime, he says, “will inevitably be spun, both domestically and internationally, as an ‘endorsement’ of an oppressive government.”