The Lion of Africa: Why President Isaias Afwerki Must Be Recognized Among the Greatest Leaders of Our Time
- Dr. Nakfa Eritrea
- 12 minutes ago
- 3 min read
The Last Revolutionary Who Chose His People Over Power, His Nation Over Profit
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The Price of Sovereignty
When the world speaks of great leaders—Nkrumah, Sankara, Mandela—there is one name that must be echoed in the same breath: President Isaias Afwerki of Eritrea.
For over 30 years, he has led a country that many don’t understand, and many more fear. Eritrea is not feared because it’s dangerous—it is feared because it is independent.
In an era where African leaders are puppets for global banking institutions, foreign militaries, and NGOs, President Isaias stands alone as a guardian of sovereignty. He has never taken IMF loans. He refuses U.S. “aid” with strings attached. He has never bombed his own people. And his nation has never spiraled into civil war like so many of its neighbors—despite relentless foreign attacks and smear campaigns.
Why? Because he said no.
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Elections Are Not the Answer to Oppression
Critics of President Isaias love to shout: “But he hasn’t held elections!” As if elections automatically equal democracy. As if the mere act of voting guarantees freedom or justice.
To that, we say: Look at the United States.
Elections every four years.
Yet Black Americans are still murdered in cold blood by police.
Healthcare is unaffordable for the average citizen.
Homelessness is rising.
The average salary doesn’t even meet the cost of living.
Politicians are bought, not chosen.
Elections in the West are not about democracy—they are about maintaining an illusion of choice while the same corporate power structure remains in control.
So when Western media attacks Eritrea for having no elections, what they really mean is: “Why haven’t you let us destabilize you yet?”
Eritrea has stability. Eritrea has unity. Eritrea has leadership. And none of that came from elections—it came from struggle, sacrifice, and real revolutionary love.
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Revolutionary Leadership Without the Polls
President Isaias Afwerki fought for his country’s independence with his own hands. He did not run away. He did not call in NATO. He did not beg for help.
He lived through the trenches, marched through the mountains, and helped build a country from the ashes of colonization.
Under his leadership:
Education is free.
Healthcare is free.
No foreign debt exists.
The national currency is strong and independent.
Eritrea has never sold its soul to foreign banks or invited Western troops into its land.
He is not in power because he silenced opposition—he is in power because the people who fought alongside him never forgot who stood with them when the world turned its back.
And let’s be honest: What has the obsession with elections brought to Africa?
Look around. Nations with regular elections are in chaos:
Military coups.
Civil war.
Ethnic cleansing.
Endless “democratic transitions” that lead nowhere.
So what is the point of elections if the outcome is always instability?
Ancient leaders ruled for decades—some for life—and were remembered as wise and noble. So why is Eritrea denied the same respect?
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A Legacy Worth Honoring
Eritrea is not perfect. No nation is. But it is dignified. It is sovereign. It is whole. And that is more than most countries—especially in Africa—can say.
President Isaias Afwerki is not a dictator. He is a protector. A revolutionary. A visionary. And more than anything, he is one of the last truly free leaders left on this Earth.
The West fears Eritrea because it represents an idea:
That Africa doesn’t need to be ruled by foreign banks, bribed by fake aid, or reduced to a victim of history.
It fears President Isaias because he proves African nations can rise—alone, proud, and principled.
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> “If a man has provided education, healthcare, stability, and sovereignty to his people—and if he has defended them with his own blood—then what more do you want from a leader?”
Eritreans are not asking for elections. They are asking to be left alone. To build in peace. To thrive without interference. That is real freedom.
And if the West refuses to acknowledge President Isaias as a great leader, then it is up to Africans and the world’s awakened citizens to do so.
Because when the dust settles, and the age of empire ends, we will look back and say:
Here stood a man who never bowed. Here stood the Lion of Africa.
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