Mo Ibrahim quotes:

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  • Mexico established a unique three-part governing system shared by the government, the information commission and civil society organisations.

  • Africa's success stories are delivering the whole range of the public goods and services that citizens have a right to expect and are forging a path that we hope more will follow.

  • The Nobel Prize is worth $1.5 million, but that's not the issue. Do the distinguished scientists who win the Nobel Prize need the money? Probably not. The honor is more important the money, and that's the case with the prize for African leadership as well.

  • In the final analysis, finding a way to do clean business and not to pay bribes actually improves your bottom line.

  • Retail banking in Africa is very weak. You can't go to a village and get money from an ATM or visit a branch of the bank. So people have to use the Internet.

  • If economic progress is not translated into better quality of life and respect for citizens' rights, we will witness more Tahrir Squares in Africa.

  • Rwanda really did take very strong steps towards development. I mean, this place is unrecognizable. There's a very good management of economy and resources - it's a success story, and that's great.

  • The African Development Bank is one of the most aggressive advocates of regional integration.

  • Women in Africa are really the pillar of the society, are the most productive segment of society, actually. They do agriculture.

  • Everywhere in Africa, you see Indian, Chinese, Brazilian businesses. Other than Coca Cola and the oil companies, it is very rare to see American businesses.

  • Business is global. Countries need to react to that; taxes need to be paid where profit arises.

  • Remarkably, governments are beginning to embrace the idea that nothing enhances democracy more than giving voice and information to everybody in the country. Why not open their books if they have nothing to hide?

  • When Captain Moussa Dadis Camara came to power, too many thought he would hold to his promise to stand down, introduce democratic elections and restore the rule of law.

  • There's no point in trying to hoard money after life, so better really to share with people.

  • Sudan cannot afford to be on the wrong side of history. The north and south will have to work together, but will they?

  • When I was young, there was only one TV channel, sponsored by the government, and it only broadcast things like what the leader had for breakfast. There was no real media.

  • Experience counts in government even more than in business.

  • Positive market incentives operating in the public interest are too few and far between, and are also up against a seemingly never-ending expansion of perverse incentives and lobbying.

  • I left Sudan when I was 25 or 26 years old. If I had stayed, I would never have ended up being an entrepreneur. You can have the qualities, but if you don't have the environment, you just wither away. It's like a fish: take it out of water, it will not survive.

  • I'm uncomfortable, frankly, with the hype about Africa. We went from one extreme... to, like, Africa now is the best thing after sliced bread.

  • For citizens to become fully engaged in holding their leadership to account, accurate information is required to see where action is needed, to measure the results of policies and programmes, to build support for courageous decisions and to consolidate political legitimacy.

  • The issue with international institutions is that there is a crisis of legitimacy. Trust in these institutions is a serious problem.

  • I don't even have a small boat. I don't even have a toy boat in my bathtub. I don't have a biplane, I don't have anything. Those things are toys, and I don't need them to be happy.

  • The state and its elites must be subject, in theory and in practice, to the same laws that its poorest citizens are.

  • What is a government supposed to do for its people? To improve the standard of living, to help them get jobs, get kids to schools, and have access to medicine and hospitals. Government may not directly provide these public goods and services, but government must be accountable for whether or not they are delivered to citizens.

  • We need to keep pressure on our own governments to force more and more transparency.

  • Experience shows that when political governance and economic management diverge, overall development becomes unsustainable.

  • Sudan has been an experiment that resonated across Africa: if we, the largest country on the continent, reaching from the Sahara to the Congo, bridging religions, cultures and a multitude of ethnicities, were able to construct a prosperous and peaceful state from our diverse citizenry, so too could the rest of Africa.

  • A narrative that branded Africa as little more than an economic, political and social basket case was not likely to provide the investment needed to drive development.

  • What we need in Africa is balanced development. Economic success cannot be a replacement for human rights or participation or democracy... it doesn't work.

  • Educational opportunities have supported the rise of the African middle class, the professional cadre of young people who are now willing and able to contribute to Africa's future prosperity.

  • In a world of growing food demand, Africa is home to two-thirds of the world's unexploited arable land.

  • More people smile at me now I'm richer.

  • Rule of law is the most important element in any civil society.

  • Electoral turnout is falling among the young, and political apathy is on the rise.

  • Celtel established a mobile phone network in Africa at a time when investors told me that there was no market for mobile phones there.

  • Compared to developed countries, or even to some major emerging countries, burdened by aging populations, financial crises, widening budget deficits, faltering faith in politics and growing social demands, Africa has become the world's last 'New Frontier:' a kind of 'it-continent.'

  • Multinationals don't pay taxes in Africa - we all know that.

  • Remember, 2000 was the year of the dot-com bust. The telecom industry lost about $2 trillion in market capital at that time.

  • You fly for hours and hours and hours over Africa to go from one place to another.

  • Business people get many undeserved prizes - golden parachutes and bonuses even when companies fail. I don't think people should get rewarded for screwing up.

  • It's time Africa started listening to our young people instead of always telling them what to do.

  • Computers are very expensive and they need power, and that can be a problem in Africa.

  • Almost every country in Africa has now instituted multi-party democracy.

  • It is very difficult for any dictator or any incumbent to falsify the results of an election and just get away with it.

  • The Zimbabwean people, like everyone else, have a right to live in freedom and prosperity and to select their leaders through fair and democratic elections.

  • I think we need to look at ourselves first. We should practice what we're preaching. Otherwise, we are hypocrites.

  • Governance has been at the heart of the work of the Oxford Martin Commission for Future Generations and is a clear focus in its report, 'Now for the Long Term.'

  • Botswana had three successive good presidents who served their legal terms, who did well for their countries - three, not one.

  • Intimidation, harassment and violence have no place in a democracy.

  • Mobile phones play a really wonderful role in enabling civil society. As well as empowering people economically and socially, they are a wonderful political tool.

  • Mobile phones could not work in Africa without prepaid because it's a cash society.

  • It was a no-brainer that the cellular route would be a great success in Africa.

  • The problem is that many times people suspend their common sense because they get drowned in business models and Harvard business school teachings.

  • Africa offers the highest return on investment in the world.

  • Increasing extremism - across Africa and the world - must be understood in the context of the failure of our leaders properly to manage diversity within their borders.

  • Africa is underpopulated. We have 20% of the world's landmass and 13% of its population.

  • Africa is rich, and why are we poor then if our continent is rich. It is not right.

  • African leaders work really under severe limitations and constraints.

  • Far from being hopeless, Africa is full of hope and potential, maybe more so than any other continent. The challenge is to ensure that its potential is utilised.

  • Women in Africa are really the pillar of the society, are the most productive segment of society, actually. Women do kids. Women do cooking. Women doing everything. And yet, their position in society is totally unacceptable. And the way African men treat African women is total unacceptable.

  • Challenging vested interests requires a government's full commitment.

  • The Security Council represents the situation from 1945 - you had the Allies who won the war who occupied that. The defeated guys - the Germans and Japan - were out. The occupied countries had no voice. That was fine in '45, but today, Germany rules Europe, frankly. They are driving Europe but have no voice.

  • We cannot expect loyalty to an unjust regime.

  • Africa is progressing but maybe not in the way you think it is. Even if the overall picture looks good, we must all remain vigilant and not get complacent.

  • Transfer pricing is causing huge problems in Africa.

  • United States has always been very close to Africa and it's very sad now to see that Africa has a lot more friends - a lot more engagements with the Chinese, with the Indians, with the Brazilians as the United States retreats. Actually, Africa is a wonderful place to do business and American business is missing a big opportunity by really overlooking Africa.

  • After the sale of Celtel, I really wanted to give the money back, and I had a number of choices - to go and buy masses of blankets and baby milk or to go into Darfur or Congo. That would have been very nice actually, but it's just like an aspirin: it doesn't deal with the problem.

  • Nobody in Africa loves to be a beggar or a recipient of aid. Everywhere I go in Africa, people say, 'When are we going to stand up on our feet?'

  • Look at the international bodies that came out of U.N. - international, publicly funded bodies that neither you or I know their names, because they are completely outdated and still publicly funded because there are no sunset clauses.

  • Nobody messes with China, nobody messes with the United States, or with Europe, because these are really big entities with a lot of clout and a lot of economic power. They have a place at the table.

  • While the Marshall Plan was important for Europe's recovery, Europe's prosperity was really built on economic integration and policy coherence.

  • Make as much money as you can, but can you please pay your taxes, because this is a major problem.

  • I don't subscribe to the narrative that Africa is backward because of colonialism.

  • What do you do if you're an executive who resigns? You declare yourself a consultant.

  • If Sudan starts to crumble, the shock waves will spread.

  • Africa has 53 countries. And you find that three or four countries in these 53 are dominating the news.

  • You get over your first love by falling in love with something new.

  • Of course, Nelson Mandela, everybody knows Nelson Mandela. I mean, he's a great gift not only for Africa but for the whole world, actually. But do not expect everybody to be a Nelson Mandela.

  • If we are to build grassroots respect for the institutions and processes that constitute democracy, the state must treat its citizens as real citizens rather than as subjects.

  • Young people are better educated. They grew up in a society which is well connected, well informed. They are able to communicate to one another, to know what is happening.

  • Women do kids. Women do cooking. Women doing everything. And yet, their position in society is totally unacceptable.

  • From my father, I learnt kindness and how to talk straight.

  • Behind every corrupt politician are 10-20 corrupt businessmen.

  • Governance is everything. Without governance we have nothing

  • I came to the conclusion that unless you are ruled properly, you cannot move forward. Everything else is second. Everything.

  • I made money. I wanted to give it back to Africa but I wanted to give it back in a meaningful way. So I really want to do something which deals with the root of the problem of hunger, of disease, of ills we have in our society.

  • If a European guy came to Africa and said hey guys, you don't have good - people could tell him to go to hell. You are an imperialist. You are a colonialist. Who are the hell are you to come and tell us what to do? I'm an African. Whatever I say nobody in Africa tell me well, it's not of your business. It is my business.

  • People never confess to failure. They should.

  • The mobile industry changed Africa.

  • The U.S. has been a great friend all these years, but as soon as Africa found itself starting to move up, the U.S. is really disengaging.

  • The way forward for Africa is investment.

  • There is a crisis of leadership and governance in Africa, and we must face it.

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