Thursday, 25 August 2011

Qaddafi's Out, So Who's the Longest-Serving Dictator Now ?

Barring a truly remarkable turn of events, Muammar al-Qaddafi's rule appears to have come to an end. Having taken power 41 years and 357 days ago, Qaddafi had been the world's longest-ruling sitting leader (not counting royals). He fell short of the all-time record of 49 years set by Fidel Castro, as well as those of Chiang Kai-shek (46 years) and Kim Il Sung (45 years.) So who takes the crown now?
According to wikipedia,it's Cameroonian President Paul Biya, at 36 years. However, that's disputable since Biya was actually prime minister for the first seven of those years and only assumed the office of the presidency when the sitting president died in 1982.

Going down the list, there's Mohamed Abdelaziz, president of Western Sahara ,which is not a generally recognized country at 34 years. Then there's Yemen's Ali Abdullah Saleh at 33 years, though his grip on power is bumpy to say the least.

That leaves Equatorial Guinea's kleptocratic President  Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo as the world's longest-serving undisputed ruler at 32 years and 21 days. Jose Eduardo dos Santos of Angola and Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe are close behind him, both at 31 years.

Given that Obiang and dos Santos are both 71 and Mugabe is 87, Castro's all-time dictator longevity record appears to be pretty safe.

3 comments:

  1. Hahahahaha. i agree Castro is the champ. though with these african leaders you never know.

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  2. Many thanks my learned friend..Kind Regards

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