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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Tutu Alicante

Interviewed January 4, 2011

The Arab Spring has definitely shown us one thing, that there is real power when people come together. Equatorial Guinea, like Libya, has an economy that is totally dependent on oil and, like Libya, has a government that has kept civil society and other forces in society completely apart from the economic base of the country, the economic resources. So you have a group of disenfranchised young people, old people, kids being raised in Equatorial Guinea, a country with the highest GDP per capita in Africa. And the likelihood, the possibility, the real danger of that society rebelling and demanding rights in the way that it happened in Libya, Egypt, and other countries is very, very high.

I think so far what has kept people from taking to the streets is a sense of, what happens after that. Equatorial Guinea has about a third of its population outside the country in the diaspora between Gabon, Cameroon, Nigeria and Spain. That’s a community that is very fragmented, very divided. And people inside Equatorial Guinea that could actually organize, coalesce, come together at a plaza and demand certain rights, has – they have serious doubts about the potential of that group outside – the group of politicians, political leaders outside – to actually come together and offer a better solution or a better future for the country than what they have today. And I think that doubt, that lack of certainty, that not knowing what the future holds is what is keeping young people today still at bay from organizing and taking over to the streets.