As Cameroon’s President Paul Biya clings to power after 43 years in office, many across Africa are reminded of a familiar story — one told by men who once believed their rule was eternal, only to watch it vanish overnight. From Guinea to Congo, Zimbabwe to Chad, the continent’s history is marked by strongmen who governed through fear, manipulation, and military might — but ultimately learnt that no throne is indestructible.
Guinea: Alpha Condé’s Rise and Fall from Democracy to Dictatorship
In Guinea, Alpha Condé was once celebrated as a democrat — the nation’s first freely elected president in 2010 after decades of authoritarian rule. But power transformed him.
By 2020, Condé pushed through a constitutional amendment to secure a third term, triggering violent protests and deadly clashes. The same army that once protected him turned against him. In 2021, a military coup led by Colonel Mamady Doumbouya ended Condé’s reign, proving that even a seasoned politician with deep state control can fall when soldiers and citizens lose faith.
Zaire (DRC): Mobutu Sese Seko’s Empire of Excess
Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) ruled with unmatched extravagance and arrogance for 32 years. He renamed his country, built lavish palaces, and amassed unimaginable wealth while citizens sank deeper into poverty.
By the 1990s, rebellion spread, his army crumbled, and international support evaporated. In 1997, Laurent-Désiré Kabila’s rebels marched into Kinshasa, forcing Mobutu to flee into exile, where he died shortly after. His fall symbolized how corruption and isolation can rot even the most powerful of dictatorships.
Gabon: Ali Bongo and the Collapse of a Dynasty
In Gabon, Ali Bongo Ondimba inherited power from his father, Omar Bongo, continuing the family’s five-decade rule. His grip on the nation seemed unshakable — until 2023, when the military annulled a disputed election widely viewed as fraudulent.
Years of frustration over corruption and inequality reached a breaking point. Within hours of claiming victory, Bongo was placed under house arrest by his own soldiers — a stunning end to one of Africa’s longest-running political dynasties.
Burkina Faso: Blaise Compaoré and the Power of the People
Blaise Compaoré seized power in 1987 after the assassination of revolutionary leader Thomas Sankara. For 27 years, he built a loyal network, crushed opposition, and presented himself as irreplaceable.
But when he tried to amend the constitution in 2014 to extend his rule, the people rebelled. Mass protests filled the streets of Ouagadougou, the parliament was set ablaze, and Compaoré fled to Ivory Coast. His downfall became a defining moment for popular resistance in Africa.
Uganda: Idi Amin’s Reign of Terror Ends in Exile
In the 1970s, Idi Amin Dada, Uganda’s infamous dictator, ruled through terror, violence, and unpredictability. His regime left hundreds of thousands dead. For years, his military power appeared absolute — until 1979, when he invaded Tanzania and provoked a devastating counterattack.
Amin’s forces collapsed, and he fled into exile in Saudi Arabia, where he died in disgrace. His fall proved that brutality breeds obedience, but never loyalty.
Zimbabwe: Robert Mugabe’s Unraveling After Decades of Rule
Once hailed as a liberation hero, Robert Mugabe became one of Africa’s longest-serving and most repressive leaders. For nearly four decades, he maintained power through intimidation, election rigging, and patronage.
In 2017, his attempt to position his wife Grace Mugabe as successor alienated the army — his long-time enablers. The military turned against him, forcing him to resign at age 93. Mugabe’s exit marked the end of a regime that once seemed unbreakable.
Chad: Idriss Déby’s Death on the Battlefield
Idriss Déby Itno seized power in 1990 through rebellion and held it for 30 years, cementing his rule through military control and Western support. But his end came not through coup or protest — rather through the violence he had long commanded.
In April 2021, Déby was killed on the battlefield while fighting rebels in northern Chad. His sudden death exposed the fragility of regimes built solely around one man’s power and persona.
Power, Fear, and the Inevitable Fall
Across these stories, one truth stands out: power built on fear, manipulation, or military might carries the seed of its own destruction. For years, these men appeared untouchable — shielded by armies, loyalists, and rewritten constitutions. Yet, eventually, the people, the soldiers, or fate itself intervened.
As Cameroonians watch Paul Biya tighten his grip once again, they do so with the awareness that even the strongest strongmen eventually fall — and that history always reclaims what power tries to hold forever.

