Africa doesn’t lack plans. Africa lacks men who bleed for implementation. Greg Mills and Olusegun Obasanjo spent years sitting with presidents and prime ministers across ten countries. They weren’t hunting for theory. They were collecting receipts.
Receipts from Singapore, which had no oil and no land but turned discipline into dollars. Receipts from Rwanda, which rose from genocide’s ashes while the world watched in silence. Receipts from Botswana, which escaped poverty with nothing but cows, dust, and institutions that worked.
Secrets that sound dull until you see them repeat through history, blood, and power.It always starts with politics, but not the politics that feeds on tribe. Lee Kuan Yew didn’t build Singapore by appeasing his clan. He forced Chinese, Malays, and Indians to kneel at one altar: survival through production. Nations that chased ethnicity buried themselves. Nations that built coalitions around growth became legends.
In 2023, a man walked into the Muslim North, the Christian South, the Igbo market, and the Hausa farm and said one thing: “Let’s produce.” That wasn’t campaign talk. That was Singapore’s code spoken in Isiagu. Coalition over calculation.Then comes the first brick: security. In 1966, Botswana was poorer than Nigeria. What changed wasn’t diamonds. It was discipline. They cleaned up the police. They cleaned up the courts.
Investors came because their money was safer than their lives. Twenty years ago, Anambra was called the “kidnap capital.” By the time his tenure ended, investors were returning with checkbooks. No speeches. Just security. Courts paid. Kidnappers hunted. Because no man builds a factory where his children cannot sleep.After the guns are silenced comes the wisdom of starting where you stand. Japan after Hiroshima had no steel, no oil, no land.
It started with textiles and rice. Ethiopia today follows the same path: cotton to shirts to exports. You don’t begin with rocket science. You begin with your soil. “From consumption to production” is not a slogan. It’s history. Process the cocoa. Can the tomatoes. Export the code. The brewery raised in Onitsha was never just beer. It was Ethiopia’s textile park wearing Igbo cloth. Start with what you have.
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Then climb but wisdom dies without movement. Rome didn’t erect statues first. It laid roads. Roads carried legions, trade, taxes, and civilization. Today the Mombasa-Nairobi-Kampala corridor moves billions for the same reason. The real infrastructure is not what looks good in photos. It’s what reduces the cost of moving goods. A road from Onitsha market to Port Harcourt port matters more than ten flyovers that lead nowhere. Trade over vanity.
Then comes the hardest war of all: cities. London burned in 1666 and rose with plans, titles, and sewers. Lagos was designed by the British in the 1900s. But today we urbanize by accident: farm to Lagos to slum. That is how nations die. Cities without planning become cemeteries for dreams. Land titles. Organized markets. Skills for youth. Order is not the enemy of hustle. Order is what turns hustle into wealth.
None of this survives if the state tries to become a trader. Britain didn’t build an empire with government companies. It built it with risk-takers and merchants. The state gave law. The traders gave wealth. Mauritius copied the formula. Ghana is copying it now. “Government has no business in business” is not Adam Smith. It’s People’s Club logic. Secure the streets. Tax fairly.
Stop trading against your own people. That is why one man left Anambra with savings instead of debts. Trader discipline inside Government House.And yet all six codes collapse without the seventh: implementation. China didn’t rise on perfect five-year plans. Deng Xiaoping said it plain: “I don’t care if the cat is black or white, if it catches mice.”
Then he tracked three things every week: power, roads, exports. Africa is drowning in policies. What it lacks are leaders who open spreadsheets on Monday morning. Leaders who know budget lines. Leaders who measure results instead of announcing them. Three priorities. Daily tracking. Verifiable results. Here is the truth they will never print in bold: Singapore obeyed the codes. Rwanda obeyed the codes. Botswana obeyed the codes.
Nigeria broke all seven. For twenty-five years we have waited for aid, for miracles, for perfect conditions. They never came. But one man is speaking the language of nations that refused to die. Not theory. Not slogans. The seven codes written in blood. The codes are old. The voice is new.
Gabriel N. Orji
