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Accent Won’t Repay Kenya’s Debt: An Open Letter to President Ruto

An African leader boasting about English fluency while Kenya’s debt-to-GDP ratio nears 70 per cent? It’s time to prioritise economics over accent.

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Your Excellency,

I recently came across a widely circulated video in which you asserted that Kenyans speak better English than Nigerians. For full disclosure, I am Nigerian; however, I will not respond from a purely nationalistic standpoint. 

Rather, I will frame my reflections along three dimensions—political, economic, and national identity—whilst maintaining a rhetorical posture.

First, one must ask: how would Africa’s founding fathers—those who fought tirelessly for independence—interpret such a statement? Would they find pride in the fact that, over six decades after liberation from colonial rule, an African leader appears to valorise linguistic proximity to former colonial powers as a marker of distinction? 

More troubling is the implicit derision of a fellow African nation on the basis of accent.

What, then, becomes of the ideological legacies of figures such as Julius Nyerere, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Walter Sisulu, Albert Luthuli, Hastings Kamuzu Banda, Kwame Nkrumah, Kenneth Kaunda, and indeed Jomo Kenyatta? 

These leaders advanced visions of dignity, cultural confidence, and intellectual sovereignty. It is worth reflecting on whether such remarks align with those foundational principles.

Need for substance

Second, from a development policy perspective, proficiency in the English language is neither a sufficient nor a necessary condition for economic advancement. If it were, non-Anglophone powers would not occupy their current positions in the global economic hierarchy. 

China—one of Kenya’s largest creditors, with exposure estimated at approximately US$6.69 billion—did not attain its economic stature through English linguistic dominance.

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Similarly, Germany, Europe’s largest economy, operates primarily in its native language. Within Africa, major economies such as Egypt, Algeria, and Morocco—whose combined GDP approaches US$785 billion—are not English-speaking nations. 

Even India, whose professionals are prominent in global technology and medical ecosystems, deploys English largely as a functional working language, whilst maintaining strong linguistic and cultural identities.

Development, therefore, is driven by productivity, institutional capacity, innovation, and human capital—not accent or linguistic mimicry.

Nigerian excellence 

Finally, speaking now as a Nigerian, the empirical record does not support any inference of intellectual or professional inferiority. Nigerians have demonstrated global competitiveness across disciplines—medicine, engineering, law, economics, academia, and the creative industries. 

Figures such as Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka and literary giant Chinua Achebe underscore Nigeria’s intellectual contributions to global discourse.

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Likewise, leaders of international standing—including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (WTO Director-General), Akinwumi Adesina (former President of the African Development Bank), and Amina Mohammed (UN Deputy Secretary-General)—reflect a longstanding tradition of excellence in global governance and development practice.

Beyond individual accomplishments, Nigerian professionals constitute a significant share of the skilled diaspora across the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and the Middle East. 

Their integration into highly competitive labour markets is not predicated on accent, but on competence, training, and adaptability. It would be reductive to assume that their contributions are mediated by linguistic performance rather than substantive expertise.

Strategic challenges

In conclusion, Africa’s strategic priorities must transcend superficial comparisons. Our collective focus should be on accelerating technological transformation, addressing poverty and inequality, strengthening trade integration under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), advancing climate resilience, and investing in human capital development.

Kenya’s debt-to-GDP ratio—estimated at 68.9pc—raises legitimate concerns about fiscal sustainability, just as similar challenges confront many African economies. These are the issues that warrant the attention of leadership in the 21st century. 

It is therefore disheartening that public discourse is diverted towards linguistic competitiveness rather than substantive development challenges.

READ MORE: PM Mwigulu in Nairobi for France–Africa Summit as Macron and Ruto Host Two-Day Gathering 

Africa’s progress will not be defined by how closely we approximate colonial languages, but by how effectively we solve our structural economic problems.

Yours sincerely,

Taiwo Akerele, PhD
Head, Policy House International
Written on the margins of the Spring Meetings, Washington, DC
Email: taiwo.akerele@policyhouse.org
The opinions expressed here are the writer’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of The Chanzo. If you are interested in publishing in this space, please contact our editors at editor@thechanzo.com.

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