Every day, the same message comes from the political circles controlling Cape Verde:
But maybe that is exactly the problem.
A country that rejects new players, rejects investment, rejects activity, and rejects growth is not protecting its future — it is protecting a monopoly.
The current system does not fear “foreigners.”
It fears competition.
Because the moment active players arrive…
The moment new parties rise…
The moment Congress stops being controlled by the same small circles…
For months, Cape Verde has remained stagnant while its leadership blocks development projects, rejects political competition, and treats citizenship like a private reward for loyal allies.
• New players are discouraged from settling
• Economic growth remains weak
• Congress turns into a theater of rejection instead of construction
• The same groups keep recycling power among themselves
And then they ask why nobody cares about Cape Verde.
The truth is becoming obvious:
They want a smaller Cape Verde…
A quieter Cape Verde…
A controlled Cape Verde.
That is why every independent movement is attacked.
That is why every new voice is mocked.
That is why every attempt to organize politically is treated like a threat.
Because they know something very simple:
A country with active new citizens cannot be controlled forever.
Cape Verde deserves activity.
Cape Verde deserves competition.
Cape Verde deserves a future bigger than the ambitions of a few gatekeepers.
And whether they like it or not…
