“There’s no playbook for leadership when the stakes are high, no playbook for what must be done in the face of a 21st century pandemic,” leadership consultant Mark Nevins wrote in Forbes. An inclusive, cohesive society, one not polarised on ideological, racial, ethnic, or religious faultlines, cannot harm the cause though. Both finally come down to biological security—life itself. A lot of focus has now shifted to Africa, an understudied continent where COVID-19 has affected all countries by now—and Congo battles it as part of a “triple threat”, alongside a recrudescent Ebola outbreak and measles. Africa is largely caught between a picture of stark leadership deficit and a vulnerable populace. At one end, Tanzanian President John Magufuli ridicules testing kits, saying even “a goat and a pawpaw” (papaya tree) had tested positive. At the other, a French scientist said on TV, “If I can be provocative, shouldn’t we be doing this study in Africa...”, prompting outrage across La Francophonie and beyond. Among the angry decrials: the Ivorian football star Didier Drogba memorably proclaiming that Africans are “not guinea pigs”. Racism, of course, is alive and well on other continents too. To face down such an unprecedented assault on human security as COVID-19 represents, what one needs is collaborative, people-oriented leadership—and a Trumpesque spirit may not ensure that security in either a medical sense or a social one. No country in the world matches the US’s nearly 2 million cases and upwards of 1.1 lakh deaths.