|
Back to Index
Africa's
crisis of democracy
Lydia Polgreen,
New York Times
April
22, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/23/world/africa/
KANO - Nigeria’s
troubled presidential election, which came under fire on Sunday
from local and international observers and was rejected by two leading
opposition candidates, represents a significant setback for democracy
in sub-Saharan Africa at a time when voters in countries across
the continent are becoming more disillusioned with the way democracy
is practiced.
Analysts said
the Nigerian vote was the starkest example of a worrying trend —
even as African countries hold more elections, many of their citizens
are steadily losing confidence in their democracies.
"The picture
in Africa is really mixed," said Peter Lewis, director of the
African Studies program at Johns Hopkins University, who was among
the researchers who conducted the Afrobarometer survey of African
public opinion. "Some countries have vibrant political scenes,
while other countries go through the routine of elections but governance
doesn’t seem to improve."
African voters
are losing patience with faulty elections that often exclude popular
candidates and are marred by serious irregularities, according to
the Afrobarometer survey, published last year, which sampled voters
in 18 countries, based on interviews with 1,200 to 2,400 people
per country. While 6 in 10 Africans said democracy was preferable
to any other form of government, according to the survey, satisfaction
with democracy dipped to 45 percent from 58 percent in 2001.
The threat to
Nigeria’s fragile democracy was underscored on Sunday by government
officials, who dropped dark hints warning of a possible coup attempt,
and said election critics were welcoming a military putsch by inciting
violence.
Twenty-five
candidates vied to replace the departing president in the Saturday
vote, the first time in Nigeria’s history that power will be transferred
between two civilian administrations. But the election was marred
by chaos, violence and fraud. Results are not expected until Monday
at the earliest.
Election officials
gave themselves high marks on Sunday for the handling of the polls,
but their comments were in sharp contrast to assessments of international
observers. Madeleine K. Albright, the former secretary of state,
who observed the election for the National Democratic Institute,
said that "in a number of places and in a number of ways, the
election process failed the Nigerian people." The International
Republican Institute said that the election fell "below acceptable
standards."
Such observations
represent a stunning turnabout for Nigeria, Africa’s most populous
and second richest country, and reflect the deep frustrations of
millions of Nigerians. In 2000, in the euphoric aftermath of Nigeria’s
transition from a long spell of military rule to democracy, 84 percent
of Nigerians said that they were satisfied with democracy as practiced
in Nigeria, according to the Afrobarometer survey.
By 2005 that
number had plummeted to 25 percent, lower than all the countries
surveyed save Zimbabwe. Almost 70 percent of Nigerians did not believe
elections would allow them to remove objectionable leaders, the
survey found.
Freedom House,
an organization that monitors the spread of democracy and free speech,
said in a report last year that the overall trends for African democracy
were mixed. "Sub-Saharan Africa in 2006 presents at the same
time some of the most promising examples of new democracies,"
the report said. It also has "some of the most disheartening
examples of political stagnation, democratic backsliding, and state
failure."
For every successful
election, like those held this year in once-troubled countries like
Mauritania and Democratic Republic of Congo, there have been elections
in countries that seemed on the road to consolidating democracy
but then swerved, like Gambia, Uganda, Ethiopia and Zambia. There
are also countries that hold regular elections, but they are so
flawed they cannot really be called democratic, like those in Guinea,
Zimbabwe and Gabon.
In 1976, according
to Freedom House, just three countries in Africa were listed as
"free," while the vast majority, 25, were "not free."
Thirty years later, the not-free category had shrunk to 14 states,
and the bulk of Africa now falls into the "partly free"
category.
In the middle
of that group is Nigeria, a nation of 140 million people divided
among 250 ethnic groups and two major religions, Islam and Christianity,
all of whom live in a space twice the size of California. It is
rich in oil, exporting about two million barrels a day, but the
riches that oil brings have not translated into meaningful development.
In Kano, a once
vibrant manufacturing center, the contradictions of Nigeria’s eight-year-old
experiment with elected government are vividly on display. Far from
building a unified country aimed at the greatest good for all, Nigeria
has instead become an every-man-for-himself nation. In Kano’s Government
Residential Area, where the wealthy live, each household is its
own power and water company. Plastic water tanks on spidery legs
tower over the tiled roofs, each fed by an electric pump sucking
water from a private well. The electric company provides light just
a few hours a day, so the air is thick with the belching diesel
smoke of a thousand generators, clattering away in miserable, endless
unison.
The poor must
manage however they can. With the decline of manufacturing and few
formal jobs, many residents make a meager living off one another’s
misery. Idriss Abdoulaye sells water from a pushcart for 20 naira
a jerry can, about 15 cents, to people like himself, too poor to
have wells. He makes about $2 a day, and cannot afford to send his
sons to school. Instead they go to a Koranic school, where they
learn the Koran by rote. He said he worries they will end up as
poor, illiterate traders like him. "There is no future for
the poor man in this country," he said.
The government
was supposed to make improving the nation’s infrastructure a priority
— President Olusegun Obasanjo, elected in 1999 and stepping down
next month after two terms in office, campaigned on the promise
of more electricity. Despite billions spent on the problem, all
that changed was the name of the state power company. Once known
as N.E.P.A. — which Nigerians joked stood for Never Expect Power
Again — it is now called Power Holding Company. The improvement
in service has been so minimal that a new joke has taken hold —
Please Hold Candle.
But when Saidu
Dattijo Adhama laughs about Nigeria’s troubles, it is through gritted
teeth. He is a textile manufacturer in Kano, and his factory used
to produce 3,000 cotton jersey garments a day. Six years ago he
was forced to shut down because paying for private generator power
to spin his knitters and spinners and pump water for his bleaching
and dyeing machines left him unable to compete with cheap imports
flooding the country in the wake of trade liberalization. "The
reason I went out of business is simple," he said. "It
is the Nigerian factor. No light. No water. No reliable suppliers.
How can I compete with someone in China who opens the tap and sees
water? Who taps a switch and sees light?"
Mr. Adhama used
to employ 330 workers in his workshops in the 1980s, but now he
has just 24 employees as he tries to restart his business. He said
the blame for the country’s dilapidated condition lay with its leaders.
Inept and corrupt officials have either wasted or plundered an estimated
$380 billion from Nigeria’s treasury since Nigeria won independence
from Britain in 1960.
"We are
not a poor country," Mr. Adhama said. "We have oil, we
have resources. But it is the management of those resources that
has been lacking. They have been hijacked. And then when we come
to vote them out of office for their misdeeds, they hijack that
as well." He said life now was in many ways worse than it was
under military rule — there was more crime, less order. The one
real improvement is the ability to freely speak his mind, Mr. Adhama
said. "But even that is worthless," he said. "What
is the point of talking if no one is listening?"
Mr. Adhama said
he had no nostalgia for military rule, but some Nigerians do. For
them, the names Sani Abacha, Muhammadu Buhari and Ibrahim Babangida,
fearsome military rulers from Nigeria’s past, signify security and
decisive leadership, not autocracy and corruption.
In Malumfashi,
a small town in southern Katsina state, men and boys not yet born
when Mr. Buhari, now the candidate of a popular opposition party,
was ruler, torched tires, threw stones and trashed billboards in
a rampage to express their anger that they had not been able to
vote. The ballot boxes in their town, an opposition stronghold,
had been snatched by thugs loyal to the ruling party, they said.
"We need Buhari, only Buhari," the young men shouted,
wild-eyed as they encircled a foreign journalist and photographer,
half menacing and half embracing, as they pressed their grievances.
"No job!"
"No
food!"
"No
light!"
"No
freedom!"
"No
election!"
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|