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Could Southern Africa be better off after its year 2004 multiple elections?
Tawanda Mutasah
Extracted from OSISA News Edition 2, Issue 1, March 2004
March 2004

If he were to be writing in the year 2004 in the context of southern Africa, would Rousseau have cause to maintain his famous intellectual cynicism concerning representative democracy, as we know it? In the social Contract, Book III, Chapter 15, Rousseau wrote:

"The people…deceive themselves when they fancy they are free: they are so, in fact, during the election of members of parliament: for as soon as a new one is elected, they are again in chains, and are nothing. And thus, by the use they make of their brief moments of liberty, they deserve to lose it."

For the 75 million southern Africans whose countries have the opportunity to choose their political leaders in the year 2004, are their lives set to get better as a result of this opportunity? Is there a risk that there is a growing cynicism, especially among younger people, in democratic opportunities unfolding in southern Africa?

It is always difficult for Africans to decide how they feel about the numerous initiatives, and even democratic opportunities, that often come up on or about the continent. This is principally because contemporary African governance tends to be dogged by the stubborn menace: the distance between rhetoric and intentions on the one hand, and action on the other.

In Southern Africa, should it matter, for instance, that, about four years onto the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad), annual economic figures are - with the exception of Mozambique's nowhere near the 7% annual target on which the very accomplishment of Nepad goals is predicted, and that, in fact, economies such as Zimbabwe have been shrinking at the rate of 8 to 10% per annum?

Even if one wants to be supportive of a 'new African commitment' to democratic peer review, should it not be of concern that, four years after the words 'peer review" gained ascendancy on the African political podium, 37 countries have still not signed up for the African Review mechanism? Should it, or should it not, trouble one that, on present trends, 57 million African primary school age children will be out of school in 2015, the new "jomtien' target, itself already adjusted to accommodate poor results? Or that, against the backdrop of "Health for all by the year 200" pledges in the different countries of the region, there is currently no single official Voluntary Counselling Testing facility in Angola's Benguela and Lobito cities?

At a personal level, what is the most constructive African attitude I should have amidst the deafening official rhetoric on "regional integration", I still have to queue up annually for my hard to get passport because, though I travel to the US on a ten-year multiple-entry visa, I have to contend with page-gobbling single or two-month 'multiple' entry visas into Mozambique in spite of the mutual sacrifices of our people in a shared nationalist liberation history, and despite the obvious flow-charts of consanguinity?

It is with this burden of proof that Southern Africa prepares for a year where 5 of its nations- Malawi, Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia and South Africa - will hold general elections.

In 2000, the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) Parliamentary forum developed a set of electoral norms and standards that have since been elaborated on by other organisations, including the Electoral Institute of Southern Africa. If followed to the letter and spirit, these norms and standards would be the envy of many a developing region. Yet, because of the credibility gap of African politics, the upshot, so far, is disconcerting.

The first important challenge facing elections in the region is that we still have leaders who notwithstanding the most high sounding democratic palaver, cling to power by all means. At least four countries in Southern Africa have already been rifted by presidential succession politics, manifested in what I would call 'the third term curse' in the region.

It started with President Sam Nujoma of Namibia suddenly finding that he was still "young enough" to be President, and that, the people of Namibia, (as "the masses" always do , don't they?) still wanted him to run for a Third term in office, in spite of a Constitutional bar to the contrary. Nujoma moved on to amend section 29 of the Namibian Constitution, and in power since 1989, he made himself eligible for a new term of office in 1999, which he won.

We have come to realise in Southern Africa that the ruling elite clearly exchange notes on (mis-) governance, and the contagion of the third term curse has fortified us in our suspicions. In the course of the last few years, Chiluba of Zambia decided he was not to be beaten at the game. Chiluba, who had been in power since 1991,and was restricted by part IV of the Constitution of Zambia No 18 of 1996, positioned himself to amend the constitution and run for a third term in office in the late 2001 elections, encouraging his sycophants to claim that "he needs time to finish the projects that he had stated".

This was particularly ironic for a man who had been on record as saying leaders should not see themselves as indispensable, and ought to leave office and not manipulate the Constituion to remain in power. Chiluba was topped in his tracks thanks to the efforts of the Oasis forum and other campaigners within and outside Zambia.

Hot on the heels of the Chiluba scandal, President Muluzi of Malawi initially launched himself to run for a third term in office in the elections now scheduled for May 2004,with cheer leaders positioned to clamour that Malawi "would be orphaned without him".

In Zimbabwe, President Mugabe had long thrown caution to the wind. Claiming at his 2001 birthday interview that he was "as fit as two fiddles", Zimbabweans found him running for a fifth term in office in the April 2002 elections.

In the latest birthday interview in February 2004, President Mugabe has left Zimbabweans guessing again as he boasted that, although he may have retired by then, in five years' time he will still be around, "boxing quite a lot".

Despite its dramatic overtones, the third term curse in Southern Africa has, in fact, been a manifestation of a deeper-seated malady in the Constitutions and constitutional practice of a number of countries of the region. Elections are thwarted in the region by constitutions that vest too much power in individuals as is clearly borne out in, for instance, Chapter VIII of the Malawian Constitution, Chapter IV of the Zimbabwean Constitution of Zambia. In addition, the culture of respect for the Constitution is not entrenched in the minds of the leadership, in spite of their solemn oaths of office.

Contrary to the rather lame, if popular, prescription that "we ought to educate our leaders on respect for human rights and the Constitution", it appears obvious that constitutional abrogation in Southern Africa is not for want of knowledge of the importance of Constitutions on the part of some leaders: it is a bargain on what they can get away with.

There are a number of other challenges. How so we ensure that elections become issue-based platforms, providing the opportunity for the contestation of policy alternatives? How do we eliminate intimidation and violence? What of the much needed reform of constitutional and electoral models?

How do we enable the fuller participation of both men and women in decision making, including moving southern African politics - whether exercised by men or women - away from the present masculinist posture whereby too high a premium is put on power for its own sake? How do we make political leaders accountable beyond elections, so that, after voting, the people do not find themselves "again in chains"? In a word, how do we make elections in Southern Africa a meaningful event for the everyday lives of the region's people?

For the Open Initiative for Southern Africa and our partners, there is already some work underway to ensure that the region comes to as close as possible to the spirit and intentions of the SADC norms and standards on elections.

These include an OSISA-EISA conference, held in late 2003, that explored the question of electoral models and systems; support for democracy education; support for the Malawian Economic and Justice Network to elevate the election debate in Malawi to the level of policy and issue-based discourses; support for ongoing human rights monitoring in Namibia; support for women participation in decision making in Botswana; and efforts at peace-building and consolidation in Mozambique and Angola.

Equally important are ongoing efforts to ensure that the media is accessible to all contesting ideas and political shades of opinion. These include the work we are involved in through the media Monitoring Project of Namibia, as well as the watershed Africa Freedom of Expression conference that Article 19 organised on the 19th and 20th of February, 2004.

To make the 2004 Southern African elections meaningful for the region's citizens,

  • There is need to help civil society in the development of comprehensive elections engagement strategies that are not limited to elections monitoring, but include advocacy and legal action on constitutional frameworks, close monitoring of electoral administrative, effective voter education, and media and other communication efforts;
  • There is need to develop and support public interest litigation on a number of laws and practices that could potentially he held as infracting on even the limited freedoms currently protected in the electoral laws ad related legislation in the different countries of the region;
  • There is need to strengthen learning and solidarity across the region as a way of generating transitional norms and standards in electoral management and engagement;
  • There is comprehensive mutual learning by civil society of what electoral models work best for what standards; and
  • Lastly, there is need to support other advocacy and legal strategies that defend the right of civil society to organise, even though, prima facie, they may not appear to deliver directly on elections.
  • This is because a civil society that consistently fights for space across different causes and platforms against gender violence to influencing the national budget, develops the social infrastructure and expectations for citizens to demand electoral fairness. Approached this way, elections move from being occasional events, into opportunities to organise social values, rights, and interests; and - for the politicians - to seek (what should be no more than) the means of advancing those interests - political office.

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