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Africa's
garden of democracy
Kabasubabu
Katulondi
June 15,
2005
http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-africa_democracy/elections_2603.jsp
The future of democracy
in Africa, says the Congolese writer Kabasubabu Katulondi, rests on a
new generation of leaders committed to the vision of African renaissance
rooted in people’s needs, civic institutions, and a culture of political
collaboration.
The African paradox
can be simply stated. Africa is widely perceived throughout most of the
world as the continent of perpetual socio-political upheavals and tragic
military confrontations; yet its people’s commitment to democracy, far
from undergoing any erosion, is, at grassroots level in particular, more
and more vibrant.
The first part of
the paradox feeds off evidence familiar to me as a writer and political
activist from the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country where around
3.5 million people have died in a series of wars and invasions over the
last decade – conflicts which are now, thankfully, coming to an end. The
second part, less dramatic but equally real, was impressed on me during
the third conference of the Community
of Democracies (CoD) in Santiago, Chile, in May 2005.
In this article I
briefly explore some of the key proposals from the NGOs process of the
third ministerial conference of the Community of Democracies. An understanding
of the importance of these vital proposals starts with the debacle of
the post-1990 wave of democratisation in Africa; continues by contrasting
them with the newer impetus for democratisation, stemming from the ideal
of an "African renaissance"; and concludes by emphasising the
fact that African leaders today have a responsibility to think, act and
create forms of African democracy that move beyond mere "electoralism".
The illusion of
past democratisation
By the late
1980s, corrupt dictatorships had created general economic misery across
sub-Saharan Africa. Coupled with pressures stemming from the end of the
cold war, the result was enormous internal political demand for democratisation.
In this broad context, many sub-Saharan countries embarked on democratic
reforms; national conferences, constitutional conventions and various
other negotiations were enthusiastically launched in Benin, Ivory Coast,
Nigeria, Congo-Brazzaville and the then Zaire in search of political change
that embraced democratic principles.
In some countries,
elections were successfully organised, and were declared free and fair.
The result, however, was not that the interests of the people (demos)
became the central focus of political management. Instead, political elites
surrounded by their clients and ethnic nomenklatura continued
to "privatise the state" (see Munyaradzi Murobe’s essay in Eddy
Maloka & Elizabeth le Roux, eds., Problematising the African Renaissance,
2000).
Elections came to appear formalities used to sanction and recycle established
oligarchies.
Zambia, Kenya, Senegal
and Zimbabwe are eloquent current examples of "electoralist"
regimes with no democratic substance, in which the people are still marginalised
(see the analysis of "low-intensity democracy" in William I
Robinson, Promoting Polyarchy: Globalization, US Intervention, and
Hegemony (2005).
The resulting "façade democracy" has profoundly distorted
the essence of democracy and created dysfunctional political systems in
sub-Saharan Africa where genuine multiparty politics cannot function.
The reality of
future democratization?
Spreading
disillusion with the superficial, electoralist democratisation of the
post-1990 period called for a fresh dynamic. This gradually emerged internally,
propelled by the ideal of an African renaissance. In this process, prominent
African leaders such as Thabo
Mbeki of South Africa, Olusegun
Obasanjo of Nigeria, Abdoulaye
Wade of Senegal, and Abdelaziz
Bouteflika of Algeria have played a vital role. In the New Partnership
for African Development (Nepad)
they articulated a coherent vision for the rebirth of the continent.
Nepad is more than
a mere economic policy, it is a strategy for Africa’s integral development,
encompassing social, economic and political aspects: sustainable growth,
poverty alleviation and good governance. Its Peer Review Mechanism (PRM)
stands out as an innovative
political device, offering African leaders a tool of political cooperation
aimed at ensuring that our nations engage in building developmental states
capable of promoting constitutional democracy and people’s well-being.
Such efforts – whose
value was demonstrated in the forcing of elections in Togo
after an attempted hereditary succession of power – clearly signal that
Africa has entered a new political era. Its leaders have learned constructive
lessons from the failures of the post-cold war democratisation and started
to internalise new values. But the long walk to the "garden of democracy",
to use French sociologist Philippe
Braud’s eloquent metaphor, needs more: a harmonious collaboration
of governments, opposition and civil society.
Africa’s democratic
goods
The African
delegates at the Community of Democracies meeting in Santiago in May,
building on the regional workshop organised in Johannesburg in November
2004, brought some of these understandings to bear in discussing how democracy
is unfolding on the African continent. In Johannesburg, NGO delegates
representing major sub-Saharan regions had agreed that building democracy
is a responsibility shared between governments and communities, and explored
key issues of political legitimacy, regular and competitive elections,
financing of political parties, and government-opposition relationships.
The NGO process of
the CoD in Santiago produced various important recommendations
– notably on creating legitimacy through institutionalising multiparty
democracy, encouraging collaborative attitudes between government and
opposition, ending opportunistic manipulation of constitutions, and the
imperative of resisting the politicisation of military and security forces.
Many of these recommendations
bear on the importance of avoiding an adversarial political culture in
post-conflict and culturally heterogeneous societies, which has caused
many tragedies in Africa – in the Ivory Coast and Zimbabwe, for instance.
It is also vital that African political systems strengthen democracy by
developing their systemic capacities to respond to the real needs of the
people at grassroots levels, particularly in semi-urban and rural areas.
An African, humanist
project
The idea
of democracy in the history of post-independence sub-Saharan Africa has
become associated with chaos, daily protests, and the abuse of freedom
of expression. The great Mwalimu
Julius Nyerere, disappointed by the rampant chaos of the period, once
declared that "multipartism is a luxury that we in Africa cannot
afford". Unfortunately, many African dictators who rejected multiparty
democracy, arguing that it is incompatible with African culture, were
not able to come up with credible alternatives. On the contrary, they
developed repugnant dictatorial regimes and justified them as being supposedly
congruent with the power systems of pre-colonial, traditional chiefs.
In its final recommendations,
the third CoD conference made a specific commitment
to strengthen the commitments to reform of sub-Saharan African leaders,
including the Peer
Review Mechanism. Since democratisation has tremendous financial implications,
the CoD also called for the cancellation of the debts of African countries
– a call echoed in the G8 initiative announced on 11
June.
The onus remains on
African leaders at all levels. The "blame it on imperialists and
colonisers" excuse has lost credibility. My deepest conviction is
that democracy is a system and democratisation is a process: the way to
build both is by using local ingenuity and drawing on the universal heritage,
without altering the essence of democracy as a humanist project. Almost
a half-century after independence, sub-Saharan Africans still face the
tremendous challenge of building industrial societies and creating democracy
as their superstructure.
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