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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Citizenship issues
Belonging and citizenship in Africa
Hippolyt A. S. Pul
Extracted from Democracy at large, Volume1 No. 3
2005
http://www.democracyatlarge.org/
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The creation
of the African Union has revived pan-Africanists' dreams of establishing
a continental state and a common citizenship out of the continent's
disparate populations. But while such unions are forming at the
regional level, the continent simultaneously faces a proliferation
of violent ethnic and/or religious conflicts, which are tearing
its societies apart. From the politico-religious conflicts in Algeria
to the battles for political power in Zimbabwe, Africa finds itself
embroiled in wars that have effectively redefined belonging and
citizenship in very exclusionary terms.
Some analysts
have suggested that Africa's arbitrary colonial boundaries explain
the continent's conflicts. Others point to the youth of some African
states or to the absence of strong, transparent and accountable
systems of governance in Africa's postcolonial states. While the
wars in Angola and the political turmoil in Zimbabwe can be attributed
to the birth pangs of emerging nations, such reasoning does not
explain why older states like Liberia and Ethiopia descended into
civil war after some 100 years as nation-states. Why is Somalia
- the only country on the continent with one ethnic group, one language,
and one faith (the majority of Somalis are Muslim) - the home of
violent interclan warfare? In sum, why is Africa breaking apart
when the rest of the world is forming continental states?
Defining
citizenship: a clash of world views?
By definition, citizenship is shared by people who also share the
same geopolitical space and, presumably, a common identity and history.
As Lance Massey notes, the concept of "
citizenship implies
a profound obligation to identify self with other, self as other
- to identify with one's community, and hold its interests as dear
as one's own (should they conflict), no matter if that community
is a town, city, state, or country."1
In this view, a citizen's "community" is defined by the
borders of his or her nation.
But are these
attributes-characteristic of Western notions of citizenship-valid
in Africa? Do Africans accept the boundaries of post-colonial states
as the defining frontiers of the geopolitical spaces in which they
find common citizenship? If identification of self with other is
a necessary ingredient for fostering a sense of co-citizenship,
why - after years of coexistence and extensive intermarriage-is
a sense of separateness eclipsing that of sameness in Africa's political
discourse?
Neighbors
as strangers or co-citizens
Despite several decades as independent nation-states, most people
in African countries do not consider themselves to be co-citizens
with people living within the borders of their home countries. This
is because the outline of current African borders was set in 1885
by a group of European leaders meeting in Berlin. Many African countries,
which emerged from this 1885 map, remain amalgams of ethnic groups
whose distinct political and economic interests reinforce a sense
of otherness rather than sameness. The Democratic Republic of Congo,
formerly Zaire, is the archetypical case in which a population of
43 million people from 120 ethnic groups were brought together in
an "unnatural coalition of peoples and places,"2
in the words of the Kenyan newspaper The East African.
Another root
of this sense of otherness is the often unequal status accorded
to different groups in the modern African state. For example, in
Liberia, Americo-Liberians, who make up only 5% of the population,
have forced an apartheid-like system on indigenous tribes. The Ivorian
crisis arises from the fact that one in four of the country's residents
were born to economic migrants and, even though some have lived
in the country for generations, are still considered foreigners.
In some regions of Nigeria, where economic and political migration
has been common, there is now some confusion about who belongs and
who does not, as selective distinctions are often made between "indigenes"
and "non-indigenes" or strangers. While several ethnic
groups have migrated to regions like Nasarawa in the last century,
some - like the Tiv - are considered strangers or recent settlers,
while others - such as the Gwari -are not.3
Paradoxically,
this emerging trend of defining citizenship in exclusionary terms
runs counter to the expressed values of most African societies.
For example, the concepts of "ebusua" (among the Akans
in southern Ghana) or "niilu" (among the Dagara of northwest
Ghana) - meaning "extended family" - have always defined
belonging expansively. Indeed, a Dagara proverb states that, like
the vine of the pumpkin, every living person is but a part of one
extended root. This sums up the African conception of citizenship
or belonging - we are all one and interconnected.
Boundary-less
citizenship
This inclusive interpretation of belonging is akin to the legal
concept of jus sanguini (citizenship defined by blood),
which runs counter to the concept of jus soli (citizenship
defined by birthplace).4
For most communities in Africa, membership in a political community
is defined not by birthplace, but by consanguineal relationships
and other affinal ties such as marriage, economic relationships
and military alliances.
Given this conception
of belonging, the boundaries and institutions of the modern state
have no relevance for most Africans. This is why a Mossi from Burkina
Faso who travels to any part of Ghana is more likely to register
his or her presence with a local Mossi chief than he or she is to
call on the Burkinabe Embassy in Ghana for anything. A Mossi might
simply move from a Mossi community in one country to one in another
country and find himself seamlessly integrated into the social structure
and accorded all rights available to the indigenes without a second
thought. The same phenomenon holds true for other ethnic groups.
Hence, territoriality is alien to most ethnic groups in Africa as
the defi ning principle of citizenship. Instead, ethnic citizenship,
which ignores national boundaries, tends to take precedence. A person
is considered a citizen of a group - according to the group's custom
- regardless of the boundaries and generation gaps that may exist
between him or her and the group.
For instance,
when the current President of Niger, Mamadou Tandja, visited his
cousin Ousmane Tandja at the birthplace of his father in Mauritania
in February 2004, he received a spontaneous welcome. The journal
Construire l'Afrique explained his citizenship as follows:
"President Tandja was born in Niger, where his father settled
after a long trek that took him through Mali and Chad;
he married
in a region
where matriarchy is practiced. As a result, the
child 'belongs to the mother,' hence the Niger nationality of President
Tandja."5
Rather than
being ethnocentric and exclusionary, this kind of boundary-less
citizenship historically allowed strangers or foreigners to be incorporated
though marriage or through assimilation "into the community
and state silently [and] unconsciously until they were ideally at
least fully fledged members indistinguishable from the majority
of the population."6
Scholars Roland Cohen and John Middleton consider this way of defi
ning belonging as natural to African social settings,
in which groups and individuals identifi ed with one or more kinds
of cultural traditions are, and always have been, interacting
and creating among themselves the bases for new types of groupings
that are or will be institutionalized within new or altered forms
of social structures as well as new or altered cultural expressions
of these relationships.7
In sum, it is
this perpetual effort to create spaces for the participation of
all in African societies that leads to the strong sense of sameness
that transcends the boundaries of the nation-state. In other words,
boundaries do not make us citizens; relationships do.
States without
citizens
So why is Africa now plagued by xenophobic tendencies that are not
only estranging groups of people that may have lived together for
centuries but are also pitting them against each other in fi erce
competition over ethno-political claims to their homelands? What
happened to the African tendency and capacity to incorporate and
assimilate strangers into co-citizenship? How did we get to Africa's
citizen-less states?
Several explanations
are possible. First, unlike traditional African political communities
in which people had a sense of ownership, the location, modus operandi
and decision-making structures of modern states have alienated the
majority from participation in them. As a result, most post-independence
African countries are, in the words of scholar Goran Hyden, "societies
without a state." The state, he argues, "sits suspended
in 'mid-air' over society and is not an integral mechanism of the
day-to-day productive activities of society."8 There is a tremendous
disconnect between the state and citizens.
Consequently,
African governments seldom consider the views and aspirations of
their citizens when managing the affairs of the state. In fact,
according to the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA),
there is an "...almost total absence of any upward fl ow of
opinions, ideas, needs, knowledge from the periphery to the policy
and decision-making apparatus at the centre." Unfortunately,
the UNECA continued, "When representative institutions exist
they assemble the ideas and positions of politicians, not communities."
9
Second, in Africa
the state has lost its moral legitimacy because (1) it cannot provide
for the basic needs of the people and (2) it has failed to guarantee
their basic rights. To the majority of citizens, the state is no
more than a tax machine, reaping where it has not sown. Many citizens
see the African state as an external entity that should be shunned.
Unless, of course, a citizen has access to state resources, in which
case the state is an entity to be exploited. This common view explains
the acquiescence of the majority in the unbridled corruption and
graft that drain the continent of its economic resources.
Third, the failure
of the state to provide a level playing fi eld for all ethnic groups
has led people to emphasize ethnic over national citizenship as
they struggle for some control of the modern state (an argument
William Zartman has made). One result, in states that hold democratic
elections, has been the predominance of ethnic patronage and clientelism
in electoral processes. Another result has been the emergence of
ethnic power brokers-neither accountable to the state nor elected
by the people - whose activities may not always be in the best interests
of the state or the people for whom they speak.
Conclusion
and recommendations
If active citizenship was measured by election turnout, most African
countries could boast of highly committed citizens ready to defy
rain and wind to ensure their countries are democratic ones. Unfortunately,
the long queues are not enough to signify democratic commitment.
People vote for personalities, because of ethnic political patronage,
or because a party offi cial has been good to them. Too few vote
because a party has good ideas or for programs that would enable
them live a dignifying life. They are not at the polls because the
state is "
the individual's only means of realizing his
own best ends, [nor because] a man could not be a good man unless
he were also a good citizen,"10
as Aristotle and Plato would want us to believe. Because they have
no confi dence in the transparency or objectivity of the state,
they vote for kith and kin in an attempt to satisfy their immediate
survival needs.
Bringing
citizens back
One way in which African states can reclaim their citizens is to
establish political and economic legitimacy by enabling citizens
to meet their own needs rather than depend on hand-outs from ethnic
elites and/or party functionaries. To do this, states must create
a level playing field for citizens of all ethnicities and establish
transparent decision-making processes so citizens see less need
to resort to ethnic and political clientelism to meet their basic
needs. Citizen participation must go beyond the rituals of the ballot
box. Issues-based electoral campaigns must replace personality-based
ones.
To meet these
goals, public policy agendas must be set from the bottom up, not
the top down, as has too often been the case. In addition, communities
must be educated to understand that (1) they, as citizens, have
rights; (2) the state has an obligation to uphold those rights;
(3) they are entitled to receive certain things from the government;
and (4) their communities have a duty to claim what they have a
right to through active civic engagement beyond the ballot box.
But the longer
term project to unite citizens and state demands the deconstruction
of contemporary national boundaries that have been used to maintain
crony dictatorships in most states. This project requires that the
boundaries of the Berlin conference follow the example of the Berlin
wall and crumble into rubble in order to give way to the free movement
of Africa's people to places where they find belonging. The people
of Niger spoke for the rest of the ordinary people of Africa when
they rebuffed President Tandja's political opponents, who challenged
his nationality when he announced his candidacy for the Presidency
of Niger. As Construire l'Afrique reports:
Curiously,
in Niger, where ethnic confl ict is fairly strong, the population
has not followed the defenders of this cause, denounced as working
against the development of Niger and Africa towards integration
and unity.11
That rebuff
is a sentinel call from ordinary people, the voting public of Niger,
for the dismantling of boundaries and the redefinition of citizenship
in Africa. As Construire l'Afrique concluded:
President
Tandja's visit to his family of origin has been seen as a strong
message of open-mindedness and tolerance for Africans and, most
importantly, for leaders to remember that, in Africa, borders
are artificial.12
*Hippolyt
A. S. Pul is Deputy Regional Director for Program Quality for West
and Central Africa Regions for Catholic Relief Services.
- Lance Massey,
"On the Origin of Citizenship in Education: Isocrates, Rhetoric,
and Kairos," Journal of Public Affairs (1997).
- The East
African
(no. 1431, Dec. 30, 1999), 10.
- Alhaji Abdullahi
Adamu (Executive Governor of Nasarawa State), "Ethnic Conflicts
in Nigeria," published 27 January 2002 and available at www.abdullahiadamu.com/speeches/2ethnic.htm.
- Olivier Devaux
and André Cabanis, "The Evolution from 'Subject' to
'Citizen' in France from the High Middle Ages to the Beginning
of the Nineteenth Century" in Citizenship and Identity:
International Perspectives, a working paper from the Clarke
Center at Dickenson College, translated by Catherine Beaudry and
Shana Hecht.
- «D'origine
mauritanienne, le Président du Niger rend visite à
ses parents,» Construire L'Afrique, 112 (1er au 29
Février, 2004), 3. Translated by DAL staff.
- Roland Cohen
and John Middleton (eds.), From Tribe to Nation in Africa:
Studies in Incorporation Processes (Chandler Publishing Company:
Scranton, PA, 1970), 6.
- Ibid.,
5.
- Göran
Hydén, No Shortcuts to Progress: African Development
Management in Perspective (Heinemann: London, 1983), 7.
- UNECA, Rural
Progress XIII (1994), 9.
- C. F. Strong,
Modern Political Constitutions, revised edition (Sidwick
& Jackson, London, 1977), 14-15.
- «D'origine
mauritanienne
» Construire L'Afrique, 112 (1er
au 29 Février, 2004), 3. Translated by DAL staff.
- Ibid.
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