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Democracy
as practiced in Africa
Mavis Makuni, Financial Gazette
December 06, 2007
A glimpse of electoral
processes in three countries Zimbabwe, Kenya and South Africa will
give the world an idea of how democratically, freely and fairly
they conduct elections when they hold polls to elect a president
and parliamentary representatives in the case of Kenya and ruling
party leaders in the case of the two southern African countries.
Presidential
and parliamentary elections will be held in Kenya on December 27
while the ruling ANC in South Africa and its counterpart, ZANU PF
in Zimbabwe will hold congresses earlier to elect or endorse party
presidents.
ncumbent Kenyan
president Mwai Kibaki, who will contest the elections under the
auspices of the Party for National Unity will be vying for a second
term. His main challengers will be Raila Odinga of the Orange Democratic
Movement and Kalonzo Musyoka of ODM-Kenya. Seven other candidates
representing smaller political parties will also be presidential
candidates. This will be the first election since independence in
1963 in which the Kenya African National Union (KANU) will participate
as an opposition party.
In the last
elections in 2002, all opposition parties joined forces under what
they called a rainbow coalition to end KANU's 40-year dominance
as well as oust Daniel Arap Moi who had been in power for 24 years
and was being accused of increasingly autocratic and corrupt governance.
Ironically, Moi has endorsed his old political foe, Kibaki for the
forthcoming presidential election. Since coming to power in 2002,
Kibaki's government has in turn been accused of corruption and has
weathered many storms. Kibaki, who has been accused of showing intolerance
for divergent views dismissesdhealth minister Charity Ngilu and
regional co-operation minister, John Koech for backing Odinga. Opinion
polls towards the end of last month showed Odinga and Kibaki to
be almost neck and neck.The
main campaign issues are the economy, infrastructural development,
corruption, health care, education and a new constitution.
While Kenya's
will be a full-fledged national election, the ZANU PF congress to
be held from December 11 to 14 and the ANC version beginning on
December 21 promise to produce more fireworks. The main aim of the
ZANU PF congress is apparently to endorse President Robert Mugabe
as the party's presidential candidate in national polls to be held
next year as well as declare him president for life.
Following the
million-man march in Harare last weekend whose aim was to show solidarity
with the head of state in his pursuit of the above goals, the congress
almost seems redundant. The President has already accepted nomination,
declaring during the march that he accepted the expression of confidence
in him and would not let his supporters down. It would however,
be interesting to see what would happen in the hypothetical event
that the delegates to the congress voted for a different scenario
from what already seems a fait accompli for the president.
The most interesting
political event to watch will however, be the ANC Congress in South
Africa when incumbent president Thabo Mbeki is expected to fight
a do-or-die battle against his former deputy, Jacob Zuma. South
African media reports suggest that Mbeki is in serious trouble after
a majority of ANC provinces and structures have overwhelmingly nominated
Zuma to take over as the ruling party's president. If he wins the
contest, Zuma will automatically become the party's presidential
candidate in elections to be held after Mbeki's current term ends
in 2009. Mbeki seems to have his back against the wall following
reports that his opponents are working on a strategy to have the
congress record a vote of no confidence against him if he loses
to Zuma in the vote for the party presidency.
It is suggested
that eventuality could spark a constitutional scenario requiring
the speaker of parliament, Baleka Mbete to temporarily take over
the reins as acting president. Another possibility being speculated
on is that Mbeki would be obliged to call an early general election.
This option, however, seems to suggest more unexpected ramifications.
Mbeki is constitutionally barred from seeking a third term after
2009. The question arises of what it would mean if he called an
early election and won it. Would he then be able to serve another
five-year term?
Whatever, the
answer, Mbeki's political woes seem immense. The South African weekly,
the Sunday Times, quotes a senior ANC official as saying "To
put it bluntly, we cannot live with Mbeki for another 18 months."
However, despite the odds being heavily stacked against him, South
African newspapers report Mbeki to be defiant and preparing to fight
the most difficult battle of his political life. When Mbeki was
asked some time ago why he would seek a third term as party president
when the constitution ruled this out, he retorted that if the leadership
of the party approached him and asked him to continue, he would
find it difficult to ignore their request.
But the outcome
of the nomination process shows that the ANC leadership has not
appealed to Mbeki to stay. Undeterred, however, Mbeki now says his
fate should be decided by delegates to the ANC congress in Limpopo
this month. What has caused Mbeki's political fortunes to nosedive
so dramatically? An observer cannot know all the internal goings-on
within the ANC but it is common knowledge that the South African
president has come under scathing criticism over a number of issues.
One was his
approach to the AIDS pandemic, which culminated in the Aids Treatment
Campaign taking the government to court to force it to provide free
treatment to ordinary South Africans. Mbeki has also taken some
flak over his firing of Zuma, which was perceived to be self-serving
in so far as it eliminated him from running for president. He has
also been consistently taken to task at home for his equivocation
with regard to the Zimbabwean crisis.
Despite basking
in the glow of victory ahead of the ANC's Polokwane conference,
Zuma has problems of his own. He still faces the threat of prosecution
for corruption arising from his relationship with his former financial
adviser, the jailed Shabir Schaik, which Judge Hillary Squires described
as being "generally corrupt".
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