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Democracy
is losing ground in Africa
Edmund Sanders, Los Angeles Times
July 13, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-africa13-2008jul13,0,5602870.story
Election-related meltdowns in Zimbabwe and Kenya are stark reminders
of democracy's fragile foothold in Africa, experts say, despite
years of financial and diplomatic investment by the United States
and other Western nations.
A combination of challenges
unique to the continent, including worsening poverty and inconsistent
international engagement, is blamed for fueling a string of setbacks.
After some progress in the early 1990s, once-promising governments
have regressed, particularly around election time.
"Overall, the continent
has had a deflation of strong democratic leadership in recent years,"
said J. Stephen Morrison, Africa director at the Center for Strategic
and International Studies in Washington. "In some places we
are seeing that autocratic pseudo-democracies have formed."
In addition to disputed
presidential elections in Zimbabwe and Kenya, where longtime incumbents
refused to cede power after their opponents declared victory at
the polls, last year's ruling party victory in Nigeria was widely
condemned as flawed. Uganda's president changed the country's constitution
to stay in power. Ethiopian government forces killed about 200 opposition
supporters after a 2005 vote.
Though there have been
democratic success stories, such as Ghana and Sierra Leone, some
see the coming years as a crucial period in determining whether
much of Africa will move forward in embracing democracy.
"The continent right
now seems caught in the middle between the good cases and bad cases,"
said Chris Fomunyoh, senior associate for Africa at the National
Democratic Institute, which promotes democratic reform around the
world.
Western
interest wanes
The
Bush administration has been praised for sharply stepping up spending
to combat diseases in Africa, including about $19 billion on HIV/AIDs
and $1.2 billion on malaria. But it has been less vigilant when
it comes to bolstering democratic institutions, analysts say.
Efforts to promote democracy
in Africa largely have been confined to Sudan, which was torn by
a north-south war and is racked by conflict in the Darfur region,
in which more than 200,000 people have died.
Indeed, after a flurry
of support in the early 1990s, which helped usher in multiparty
systems and stronger institutions, the U.S. and other Western powers
have largely focused on the Middle East and Asia.
Zimbabwe's crisis is
a prime example, critics say. President Robert Mugabe long ago began
leading his southern African nation toward economic ruin and violent
autocracy.
"We should have
stopped Mugabe in his tracks years ago," said Johann Kriegler,
who oversaw South Africa's first democratic election in 1994 and
is leading a commission to investigate Kenya's electoral breakdown.
African leaders have
long been reluctant to criticize one another lest their own records
be judged. However, the presidents of Senegal and Zambia, along
with former South African President Nelson Mandela, recently have
roundly criticized Zimbabwe's leadership.
Yet South Africa's Thabo
Mbeki has continued to refuse to condemn Mugabe. And at an African
Union summit in Egypt early this month, Mugabe was met with only
muted protest.
Limited international
outcry after disputed polls in places like Nigeria may have emboldened
other African leaders, such as Mugabe and Kenya's President Mwai
Kibaki, experts said.
"There's been a
certain amount of serial learning that has gone on," Morrison
said. "Incumbents realize that some pretense to a democratic
process is all you need, combined with heavy-handed intimidation
of the opposition."
After the 2001
Al Qaeda attacks on New York and the Pentagon, U.S. priorities around
the globe changed, with a greater emphasis on cultivating partners
in the Bush administration's war on terrorism. Such shifts in priorities
may explain why the United States took a softer approach in dealing
with Ethiopia's crackdown in 2005, according to Fomunyoh. A year
later, Ethiopia, with U.S. support, entered neighboring Somalia
to crush a fledgling Islamic regime that U.S. officials said was
linked to Al Qaeda.
"The
U.S. should not get blinded by the global war on terror to the point
of overlooking other shortcomings," Fomunyoh said.
Friends
with no strings
China's
growing influence through investment in Africa has created another
roadblock to democracy, analysts say, providing an alternative to
governments not interested in political reform. In addition to buying
billions of dollars in oil and other natural resources, China is
building roads, bridges and other infrastructure in nearly every
major African nation without attaching Western-style conditions.
The Chinese have openly
sold weapons to some of Africa's most controversial governments,
including Sudan. Early this year, a pro-government Chinese newspaper
said the violence in Kenya, in which nearly 1,000 were killed, was
proof that Western-style democracy "isn't suited to African
conditions, but rather carries with it the root of disaster."
"China's role is
giving a certain confidence to those who want to pursue a model
of a strong central, nondemocratic state," Morrison said.
Chinese officials recently
beefed up calls for change in Sudan amid a threat to boycott the
Beijing Olympics in August. But China joined Russia on Friday in
vetoing a U.N. Security Council resolution sponsored by the U.S.
to impose sanctions on Zimbabwe.
Progress
cited
Some
African leaders contend that despite the setbacks, democracy is
far stronger on the continent than it was in the 1970s and '80s,
when dictators ruled with an iron fist, often bolstered by Cold
War enticements from the United States or the Soviet Union.
"Although we have
seen some disappointing developments, we should not lose sight of
the fact that progress has been made," said Kenya's Wangari
Maathai, the first African woman awarded the Nobel Peace Prize,
in 2004. "These are problems arising because we have raised
the bar."
In Kenya, she said, free
speech and an open media were unthinkable a decade ago.
The continent and its
people are still struggling to overcome the effects of European
colonialism, she said, which exacerbated tribal conflicts by drawing
arbitrary national borders and setting an example of a supreme ruler
in the form of a colonial governor.
"Most of the leaders
today are part of the independence generation," said Peter
Oloo Aringo, a former Kenyan lawmaker who works as a consultant
to strengthen democratic institutions. "They are trying to
imitate the people they succeeded during the colonial period and
those people held all the power to themselves."
Maathai said it might
take another generation for Africa to produce true democratic reformers.
"So far, what Kibaki
and others in the ruling elite have done is, as the democratic winds
changed, they changed with the wind," she said. "But they
didn't change in their hearts."
Mandela remains the continent's
most celebrated democratic leader, relinquishing power after just
one term and working to strengthen institutions that would check
presidential powers.
"He has
iconic status, but so far not many have followed him," said
Babafemi Badejo, an author and United Nations political advisor
in Liberia. "Definitely there is a leadership deficit in Africa.
It's a common denominator that has made democracy harder."
Kriegler said Africa's growing poverty was another hindrance. More
than two-thirds of the continent's people live on less than $2 a
day.
"Poverty is the
biggest single handicap," he said. "Democracy only functions
where there is a viable society, where people have hope and personal
dignity.
"How can you have
democracy in a place where people are happy to sell their vote for
[a couple of dollars]? Here, if the winners take all, the losers
starve."
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