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An
African perspective: Is cyber democracy possible?
Clayton
Peel, Pambazuka News
July 30, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/49780
Wole Soyinka was addressing
a conference on the issue of the 'brain drain- from
African countries. He remarked on how many of the speakers before
him had lamented the flight of millions of Africans to the West
and how apparently desperate were these speakers, who included African
heads of state, to reverse the trend so that the bright young minds
and their skills could be retained on the continent. 'Lucky
drainees!- Soyinka enthused, with a whiff of sarcasm. While
they went abroad exploring new frontiers, 'the brains of their
stay-at-home colleagues will be found as grisly sediments on the
riverbed of the Nile. Or in the stomach linings of African crocodiles
and vultures- (Olaniyan, 2003).
You will understand then
why, at a conference of writers in exile held in Vienna in December
1987, the award-winning Somali writer, Nuruddin Farah, spoke 'In
Praise of Exile.- He was not disparaging his home country:
he was seeking to challenge the perspectives of its leaders. Basically
agreeing with Soyinka's opposition of lucky exiles to dead stay-at-homes,
Farah said he himself could not have been a writer in Somalia, only
a prisoner. Not for him the common idea that the distance of exile
kills artistic creativity: 'For me,- he wrote, 'distance
distills; ideas become clearer and better worth pursuing-.
Removed from Zimbabwe,
many of us have now become, in positive terms, more critical analysts
of the situation in our homeland; in negative terms, soppy armchair
critics. But the fact is that, we have the liberty of doing so!
This armchair critic, for I am one, has become pre-occupied with
the segmentation of Zimbabwean transnational website communities.
Racially-charged politics, a high rate of HIV-AIDS infection, the
complexity of gender relations derived from a country context that
mostly is culturally conservative, and settlement in Britain by
Zimbabweans and the various sensitivities that surround it, in both
countries, are some of the issues that are raised in these website
discourses. But difference is an opportunity to negotiate identities
and is not inimical to the historical particularities that have
shaped a definitive and distinctive ethnic presence in the demographics
of Zimbabwe and in its diaspora.
For Diaspora and Communication
studies, Zimbabwean electronic fora - the 'new media-
- and their associations in Britain represent an important interface
- a 'social embedding- (Aarsaether and Baerenholdt,
2001:49) of Diaspora communities in the homeland agenda that has
created of the websites 'specific communal refuges-
based on networks of family and friends and ethnic associations.
In a generation of émigrés witnessing their homeland-s
political and economic ruin but possessed of enhanced media technologies,
the facility to not just track, but respond to events has led to
the emergence first of social networks, and later the source of
Internet activism that irked Robert Mugabe (2003) who said it represented
'the same platforms and technologies through which virulent
propaganda and misinformation are peddled to de legitimise our just
struggles against vestigial colonialism, indeed to weaken national
cohesion and efforts at forging a broad Third World front against
what patently is a dangerous imperial world order led by warrior
states and kingdoms-.
Compatriots wanting to
assuage anxieties and nostalgia created and contributed to a web
of electronic activism that contributed meaningfully - and
varyingly - to Zimbabwean communities as the discourses and their
associations grew vivid, provocative, and productive. Creatively
using new technologies to define themselves, the Zimbabwean Diasporic
websites raise social and anthropological media properties bound
to attract scholarly attention.
Secondly, the fora are
a microcosm of Zimbabwean diversity which deconstructs the authoritarian
nationalism that has been a signature of Mugabe-s 28-year
rule. This study characterizes the Diaspora websites- 'production
of difference within common, shared and connected spaces-
(Gupta and Ferguson, 1997:45). It fills a research void acknowledged
by Mwangola (2007) regarding smaller Diaspora communities 'considered
by both their host countries and the African world to be insignificant
because of their small numbers and lack of political and/or economic
capital-. Diverse Zimbabwean identities and their expressions
which convey not only data and meaning, but community building through
communication, form a transnational public sphere of website communities
and associations representing a vibrancy absent from the 'intolerant-
and 'dull . . . intellectual ghetto- Zimbabwe had become
(Nyamfukudza 2005:21, 23) .
Thirdly, there is a general
lack of authoritative source material of a qualitative nature on
which UK agencies can rely for assessment of Zimbabwe and Zimbabweans,
in the UK and at home. Over a two-year period I have provided assessments
for law firms pursuing asylum cases and was given access to not
just the claims, but the material on which government agencies drew
to make their determinations. The source material nearly always
lacked comprehensive detail. In particular, the expectation that
all hardship in Zimbabwe must have had a party political dispensation
to be worthy of an asylum claim betrayed an insensitivity to other
tensions existing in that strangled environment, which UK-based
agencies in particular seemed to be uninterested in. My research
has the potential to expand the value and the knowledge base of
interested parties.
It makes diversity a
factor of social research with its emphasis on 'undigested
minorities- (Nyamnjoh 2006:94; Nyamfukudza, 2005:18). Despite
the significance of ethnic and cultural difference to Zimbabwe-s
distant and recent history, this has not been a priority area in
the research there has been into Zimbabwean transnationalism. The
odd scholarly observation in this direction has remarked on the
'fragmentation- (Pasura, 2006a), although to view the
diverse representations of a country-s multi-ethnic make-up
solely in that light is to potentially omit positive aspects which
the diverse populations and their plural expressions might bring
to the discourse, something the electronic media may have enhanced.
Conceptualizing this multi-polar engagement, I use Appadurai (1996),
Werbner (1997a), Wise (2006), Moyo (2007) and Habermas- descriptions
of the public sphere as the 'epistemic dimension- (2006:411)
to the procedures of democratic discourse. The research hopes to
demonstrate not only the extension of democratic space, but also
the production and reaffirmation of marginalized cultures in the
electronic fora. Zaffiro (2002), Raftopolous (2004), Ranger (2005;
2002) and Nyamfukudza (2005), among others, have tracked the Mugabe
government-s attempts to forge a corporate Zimbabwean identity
and history that either excluded or assimilated minorities, or distorted
their historical roles and the entitlements of their Zimbabwean
citizenship. The social and economic upheaval which ensued, notwithstanding
political arguments in mitigation, were accompanied by a re-ordering
of Zimbabwean historiography that replaced even-handed analysis
with unbalanced and at times rabidly racist literature (Nyamfukudza,
2005; Ranger, 2005; Raftopolous, 2004). By contrast, the transnational
websites may inform an alternative narrative that acknowledges Zimbabwe-s
demographics in deconstructing history and re-defining the nation.
As it expands its functions
and its properties become progressively more accessible to households
and other non-institutional users in Britain (OfCom, 2004), Internet
communication is being appropriated by various echelons of the society
to serve diverse interests: to 'encompass the cultural forms
of marginal constituencies- (Ebo, 1998:x) as well as 'emphasize
hierarchical political associations- (1998:2); to 'encourage
broad participation and emphasize merit over status- (1998:3)
as well as create private media spaces for individual, group and
culture aggregations (Burnett and Marshall, 2003:67-68). There is
a sense of virtual spaces being freed up to ventilate the previously
unventilated: the minorities and the marginalised, their aspirations,
their political and social will all being articulated in the relative
freedom of a media-savvy Western liberal democracy.
In Ebo-s words,
internet technology allows groups 'traditionally dislocated
from mainstream social linkages . . . to develop communal bonding-
(1998:4) through virtual and real-life associations that 'fulfil
the same traditional essence of associations and bonding, and invariably
promote social relationships that are orchestrated by inherent inegalitarian
tendencies in society- (1998:5). He concludes that the stratification
in the online associations will continue, for 'as long as
communities on the Internet allow participants to engage freely
in the creation of social realities, economic and social classifications
rooted in race, class and gender . . . will invariably influence
relationships in virtual communities- (ibid., p6). Ebo refers
to this property of online engagement as the 'cyberghetto
perspective- (ibid., p5), betraying a fear of negation and
inequality being extended to cyberspace. But the facilitation of
self-propelled diverse interest groups which use Internet communication
to gain leverage in a world of inequalities is the rather more positive
intuition behind this research.
Conclusion
To foregrounds a plurality of ethnic, political and professional
continuities to introduce a study that addresses the democratic
deficit and counter-authoritarian discourses that co-exist in an
extended public sphere which this thesis seeks to describe. It has
introduced plurality as a key element in website production and
usage and the real-life associations that are formed based on shared
affinities to the respective websites.
*Clayton Peel is the Vice-Chairman, Britain Zimbabwe Society.
This paper was presented at the Britain Zimbabwe Society Research
Day, 2008.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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