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Is civil society that evil?
Kamurai
Mudzingwa
February 26, 2010
Civil society
throughout the world has been called all sorts of names particularly
from Government quarters and the State controlled media under undemocratic
governance. The article by Reason Wafawarova—Civil Society:
Stooges of imperialism (The Herald 11 February 2010) microcosmically
depicts some sections of the government-s negative attitude
towards the watchdog role played by civil society.
In light of
such attitudes, the following questions become relevant: Why is
it governments that suffer from democratic deficiencies hate civil
society and label them as the agents of evil? What is civil society?
Is it an animal that is separate from a country-s citizens
embodying aspirations alien to these citizens? The answer to these
questions is deeply embedded in the proper understanding of what
civil society is—the collective humanity of a country-s
citizens that comes together in some organised way to debate and
advocate for issues of common interest. This collective humanity
is manifest through various organisations that are non-governmental
but civic in nature.
Naturally in
an undemocratic society, what is of common interest to these people
is at loggerheads with the interests of undemocratic rulers. This
collective humanity called civil society always demands good governance,
the upholding of human rights, freedom of expression, freedom of
choice and accountability from the rulers among other things. These
tenets are the real antithesis of undemocratic rule and demand for
these lead to the tension between undemocratic governments and civil
society.
Civil society
is then labelled as central to the challenges facing any country
whose real challenge is autocratic rule or the desire to perpetuate
that kind of governance. Leaders and their praise singers in an
autocratic or in an oligarchy deliberately pretend that they are
not the problem, claiming that the problem is civil society and
foreign intervention. This trick has been used by despots throughout
history—Hitler used it and killed six million Jews. In our
modern contexts how many Hitlers have we witnessed using the same
trick to slaughter the innocent for the preservation of power?
The centre of
the challenges is not civil society but the moral deficiencies in
leaders who lack clarity of purpose and are unfathomably selfish,
cruel, unethical and unaccountable and whose general behaviour borders
on inhumanity. If civil society—the collective humanity manifest
in ordinary citizens not politicians—does not organise to
engage government in a constructive manner, then we will experience
an avalanche of disintegration and decline.
Undemocratic
governments do not want their citizens to watch their misdeeds and
highlight them. They want a docile bunch of citizens, and by implication
a passive civil society that is like a watchdog that does not bark.
Despotic governments do not want meaningful participation by citizens
in national processes. They do not want civil society organisations
because these are citizens coming together for the common good of
the common man, an insult to undemocratic governance.
As a result,
there is a sustained attempt to dismember civil society from what
should be perceived as the "citizens". This attempt
is done physically through unwarranted arrests, beatings, incarcerations
and general harassment among other evil deeds. But the warfare against
civil society is also fought psychologically through name calling,
the media, political rallies, blame games and other dirty tricks
that are not physical.
Hypocrisy is
also a sickness that manifests itself in undemocratic governments
in their relationship with civil society. When the going gets tough
for them they will allow civil society to help them and ensure that
they do not acknowledge. They "love" civil society during
droughts, famine and disease outbreaks, for they know the capacity
of civil society in bailing them out of these situations. But they
hate civil society for pointing out their weaknesses and unethical
behaviour.
Therefore the
notion of civil society being evil is a political construction of
despots and their praise singers throughout the world.
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