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Southern
Africa year in review: Democracy without citizens
Ndumba
J. Kamwanyah, Foreign Policy Blogs
December 22, 2011
http://foreignpolicyblogs.com/2011/12/22/southern-africa-year-in-review-democracy-without-citizens/
The year 2011 for Southern
Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa in general, will probably be remembered
for what did not happen in the light of the people-powered uprising
and protests that swept across the globe.
In the Arab world, in
particular North Africa, what is being now referred to as the Arab
Spring made 2011 a tough year for the dictatorial regimes of Zine
al-Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia, Hosni Mubarak in Egypt, and of course
Gaddafi, who was killed in Libya. In the Western world, a movement
that started as Occupy Wall Street in New York stirred up similar
protests across major cities in the US, Britain, Italy, Germany,
France, Spain, Portugal and Asian countries as citizens fought back
against growing greed and inequality. Public anger over the debt
crisis brought down Prime Minister George Papandreou and Silvio
Berlusconi in Greece and Italy respectively.
Yet, despite the Southern
African region-s high level of poverty, unemployment, and
inequality, we did not see a wave of public anger similar to what
we have seen across the globe. In a case study of five Southern
African countries, the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa
has found that poverty and inequality is tearing apart Zimbabwe,
Swaziland, Malawi, Namibia, South Africa and Angola, with many citizens
living on a mere US$1 per day. The irony here is that some of those
countries, such as Namibia and South Africa, are resource-rich countries
with some of the highest GDP in the world.
Amid this global backlash
against greed and inequality, why were most Southern African streets
(apart from isolated and sporadic protests in Malawi and Swaziland)
empty, quiet, and business as usual? What happened to the militant
spirit that has sent many young people toyi-toying in the streets
of Namibia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa against colonialism, poverty,
and social injustice in the 60s and 80s?
One answer given
for this widespread citizenry indifference in Southern African has
been explained in terms of the belief that some of the governments
in the region would not hesitate to use harsh measures if confronted
by an Arab Spring-like mass action. True to this, in Zimbabwe some
45
activists were rounded up and charged with treason for watching
a Mideast uprising video. In Malawi, the security force launched
a violent crackdown on the protestors, leaving at least 18 protestors
dead. In Swaziland, pro-democracy activists were banned, arrested,
tear-gassed, and sprayed with water cannons.
It is also true that
when the uprising was under way in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, none
of the Southern Africa governments (well, South Africa maybe did
but flip-flopped later to save face with the radicals within the
ANC and other hawkish Africanists in the region) picked up a phone
to urge Mubarak, Gadaffi, or Ben Ali to exercise restraint in dealing
with the protestors. Instead, what we heard from Southern African
governments was the usual song of complaint about Western interference
in Africa-s internal matters.
But here is another explanation:
Southern African citizens- indifference can be explained in
a "been there and done that" syndrome. This is because
in some ways Southern Africa is a little bit ahead of North Africa
in terms of democratization, meaning that most governments in Southern
Africa are products of democracy and came to power through elections.
Whereas North Africa might have been stable and economically advanced
but did not have democratic governments. However, a distinctive
characteristic of the southern African democracy is that not only
we have a democracy without democrats but also a democracy without
citizens. Southern Africa-s democracies did not and do not
produce citizens but subjects controlled by governments due to the
hierarchical nature of Southern African politics which demands obedience
and loyalty from citizens. Why? Although they claim to have fought
for democracy (such as SWAPO in Namibia, ANC in South Africa, MPLA
in Angola, FRELIMO in Mozambique and ZANU-PF in Zimbabwe), most
ruling parties in Southern Africa don-t operate as democrats.
Their politics and decision making processes are highly centralized.
By the way, the same can also be said about most opposition political
parties too.
It is against the backlog
of this unquestioning and uncritical citizenry, that we understand
why Mugabe is still in power today and why most ruling parties in
that region have won elections with landslide victory. This is why
the Namibian president can place a moratorium on public discussions
about the SWAPO presidential succession. And this is why the ANC-dominated
National Assembly in South Africa can pass a law (reversing the
gains made against apartheid repressive laws and policies) to limit
free speech.
On the flip side, events
in North Africa made the world forget (as the international media
and world government shifted its attention to the Arab Spring) about
Southern Africa, especially with regard to what-s going on
in Zimbabwe and Malawi Here are a few predictions for 2012: The
ruling party SWAPO-s 2012 election campaign to replace the
incumbent Namibian president when his term expires is shaping up
to be between Geingob (who is the vice president of SWAPO) and me
Pendukeni Ithana (who is the secretary of SWAPO). One is believed
to be a technocrat and the other a populist. But both are insiders,
so expect less change here if either of them wins. What is clear,
however, is that another potential split (this would be the third
split if it happens) from the ruling party is looming as the in-fighting
has already started. More is too come as we inch closer to Election
Day.
In Zimbabwe, it is clear
that the opposition party MDC (MDC has lost the mojo, and has been
weakened by in-fighting too) is not the party that will bring down
Mugabe (as it was hoped), but expect a potential split within the
ruling ZANU-PF party. As Mugabe-s health continues to deteriorate,
we expect infighting as members vie for control and Mugabe-s
position.
On the other hand, South
Africa will continue walking the populist road and of course with
less transparent governance. Unless restored, expect the worst from
Malawi because its life line support, which is aid from the international
community, has been cut off, which is going to make life difficult
for ordinary citizens. Angola and Mozambique (riding on oil) will
continue unabated because we don-t really hear much about
these two countries in terms of international coverage anyway. The
remaining question is will Swaziland eventually collapse economically,
or has it already collapsed?
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