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Bumps, but Africa’s democracy
rises
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
After much misunderstanding, with all the anarchic
one-party ordeals and self-serving dictatorial military
juntas, it appears Africa is nearing a turning point in
its democratic grasp. There may be divergent signs, some
incredibly disturbing as Guinea Bissau and the Central
African Republic indicate, but it looks like a turning
to democracy as the best option to solve Africa’s
development challenges. This is Africans new trust, for
cultural, historical, moral and material reasons, in
resolving decades of political mix-ups, contradicting
irrational international exuberance and governance
deficits, in relation to the African reality.
Nigeria, the giant dances with democracy
Nowhere in Africa has democracy seen much trial but yet
moving on confidently than in continental giant Nigeria,
where the fever of long-running military juntas is
gradually giving way to vigorous democratic ascent, with
former military junta members being democratized and
former military leaders such as Gen. Ibrahim Babangida
attempting to be elected democratically as civilian
presidents. Nigeria’s Senate President David Mark was a
former military bid wig but now highly democratized.
The principled democratic horse trading that occurred
during the long illness of the late President Shehu Musa
Yar’Adua, against the ancient view that Nigeria is
disorderly and may curve in under pressure, improved the
country’s democratic wellbeing. And that led to Vice
President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan first acting as
President and later sworn in as President, against the
backdrop of the country’s legislature playing with the
vibrant civil society, the judiciary and the executive
bode well for Africa’s democratic vigor. President
Jonathan, among his new agenda, is electoral reforms to
further open up Nigeria for democratic growth.
Yes, there were stress, strain and pain and the test of
Nigerians patience for democracy to resolve any
constitutional hurdles but in the final analysis
democracy prevailed and have made the country healthier.
The thinking among African democrats is that if
continental giant Nigeria, with its enormous weight and
immense global gravitas, can fertilize and project
coherent democratic ideals, it will have cosmic
boomerang Africa-wide and help inspire, project and grow
Africa’s democracy as a vehicle for rapid progress.
Kenya and democratic wrangling
The thinking is that if Kenya, East Africa’s regional
giant, could heavily democratize, like Nigeria, it will
have continental contagion on Africa’s democratic
enlargement. The need for democracy to release Africa’s
long-running “rage” tested the organic foundation of
Kenya, where unresolved extensive ethnic predicaments
mixed with wrenching poverty since independence have
impacted on the country’s appropriate progress. Kenya’s
2008 presidential elections were thought to be flawed,
rigged to the advantage of the incumbent President Mwai
Kibaki, despite high indications that his rival and
current Prime Minister, Raila Odinga, won the election.
With democracy misunderstood in relation to the
country’s make-up, there was widespread violence with
over 1,300 killed and thousands displaced.
The two rivals were later united in a grand coalition
government following international mediation, led by
former UN chief Kofi Annan (a Ghanaian), under a
power-sharing National Accord on Reconciliation Act,
entrenched in the constitution. Despite this, a shaky
truce held, and the Kenyan reality saw a Harmonized
Draft Constitution minted in 2009 as a way of enhancing
democracy. As the new constitutional draft debate
reveals, the attempt is to use the new constitution to
further democratize Kenya in relation to the reality of
its tradition, history and material wants.
Democracy as best card for the African reality
Whether in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the
Central Africa Republic, Burundi or Guinea Bissau, the
practical insight is that democratic tenets are the best
solution to any of their intractable problems,
especially in using democratic ideals to refine most of
the inhibitions with the African culture that have
blocked progress. Human rights, the rule of law and
freedoms will help correct genital female mutilation,
child slavery, witchcraft accusation, human sacrifice,
tribalism, or early child-girl forced marriage.
Africa’s Big Men, notoriously known for much of the
continent’s troubles could be cut to size with the
vigorous enforcement of rule of law, accountability,
human rights and freedoms. Here the democratic tenets
such as the rule of law and human rights will mediate
relations between the rich and poor, the weak and the
powerful. For long, in Africa, as we see in Nigeria and
Kenya, the law has been owned by the politically
powerful and the economically wealthy.
Without qualms, the African Union and other regional
bodies have come to the conclusion that democracy will
solve most of Africa’s development ordeal and free the
continent for greater progress. This has been enshrined
in their charters. In mineral rich Sierra Leone,
democracy is unlocking the country’s potential, helping
to heal the deadly wounds of ten years civil war,
including high-profile corruption trials that were
unthinkable decades ago. Aware of this, Niger’s new
military junta that removed the autocratic President
Mamadou Tandja named itself the Supreme Council for the
Restoration of Democracy. Here democracy is sinking in
as solution to Africa’s complex problems; no African
military junta had been convinced of the true values of
democracy as development tool and had named itself of
growing it. And mechanisms are underway to restore
democracy in Niger against pressure from the flowering
regional democratic climate.
Why long-delayed African democracy
Ramesh Thakur, director of Balsillie School of
International Affairs at Canada’s Wilfred Laurier and
Waterloo universities, would argue that there are
generally three explanations for the long-delayed but
nevertheless welcome signs of democratic reforms in
Africa’s governance. First, as Nigeria, Kenya and South
Africa reveals, there is emerging African middle-class
that is strengthening as a political force to be
reckoned with, especially in the urban centres of Lagos,
Nairobi and Cape Town. Educated and informed, the
expanding middle-class is starting to assert itself
democratically by exploiting the citizen’s levers in a
free society, including the judiciary and a vigorous
competitive mass media. Second, as part of the tenets of
globalization and diaspora Africans dealings with their
homelands, the rising prosperity of the growing African
middle class has empowered its members to travel abroad
and start evaluating domestic governance against
international standards.
Remember that Sudan’s London, UK-based billionaire Mo
Ibrahim has instituted governance prize to check how
healthy African governance is doing annually. Third, as
Kenya demonstrates in regards to the International
Criminal Court (ICC) investigating post-election
violence, African civil society is pushing for justice.
Lawyers, human rights advocates and social activists
such as Nigeria’s Nobel prize-winning laureate Wole
Soyinka have maintained the demand for criminal
accountability through the growing mass media, the
political process and the justice system. In an
increasingly connected world, African democratic
activists have joined forces with international
counterparts to publicize, harass and otherwise exert
pressure for a settling of accounts in Africa’s
disgracefully sluggish courts.
The Mauritian miracle and the African struggle
While African democracy undergoes bumps along the way,
some of the rising successes are best captured in
Botswana and Mauritius, countries with Africa’s best
development indicators. As symptomatic of the African
reality, other African states can draw lessons from
Mauritius. Despite some negatives – colonialism
(British, independent in 1968), remoteness, lack of
natural resources and tropical climate, Mauritius have
been able to appropriate its human capital superbly,
foster good institutions, according to David Carment and
Yiagadeesen Samy (both at Canada’s Carleton University),
represented by the rule of law, democratic tradition,
freedom of the press, and property rights. These
conditions have created better growth in a continent
with appalling development indicators. Growth rate in
Mauritius averaged 5.2 per cent over the period 1981 to
2008. Income per capita increased more than three times
to reach US$11,165 in 2008. So, how can we reconcile the
Mauritian growth and development phenomenon with other
African states?
Carment and Samy give four reasons. First, under its
thriving democratic ethos, there have been efficient
taxation system and invariably better accountability
regime. Second, political stability, better property
rights, the rule of law and reasonably high degree of
human capital has made investment “attractive prospects
for foreigners.” Third, Mauritius has been able to
exploit its ethnic diversity and diaspora by attracting
foreign direct investment from Hong Kong and India.
And fourth, good leadership, drawn from the Mauritian
traditional values and history, which accommodate every
religious and ethnic group, with less traces of Africa’s
tarnished Big Man syndrome that weakens and wreck
institutions, as one of Nigeria’s prominent journalist,
Dan Agbese, have argued. Without any hesitation, since
independence Mauritius has always been ruled by credible
coalition government, borne out of its resilient
political mechanisms related to good democratic
governance and its related economic management. The
lesson from the Mauritian case is that Africa will not
look democracy directly on the face only to stubbornly
turn its back and walk off in the opposite direction and
further darkened the African development process.
Democracy from within African traditional values
Carment and Samy’s argument is that the key determinant
to the Mauritian miracle is excellent leadership (brewed
from within its traditional values and blended with
modern democratic ideals), and lack of which in other
African states is significant determinant of Africa’s
letdown. The Mauritian thinking is popping up
Africa-wide. African democratic activists and civil
societies are increasingly coming to terms that Africa’s
budding democracy needn’t be like that of Britain or USA
– it has to be fermented from within Africa’s
traditions, histories and material desires, as means of
resolving practical developmental wants on the ground.
Check Kenya and understand how it is battling to
indigenize its prospective new constitution as a way of
entrenching its democracy to its real environment.
Modern democracy, says the Oxford Dictionary, “is a form
of government in which the power resides in the people
and is exercised by them either directly or by means of
elected representatives.” If democracy means the
people’s power, then the people’s traditional values,
the source of their power, should inform their
democratic practices and material needs. Either because
of colonialism that suppressed Africans’ traditional
democratic political systems, the thinking universally
had been that only the Athenians had the idea that only
the common citizen should decide governance rather than
the elites.
Like Athens’ Pynx hill, various African ethnic groups
debated, listened and decided their progress before
European colonialism under shade of trees. Either
because of colonialism or its consequent global power
outreach, Athens has been projected as the model for
democracy, as citizens play the deciding role in public
affairs. The over one billion Africans with 2,000
African ethnic groups, too, have had a tradition of
participatory democracy, as enshrined in their
traditions, but have not been touted as prominently as
the Athenians. The operative norms in African tradition,
as have been in Europe, were, and, are still, consensus
and participation.
Direct democracy of the Akans or the Athenian form had a
flaw of not been able to put all citizens on top of a
geographic spot to deliberate issues. The British, who
had moved past direct democracy, resolved the
complications of direct democracy and invented
representative democracy. This was the institution
transplanted into Africa by the Europeans without
considering Africa’s cultural values. Over time, the
struggle, as Thomas Axworthy, chair of Canada’s Centre
for the Study of Democracy, Queen’s University,
explains, was “how to transform a representative
legislature into a responsible government.” The test had
been how each ex-colony mixes the European’s with their
indigenous systems, as the Southeast Asians, Botswana
and Mauritius have brilliantly done, as a way of making
democracy very realistic or very responsible on the
ground. This means a Nigeria democracy will be slightly
different from a Malaysian one because of different
traditional values, history and material needs on the
ground.
Mauritius and Botswana aside, the rest of Africa is yet
to fully go the Southeast Asian way. Daniel T. Osabu-Kle,
a political scientist at Canada’s Carleton University,
expounds in Compatible Cultural Democracy: The Key to
Development in Africa that “instead of adapting the
deeply embedded indigenous political cultures to achieve
the appropriate political conditions, the new [African]
nations adopted alien democratic practices, which served
to undermine the attainment of the political
prerequisites for genuine decolonization, divided the
elites, stifled economic and social growth…” Added to
Osabu-Kle, the Washington-based social justice advocacy
Africa Faith and Justice Network, has advised that
“Africans need to define for themselves the meaning of
democracy in their own historical and cultural contexts,
drawing on their participatory traditions and the
experience of democratic societies elsewhere.”
In the midst of African elites’ struggles to imagine a
home-grown African democracy, Africa’s democratic growth
has seen bumps over the years. In its uncertainty,
Africa states have created many constitutions but as
Mauritius and Botswana teach Africa, the trick is in
good leadership and political resilience, and not the
creation of one constitution after another. Till now,
Ghana, which is touted as West Africa’s oasis of
democracy today and had had its fair share of leadership
troubles over the years, has created four constitutions;
three have been suspended, as result of military coups.
On the other hand, Mauritius still operates its March
12, 1968 constitution since independence.
Conclusion
As Nigeria demonstrates, African democratic activists
are increasingly proving to be a complex historical
surprise, surviving in the sizzling African political
climate where democratic bumps and lack of leadership
undermine democratic growth and economic management. All
these, against the backdrop of the restless African Big
Men, such as Ghana’s ex-president Ft. Lt. (rtd) Jerry
Rawlings, a tyrant, heckling the democratic process. In
Ghana, ex-President John Kufour, himself part of the
democratic activists that forced the Rawlings military
junta to democratize and who had the best index of
experiences as public figure among all those who have
ruled Ghana, mastered the Ghana’s fragile security game,
putting potential forces of instability at bay and
growing the rule of law, human rights and freedoms, as
well as property rights.
As African democratic activists work to secure the
African state democratically, they are drawing from the
continent’s history of instabilities and democratic
stasis. This is progressively deepening African
democratic activists’ historical size and democratic
force. In the final analysis, as Botswana and Mauritius
would tell their fellow Africans, the practical
relevance of democracy to Africa’s progress, as part of
the universal democratic movement, is how African
democratic activists ferment democracy from within
African traditional values and institutions. And it is
when this is done that for the first time recent
developments will mean that the winds of change may be
blowing at the cross-roads of democracy, economic
management, leadership, African history and tradition.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong, Canada,
May 11, 2010
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