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West African democracy: black-sheeping
Guinea
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
The suspension of Guinea by ECOWAS for the overthrow of
a constitutional regime by its military, signals the
fact that the West African region takes democracy, as
development and stability vehicle, seriously.
Ever since the military coup in Mauritania last August
and the coup attempt in Guinea Bissau, the issue of
democratic consolidation in West Africa has become a
worrying issue. In this regard, the December 7 and 28
and January 2 general elections in Ghana, viewed as the
region’s democratic star, was seen as a test case for
the West African region which stability is still
suspect, as it struggles for democratic consolidation.
Democracy may not be consolidated yet in the region but
the ECOWAS move is ennobled by the sordid realization
that the long-running suffering of Guineans at the hands
of frightening military juntas and dreadful one-party
systems have to stop and tie Guinea, a black-sheep, to
the region’s emerging democratic ethos.
As part of black-sheeping Guinea, the African Union had
also suspended Guinea – and so have been some section of
the international community. Such view of Guinea comes
against the backdrop that much of its politics have been
primitive. Even in a West Africa where for long military
coups and one-party systems hold sway, almost all the
countries are on the democratic path, amid various
trends. But Guinea, for the past 50 years, refuses to
wean itself from the military junta and one-party
mentality, scurrying the country on perpetual
instability, misgovernment, and worsening poverty.
Why should a President Lansana Conte dying lead to the
military staging a coup, throwing any constitutional
procedure to resolve any transition process away. It
doesn’t matter whether Guinea has weak institutions, of
which it has; the rule of law has to take its cause as a
matter of stability. It may sound heartbreaking but
that’s Guinea, where for the past 50 years, it hasn’t
seen anything democratic. The Guinean event isn’t
African; it’s noticeably Guinean with its own
eccentricities. Guinea, like a kid, refuses to grow up
and join the West African democratic trend. The era of
what happens in one African country viewed as indicative
of the rest is no more.
Guinea is politically a sick country and need to be
cured by Ecowas, the AU and the international community
by forcing it to take bitter medicine of the rule of law
and democratic freedoms. Like one suffering from autism,
Guinea has been repeating the same primitive political
behaviour again and again for the past 50 years as if
it’s entrapped in a crab hole. Ecowas is cutting Guinea
off as part of its cure in a region that for long is
known as the sick spot of Africa and the poorest region
in the world.
This brings to mind not necessarily Guinea and West
Africa but more narrowly Guinea and Ghana that virtually
started on the same path, and are viewed as brothers.
Ghana is increasingly growing democracy, freedoms, the
rule of law, and garnering global respect. Some may ask,
but Guinea and Ghana are pals. Yes, they are but Guinea
hasn’t weaned itself from the disorderly politics. While
Ghana is rightly growing democracy and freedoms, Guinea
hasn’t, and instability, dreadful one-party systems,
threatening military juntas, unfreedoms, fears,
harassment, threats of civil war, and collapsing
institutions are still dangling on its messed-up head.
While Ghana is progressively learning from its years of
misgovernment, Guinea appears held back and should be
seen simultaneously in its own environment and its
leaders/elites, who lack confidence, unique lack of
common sense. Despite starting on promising note on
October 2, 1958, at the cost of the immediate
termination of all French assistance, when first
President Ahmed Sékou Touré took a famous exceptional
path and called the bluff of French President Charles de
Gaulle’s referendum given French colonies the choice
between immediate independence or retaining their
colonial status.
With independence, Guinea pursued a mixture Soviet-type
radical socialism and Pan Africanism without any hint of
flexibility in its development process. Ghana had done
so but has quickly moved on big time. While Ghana
experienced 21 years of military juntas and 6 years of
one-party systems and has moved on, driving enviable
democratic culture, Guinea is still enmeshed in almost
50 years of military juntas and one-party systems with
the shocking December 23, 2008 military coup that
enlarges its misgovernment at a time when democratic and
reformist trends are observable in West Africa.
Toure effectively shut Guinea out from the rest of
world’s progress. Practically, that started Guinea’s
befuddled state under the brutally tyrannical grip of
Toure who suppressed democratic aspirations and
effectively asphyxiated progress. Disturbing ethnicity
became the order of the day, and is still smoudering,
deflating Guinea’s Pan-Africanism image, and seeing
Toure, a Mandingo, effectively killing and scattering
the increasingly progressive Fulah ethnic group, who
form about 40 percent of the Guinean population.
Till he died in 1984, Toure didn’t demonstrate any
understanding of Guinea despite his pretensions. There
were virtually no institutional growth and the country,
for the past 50 years, was increasingly decomposing in
the face puny leaders/elites. Guinea endangered itself,
the country mired in some sort of perpetual chaos. In
development-speak, from scratch, Guinea was paralyzed,
its soul choked, its development engines jammed. For
long, Guinea has been a depressed nation, its innate
pride and “African Personality” ruined, and now-and-then
Guineans struggling to free themselves from this state
of suspended animatronics.
It may sound surreal but such growing puzzlement saw
Toure blinded from appropriating the global prosperity
ideals to develop its vastly endowed mineral wealth
(bauxite, oil, gold, diamonds, iron ore, uranium, among
others) and its remarkable agricultural potentials. With
corruption endemic and rule of law suppressed, Guineans
become the poorer, as local and foreign investor are
scared of the country, and at the bottom of the United
Nations Human Development Index – at 167th rank out of
179 countries ranked with data in 2007.
Those who came after Toure were failure, showing greater
misunderstanding and fright, and failing to draw from
Toure’s failures and Guinean conventional values. In the
face of misapprehension after the death of Toure,
Lansana Conté, a military general and a Soussou (who
make up 20 percent of the population), assumed power in
1984, in a military coup and explosively mixed free
market policies with unfreedom, brutal dictatorship and
tribalism. Conte became Roman Emperor Nero, dancing
through his deadly delusions, as Guinea burns behind
him.
There have been multi-party elections beginning since
1993 but they are veneer. Expectedly they had negative
effect on Guinea. This saw intermittent threats against
the Guinean state from sections of the military,
attempted rebel invasions, and deadly bickering from the
opposition parties. Under Conte, Guinea had the highest
number of military mutinies and violent demonstrations
in West Africa. That’s scary in a region already mired
in long-running instabilities.
With weak grasp of Guinea and insecurities widespread,
the country became addicted to instabilities – even at
certain points some prime ministers and state ministers
were running away from their own country in a climate of
heightened insecurities. Ministers and other state
officials were wheeling around Conte like buzzing
insects in a state of instability. One day you are
hired, the next day you fired in a rapid succession –
Guinea becoming intellectually and spiritually feeble,
its citizens sinking deeper into poverty and political
hopelessness.
In 2005, Prime Minister François Lonseny Fall resigned
and sought asylum with his family in France, citing
corruption and increasing interference from Conte.
Fall’s successor, Cellou Dalein Diallo, was sacked on
April 2006, in the face of crippling nation-wide
strikes, mass demonstrations, unfreedoms, military coup
attempts, and food shortages. The institutions of state
were deteriorating against the backdrop of unfreedoms,
deaths, scrawny elites, and, as the Greek thinker
Thucydides would say, democratic stasis, where there
were symptoms of perpetual disturbances of Guineans and
the Guinean state.
Despite Conte’s on-again, off-again agreeing to
opposition demands for broader democratic reforms, he
reverted to his old primordial tricks. On February 13,
2007, Conte appointed Eugene Camara as prime minister
but yet Guinea was boiling under insecurities. On 26
February 2007 Conte appointed Lansana Kouyaté as prime
minister but he was fired on May 23, 2008. Kouyate was
replaced by Ahmed Tidiane Souaré who has been prime
minister since May 2008. You’ve to be magician to
understand all these entire rapid never-ending wheeling
at Conte’s State House.
Really, a confused nation and dictatorship-plagued. No
country develops under such circumstances of
near-permanent confusion. No doubt, Guinea has been
failing for the past 50 years, riddled in immense
psychological and spiritual crisis.
Perplexed, Conte imposed martial laws – it was part of
his political diet. Like neighbouring Sierra Leone and
Liberia, the fears have been that Guinea would explode
into civil war – all the ingredients have been there for
self-destruction. In its long smouldering civil unrests,
government buildings and properties throughout the
country were either looted or destroyed by angry
Guineans who saw nothing good in Guinea. Guineans
unequivocally called on Conté's to resign. Conte
survived assassination attempts in the interim. He
became used to such dangers, turning them into a healthy
political game and strangely surviving them till being
knocked down by diabetes on December 23, 2008.
Conte’s long “illness” should have let him transit power
smoothly for the good of Guineans to avoid crisis, but
he did not, a disease of Africa’s “Big Man” syndrome.
This is against African tradition. It reveals Guinea’s
long shadow of insecurities even at the point of Conte’s
death. Conte didn’t believe in Guineans and the fact
that they a civilized lot. Once again, like what
happened after the death of Toure and Conte, the
military took over power, dismissing the normal
constitutional process to resolve transition issues.
Guinea remains uncivilized 50 years on, stuck in the
past. Under the Guinean constitution, Aboubacar Somparé,
the Speaker of Parliament, was to assume the presidency
of the republic and a new presidential election was to
have been held within 60 days.
You don’t say this to a long disordered country and a
country which institutions are tumbling, its elites
feeble, and its mindset screwed up over the past 50
years. Nevertheless, six hours after the announcement of
Conté's death, Captain Moussa Dadis Camara, announced a
coup d'état, saying that “the government and the
institutions of the Republic have been dissolved… as
well as political and union activity.”
You shouldn’t be surprised, that’s Guinea displaying its
antique mindset. Guinea is still psychologically and
spiritually insecure, and may need superb retooling,
part of which Ecowas, the AU, the EU, United States and
others are doing, as a tranquilizer to cure Guinea.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Canada, January 12, 2009
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