Regimes have been shaken, dictators toppled and revolutions
televised in ways most people thought was not possible a mere 12 months
ago in North Africa and the Middle East. Sub-Saharan Africa is home to
some of the world's longest-serving and most autocratic leaders - and
that is exactly what residents of some Arab countries have been fighting
against.
Yet an African Spring in the exact fashion of the Arab Spring would signify a step backwards - not a step forward.
In fact, it would make a mockery
of all that the majority of African countries achieved in the late
1980s and the early 1990s - when they did away with dictators and
presidents-for-life in favour of multiparty democracies.
I previously argued that
"the protagonists of the Arab Spring have more to learn from their
sub-Saharan Africa counterparts than the other way round. The majority
of sub-Saharan African countries peacefully did away with one-party-rule
in the 1990s."
And now there is no region in the world that holds more elections than sub-Saharan Africa.
'Selfish, greedy leaders'
However, the vote alone is not enough - and democracy does not
begin and end with the ballot box, as recently "liberated" Egypt and
Tunisia are starting to find out and countries south of the Sahara have
known for a long time now.
How free is Africa?
These countries continue to
struggle to solidify their democracies - because of the enduring lack
of necessary democratic institutions and structures of governance.
And, of course, because of the
prevalence of selfish, greedy and opportunistic leaders: Eduardo dos
Santos of Angola, Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and Paul Biya in Cameroon,
to name but a few.
Indeed, some of these leaders got extremely nervous in the wake of the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions last year.
A political science lecturer at the University of Malawi was summoned for "questioning" after he allegedly compared the social and political situation in Malawi to that of Egypt.
And in Zimbabwe a group of activists are still on charges
that originally carried the death sentence but have now been reduced -
for allegedly plotting an Egyptian-style revolution in that country.
So, the struggle for democracy in sub-Saharan Africa is certainly not lacking.
But these struggles are very different to what we have seen in parts of the Arab world.
Freedom to protest
These ones are mainly focused on forcing governments to become
more accountable and to provide populations with the basics that they
need to survive.
The July 2011 demonstrations in
Malawi, for instance, was not organised to overthrow the government or
to demand that President Bingu wa Mutharika step down.
The protests were about the lack of democratic institutions
that have allowed the current administration to rule with total
impunity.
In Uganda the "Walk to Work" protests were about exorbitant fuel prices - it was not about overthrowing the government or forcing the president to go.
Nigeria is the same - aside from the separate issue of the recent Boko Haram bombing campaign.
Nigerians have been protesting about the withdrawal of fuel
subsidies - they are asking their government to be more considerate but
they are not calling for a revolution.
Not one of the Arab countries had such
freedoms to protest or even question their government prior to the
Tunisian revolution on 14th January 2011.
So why then the calls for an African Spring?
This failure to acknowledge the difference between what is
happening south and north of the Sahara may well be a matter of
distorted historical perspectives - mainly by Western commentators who
were caught off-guard by the Arab Spring and are now eager to spot the
next possible spark.
And there is an unfortunate perception that people from
sub-Saharan Africa cannot stage any revolt of their own. They have to
copy it from elsewhere - in this case, the Arab Spring.
Rather, the growing number of protests and increasing
political dissent in sub-Saharan Africa - whether tolerated by
respective governments or not - could yet be an indication of a mature
democracy. And a sign that the region does not need such a "spring".
It is worth remembering that most of these countries attained democracy only 20 or 30 years ago.
All these protests were unheard of before the dawn of democracy.
Today, ordinary citizens are demanding more of their
governments than they have ever done before - and they are refusing to
accept any form of mediocrity.
US political scientist Francis Fukuyama argues in The End of History and the Last Man that the striving by citizens for liberal democracy arises as a part of the soul that demands recognition.
"As standards of living increase, as populations become more
cosmopolitan and better educated," he says "and as society as a whole
achieves a greater equality of condition, people begin to demand not
simply more wealth but recognition of their status."
These are exactly the social changes happening in Africa today. Progress has been made - and it can only get better.
These demands and the eagerness by the people to be heard -
to hold their governments to account - can only be addressed by
developing strong democratic institutions - and not simply by getting
rid of presidents and their governments.
This is what is necessary in the next stage of Africa's democracy - not an African Spring in the mould of the Arab Spring.




0 comments:
Post a Comment