Africa's new democracies
Democracy, according to Winston Churchill, is the worst form of
government-except for all the others! The African people, who against their
will, have had plenty of experience of all kinds of dictatorship and who, it
must be said, have paid the price for this, are now increasingly following in
the footsteps of others who have experienced the wisdom of Churchill's maxim. It
has become commonplace to say that the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse
of that other modern form of organising states-communism-has contributed to this
democratic surge. The influence of events such as Frans Mitterand's famous La
Baule speech in 1990 is also stressed. In retrospect, one can but regret that
these 'liberating' remarks were not made much earlier.
While one African country after another embarks on the road to
democracy, with varying degrees of enthusiasm and in the face of varying degrees
of resistance, questions are increasingly being asked about the validity of
Western-style democracy for the continent at the present juncture. As, here and
there, the democracy movement suffers reverses, these questions become
increasingly pointed.
Some suggest that Africa should work out a model for itself by
marrying democratic principles to its own cultural heritage. This is a view
which is put forward in several of the articles in this Dossier although the
practicalities are deliberately left vague and those elements of African
civilisation (if it is possible to talk of this in the singular) which ought to
be incorporated in the model are not specified.
Others take a contrary view, believing that democracy is a set
of universal principles which apply everywhere in the same way. They reject any
idea of a specifically African dimension, fearing that this can only lead to a
situation which the international community, having acknowledged the right to be
'different', will be much less able to condemn. Those who take this view find it
difficult to understand why the former communist states, facing similar ethnic
conflicts and economic crises, do not receive the same advice as that proferred
to the African countries. The former, according to this logic, should be
inventing a democratic system which also takes account of their particular
history and culture.
An objection of a different kind is to be found in the thesis
that Africa does not meet the optimum conditions for the establishment and
development of democratic systems. African countries are indeed very poor, and
none of the new democracies has been able to pay for the organisation of its
elections. Even Senegal, which has a longer democratic tradition than most, had
to have recourse to outside help for the financing of its recent presidential
poll.
Without development, therefore the future of the democratic
process is, to say the least, compromised. What would happen if this
providential support were lacking? And the situation is exacerbated by the fact
that African states, unlike countries elsewhere which have moved to democracy in
recent decades, have not been able to meet the other important requirement for a
successful democracy, namely, having a population the majority of whom are
educated. Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad/ Tobago, to take just a few ACP
examples, are countries where democratic alternation has been the rule since the
1960s. They are also countries where literacy rates are very high (90% in
Barbados). It is a very different situation in Africa.
For people who are poor and illiterate, the temptation is
consequently very great to regard democracy purely in terms of utility. If the
new system delivers a noticeable improvement in living standards, they will
support and defend it. If it does not, can we really be surprised if they view
it as something which is alien to them? And it is this risk of rejection which
underpins the arguments of those who support adapting democracy to African
realities- so as to give it sure foundations.
Using the same line of reasoning, there must be the fear that
the people will be prepared to accept limits on their freedom if their material
needs are satisfied. This is one of the lessons that one can draw from the past
experience of Cot'lvoire, Gabon and Malawi. For much of the period from the
1960s to the 1990s, these countries experienced steady growth. This was
reflected in social stability which only began to crumble-albeit rapidly- when
the government coffers emptied because of the economic crisis. Cot'lvoire and
Gabon were in fact, the first countries in the period after the La Baule speech
to face upheavals and to hold multi-party elections. Democratic aspirations may
not entirely merge with economic ones, but they clearly intermingle to some
extent.
It is interesting to speculate whether the experience of
Lithuania may not hold some lessons for Africa. The people of this Baltic state
recently elected the excommunists-under whose earlier management, they had faced
fewer hardships-in place of the 'champions' of democracy.
In this issue of The Courier, we seek the clues, if not the
answers, to some of the main issues arising from the flowering of democracy in
Africa. Two case studies are presented. In the Country Report on Zambia which
precedes this Dossier, we look at an English-speaking state where power was
transferred peacefully following elections-although since this Report was
prepared, a state of emergency has been proclaimed which illustrates only too
clearly the vulnerability of the democratic process. And at the end of the
Dossier, we consider the case of Mali, a French-speaking country where blood had
to be spilt before democracy could put down roots and where major difficulties
have still to be overcome.
Amadou
TRAOR