(introduction...)
Until recently, Senegal was French-speaking Africa's only
democracy. This, the authorities say, has more to do with colonial heritage than
national tradition and it is an historical premise which has its importance in
both the practice and the development of the country's political institutions,
particularly since a State organisation and operation model often reflects the
ambitions of those who design it, in addition to all the socio-cultural and
economic factors.
At first sight, Senegalese society has all the hallmarks of a
democratic organisation. There is less State pressure on the individual than in
many other African nations and the coercive attitude typical of the authorities
elsewhere on the continent is virtually imperceptible here. Officially, the
country's democracy is a real and positive thing, but the Senegalese themselves
can be virulent in their criticism of its political workings - and for domestic
far more than historical reasons.
Democracy grinds to a halt
Democratic organisation goes back a long way, but it was set
aside nonetheless just after independence in June 1960, when the then Head of
State, eminent grammarian Lold Sedar Senghor, was the next leader to be
seduced by the one-party system, which lasted until 1978. The single party in
question, the Senegalese Progressive Union (UPS), in fact looked more
transparent because it included the socialist faction of former Prime Minister
Mamadou Dia, although Dia was abruptly removed from power in 1962.
Senegalese politics are heavily influenced by what goes on in
Paris and the events in France in May 1968 had their constitutional fall-out,
leading to the reestablishment of the post of Prime Minister and a start on a
multi-party system in only four years. The new system was made official in 1978,
with the recognition of two new parties - the Senegalese Democratic Party (PDS)
and the Independence and Labour Party (PIT). But hidebound regulation of the
division between the ideological positions on which the parties were lined up
meant that Senegal's democracy was stillborn, its machinery doomed first to
freewheel and then grind to a halt. Paradoxical though it may seem, President
Senghor thought and decided that the PDS, led by Abdoulaye Wade, the brilliant
lawyer, could be nothing but a fairly right-wing free-market organisation and
the PIT, Marxist or with Marxist leanings, could only be the extreme left. Only
his own party, the Senegalese Progressive Union (UPS), bore the label of social
democracy. So the rules of the democratic game were hard and fast and destined
to lead, not to a proper pluralist system, but to governance by a dominant party
which outstayed its welcome in power, radicalised the official opposition and
aroused frustration in all those passed over by an economic policy totally
reliant on external aid. The other consequence - one of the most perverse
effects of this democracy programmed to seize up - was the development of a
one-party cult in Senegal, even among the opposition, because there was no
alternative to State direction.
With Africa's economic problems, national constraints and
widespread one-party government, successive Senegalese authorities found it easy
to develop a democratic image and to reap the dividends on the international
scene.
Yet although Senegal's system has a long way to go before it
becomes an average democracy, many African peoples - not leaders - would still
find much to envy in the lot of the Senegalese. Despite such a firm commitment
to the one-party system in its choice of leaders and its attitude to them,
Senegal has, to a very large extent, the basic features of pluralist opinion, an
aspect of public life which is reflected in great freedom of debate, in
religious freedom in a country with a Moslem majority, in the right to be
politically active without running any major risk and in the (for an African
country) profusion of newspapers, whose lively tone is at variance with the
conformity and 'poor standard' of the official media.
Opposition commits hare kiri
In Africa more than on other continents, the State has wanted to
be a real provider and opportune or opportunistic sticking to the existing power
has helped slow the move towards democracy and bolstered the one-party cult
which, in Senegal, has taken hold of the opposition too. The Senegalese
opposition was fairly moderate to begin with - more as a 'force of proposition'
in the eyes of its principal leader, Abdoulaye Wade - and it has become more
radical because of the lack of any alternative. But political combat in Africa
has more to do with wielding power than achieving objectives or furthering any
concept of the society that is to be built and, in 1990, the Head of the PDS
yielded to temptation and joined President Diouf's Government, with neither
condition nor portfolio. Just what concessions and assurances did Wade get to go
into the Government and why? Newspapers and people close to the PDS leader
maintain that there has never been an answer... and Senegalese housewives are
still waiting for his promised slash in the price of rice.
Much the same has happened with the PIT. One or two of its
leaders joined the Government at the same time as the PDS representatives, but
this has done nothing to alter the policy of President Diouf and Habib Thiam,
his Prime Minister.
Joining the Government spells hare kiri for the opposition and
its principal leader Abdoulaye Wade, they say in Dakar - but without the honour
that usually goes with this traditional Japanese form of suicide. The fact that
the Government's only Minister of State is standing against President Diouf in
the presidentials in February 1993 added to the confusion and made the head of
the PDS's position more untenable and, in mid-October, he (like his two
partisans) was forced to try and right the situation by resigning from his
Government functions. But will this be enough to bring him better fortunes in
the presidential elections, particularly in a country where, despite the waning
authority of the holy men, particularly in the towns, Moslem brotherhoods can
still greatly influence the voters' behaviour?
The other handicap, as one former PDS leader put it, is that the
Senegalese opposition has failed to steer democracy or make sure it is properly
rooted.
Anxious not to be outpaced
The democracy label attracted international aid for the
Government and Senegal has the highest per capita rate of aid in Africa. This
has its advantages, of course, but there are disadvantages too, not least the
very common belief that aid is inevitable if Senegal is to survive.
The emergence of or the opening to democratic ideas in most of
the other countries of Africa since Frans Mitterrand's famous speech at La
Baule in 1989 has brought the Senegalese authorities the threat of competition
in an area where Senegal has so far been treading a lone path on a continent
where democracy was interpreted in widely different ways and was much subject to
the carping of the leaders.
Anxious not to be outpaced in the democracy marathon slowly
being run on the continent, the Senegalese Government has embarked upon a vast
overhaul of its system, setting up a new electoral code, whose first merit is
that it was adopted by all the political parties. Voter identity, the secrecy of
the ballot (individual booths must be used), the count and transparency in all
electoral operations in general are much more stringently controlled than
before.
Votes, for example, will now be counted by about 30 committees,
each one chaired by a magistrate and comprising representatives of the political
parties, but none of the State - 'a real innovation', the Minister for Home
Affairs emphasised, although he objected to the 'lack of a State presence' in
this matter and thought the Government was at fault ' for going along with it.
'We have gone; further on this one than they have in France,' he added.
But if this is democratic progress for the people, what is the
point in regretting going one better than those set up as the example?
There is a limit on the number of terms a president can serve
now too - two lots of seven years - and independent candidates can stand, on far
easier terms than before.
But one of the most important provisions in the new electoral
code concerns the basis on which the President of the Republic is elected. The
new Article 28 says that 'henceforward, no-one may be proclaimed elected on the
first round unless he has obtained an absolute majority of the votes cast,
representing at least one quarter of the electorate, and... if no candidate has
obtained the requisite majority, there shall be a second ballot... to take place
on the second Sunday following the first round'. There are a number of
advantages to this: three of them are that it forces the Government to announce
how many people are on the electoral roll before the election, it broadens the
basis on which the president is elected (thus avoiding an ethnic, minority-based
election in which list manipulation could bypass heavily populated areas hostile
to a particular candidate) and it can encourage greater civic duty among the
citizens.
Senegal has made a huge effort to update its democratic system
in time for February 1993. It has been an expensive undertaking, very expensive
indeed bearing in mind the country's income and requirements, and part of the
cost has been covered by the international funders, with the European Community
giving something like ECU I million.
But going beyond the heavy cost of a better system of democracy,
what Senegal's political leaders, opposition included, have to do - and this is
most important - is to create optimum conditions in which to safeguard the
returns on democracy from which the country has derived so much benefit in years
past.
Lucien
PAGNI