MAKAU MUTUA: How
to keep Africa from backsliding
The
Christian Science Monitor
28, November, 2005 - BUFFALO, N.Y. (CSM) - Black Africa, unlike
its North African or Middle East neighbors, has made epochal
strides in building open societies.
The decade of the 1990s witnessed unprecedented political progress
in virtually all sub-Saharan African states. Military dictatorships
and authoritarian one-party states were either swept aside or
forced to adopt democratic reforms by popular upheavals.
Even so,
democratization in black Africa has in recent years either stagnated
or witnessed serious reversals. The euphoria of change has not
had a lasting effect on the political cultures of many African
states. Regrettably, recent success stories of democratic reform
are turning into tragedies. The future hangs perilously in the
balance unless there is a dramatic shift in the culture of governance.
In Uganda,
President Yoweri Museveni, long a darling of Washington who
has been in power since 1986, rammed through parliament a constitutional
amendment to remove term limits so that he could run for a third
time. In Ethiopia, governed by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi (dubbed
by former President Bill Clinton as among the new democratic
breed of African leaders), scores of peaceful demonstrators
protesting the outcome of elections in May were killed by government
forces.
Even in
Kenya, the pivotal East African state that in 2002 underwent
a historic and peaceful regime change since independence in
1964, democratic reforms have been derailed. The government
of President Mwai Kibaki is rife with corruption. It has reneged
on all key reforms. Last week, it resoundingly lost a referendum
on a divisive draft constitution. Kenya's star has dimmed amid
ethnic tensions, a government in disarray, and a despondent
population.
Tanzania,
once an oasis of calm in a turbulent region, has been rocked
by violence as protesters have clashed with security forces
in Zanzibar, its autonomous archipelago nation. The opposition
disputes an election that was won by the ruling party.
Zimbabwe's
Robert Mugabe has completely run his country into the ground.
He has quashed a democratic movement, ordered land invasions,
and isolated Zimbabwe from the world.
And in
Liberia, soccer-star George Weah has refused to concede defeat
to Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the Harvard-educated former World
Bank economist. President-elect Johnson-Sirleaf will be the
first woman African head of state with an excellent opportunity
to end Liberia's string of despotic regimes.
Elsewhere
on the continent - in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo,
lawless Somalia, and the Ivory Coast - dysfunctional or failed
states continue to tear the abric of society. Despair among
the population is increasing in countries with more stable states
such as Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Malawi, Botswana, Zambia, and
even democratic South Africa.
What has
gone awry so soon after a decade of democratization? Meaningful
political and economic reforms will remain elusive unless Africa's
traditional political class is exorcised from the landscape.
This will require both a complete renewal and a broad expansion
of the political elite.
Second,
politics must be detribalized. One ironic paradox of multipartyism
and open political competition has been the tribalization of
politics. African political parties - the only vehicles through
which modern democracy is practiced - are arren receptacles
for tribal barons and ethnic demagoguery. They are parties in
name only, not substance. They do not mobilize the population
and only heighten ethnic tensions and fragment the political
landscape when they do. Political parties must be national vehicles
grounded in political ideologies and economic philosophies.
Third,
democratic development is not possible without the demarginalization
of women and their full inclusion in the public square. In African
states, the female gender is the voice of the powerless. Women
till the fields, raise families, and nurture society. Yet, their
voices remain excluded from political participation. Their knowledge
of the conditions of powerlessness makes them the critical ariable
for lifting Africa from its deathbed.
The West
must play its role to help Africa overcome the barriers to development
and democracy. Fairer terms of trade are better than aid. So
are debt forgiveness and more equitable terms for loans. Nor
should protest diplomacy be abandoned. It is reasonable that
the United States should express its concern when Kenyan legislators
pay themselves more than members of the US Congress in a country
with a per capita income of less than $300. Denying American
visas to Kenyan ministers would send a clear message that corruption
is not acceptable.
But the
future of black Africa rests squarely in the hands of Africans.
African leaders must understand that societies are only as great
as their elites. Politicians ust develop a national sense of
the mission of government. Self-aggrandizement and personal
interests cannot be allowed to trump the national interest.
Africa's first liberation overthrew colonial hegemony. The second
liberation swept away blatant dictatorships. The third liberation
must consolidate and deepen democracy.
Makau
Mutua is a professor of law and the director of the Human Rights
Center at the State University of New York at Buffalo.