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Is Democracy in Retreat in Africa?
Published at Foreign Policy Research Institute, March 10, 2022
Is
Democracy in Retreat in Africa?
Charles
A. Ray – March 10, 2022
n 1953, Rollo May, an
American psychologist, wrote the following in his book Man’s Search for
Himself: “Authoritarianism in religion and science, let alone politics, is becoming
increasingly accepted, not particularly because so many people explicitly
believe in it but because they feel themselves individually powerless and
anxious. So what else can one do . . . except follow the mass political leader
. . . or follow the authority of customs, public opinion, and social
expectations?”
May identified the
reason for this trend, which has accelerated in the past few decades, not to
the existence of psychologically disturbed, power-hungry politicians who want
total control—which have existed since the beginning of organized
government—but to the lack of courage of citizens who are unwilling to take the
necessary actions to turn back the tide of repression.
Since Rollo wrote these
words, the world has seen a rise in autocratic and authoritarian governments.
In the countries of the Global South, such as on the African continent, this
trend appears to be accelerating, with a decline in constitutional, rule-based
governments who respect the rule of law and human rights.
Why the Decline in
Representative Government?
When the European
colonial powers ended their rule over Africa, they were replaced by local
governments lacking effective governing institutions or true national
identities. While the post-independence leaders often adopted the putative
democratic constitutions of their colonizers, the challenges of state-building
caused many of them to quickly turn to authoritarian rule. This was caused in part by
the patterns of governing they had inherited from colonial rule; the influence
of the ideological conflict of the Cold War, when many countries felt abandoned
by the West and turned to the USSR and China; and the fact that in many of
these new countries the military was the only institution with any leadership
or organizational capacity.
In the 1990s, with the
end of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet Union, Africa saw a wave of
democratization. This golden age of constitutional rule, rule of law, and
peaceful transfer of power, however, did not last long. Many of the democratically
elected leaders attempted to establish family dynasties, ethnic or clan-based
rule, or, in many cases, direct rule by the military. These rulers have learned
how to use the “democratic” process to subvert truly representative
government—curtailing freedom of speech and association, muzzling the
independent media, and violating human rights with impunity.
An example was the
military’s intervention to end the decades-long autocratic rule of Robert
Mugabe in Zimbabwe in November 2015. Welcomed at
first by the population, and adamant that they were not staging a “coup,” the
military soon began running the country in the same way that Mugabe and his
cabal had since independence in 1980—violently cracking down on demonstrators
who were demanding elections and more freedom. The crisis was precipitated when
the ninety-three-year-old Mugabe fired his vice president, Emmerson Mnangagwa,
and expelled him from the ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National
Union–Patriotic Front (ZANU–PF)—apparently in favor of Mugabe’s wife, Grace
Mugabe, who had been positioning herself to take over from him for some time.
Mnangagwa, a former
defense minister and an intelligence officer during the independence struggle,
was a favorite of the military and aligned with the main war-veterans
association, while Grace Mugabe was head of a rival faction of younger veterans
known as the G-40 and was popular with young ZANU–PF party activists.
Neither side sought true
constitutional liberal democracy, as subsequent events have shown. What has
emerged in Zimbabwe, and many other African nations, is what Fareed Zakaria, in
a 1997 article in Foreign Affairs, called “illiberal” democracies. In the article,
Zakaria refers to American diplomat Richard Holbrooke, who in 1996 worried that
those elected in the Bosnian elections would be racists, fascists, and separatists
who would be opposed to peace and reintegration of all the different ethnic
groups in the former Yugoslavia. Holbrooke turned out to be right, and this has
been the case in many countries in Africa as well.
The trend toward
authoritarianism increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, when autocratic
leaders used control methods for stemming the outbreak of the disease as cover
to consolidate and extend their control. Governments around the world,
including in Africa, used the pandemic as justification to
stop demonstrations, muzzle journalists, and stifle dissent. In 2020, sixty-two
journalists were killed and 274 imprisoned—many for criticizing their
governments’ handling of the pandemic. The biggest offenders in this regard
were China, Turkey, and Egypt, who jailed the most journalists. Many people
were questioned and arrested in Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Madagascar,
Tunisia, Niger, and Cameroon for expressing views on the COVID situation or
sharing information. The Global Expression Report 2021, which scores
countries for freedom of expression and the right to information, states that
two thirds of the world’s population lives in a country where freedom of
expression is highly limited. In Asia and the Pacific this is true of 85
percent of the population. Not one country in Africa scored in even that
distressing metric.
Power from the Barrel
of a Gun
In 1927, at the
beginning of the Chinese Civil War, which eventually led to communist control
of the country, —the first leader of the People’s Republic of China and a
supporter of many African liberation movements—coined the phrase, “Political
power grows out of the barrel of a gun.”
This would appear to be
a lesson that many African militaries learned well. According to the
International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR) there have been
twenty-one attempts by military forces to overthrow incumbent governments since
2015 alone—with recent attempts in Mali, Sudan, Guinea-Bissau, Chad, Niger, and
Burkina Faso. Of these attempted overthrows, 38 percent were successful. Since
1950, ICIR has tracked 494 attempted coups worldwide, with 222 of them taking
place in Africa.
Coups and attempted
coups in Africa are blamed on lack of credibility of elections, lack of good
governance, and pervasive corruption. Some blame is also laid at the feet of
regional groupings such as the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) and the African Union (AU) for failing to vigorously condemn these
unconstitutional attempts to seize power. The Western countries, including the
United States, have expressed opposition to coups, but with even the U.S.
scoring lower in the Global Expression Report—especially during the period from
2016 to 2020—credibility is not high, and influence on events is minimal.
In addition to violent
attempts to overthrow governments, Africa is plagued by extremist violence and
interethnic conflict. Examples include the ongoing conflict in Ethiopia between
the central government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF),
fighting between Anglophone separatists and government forces in Cameroon, and the violence in South Africa following the arrest of
former president Jacob Zuma.
Hope or
Hopelessness—Whither Africa?
The ongoing violence has
caused incredible loss of life, damage of property, and suffering on a
continent that is already taking severe body blows from the negative effects of
global climate change.
As is often the case,
the negative news out of the continent tends to overshadow the good. There have
been a few bright spots, like the rise of credible opposition movements in the Democratic
Republic of Congo and Uganda. These gains, however, have not translated into
true increases in liberal democracy. Indicators of political and economic
governance continue to deteriorate, leading to increased political instability
and lack of sustained economic growth.
What has occurred in
Africa, as in much of the rest of the world, is a growth of Fareed Zakaria’s
illiberal democracies. Even countries such as Uganda and Mozambique have been
classified as “moderate autocracies,” as they have moved to more authoritarian
rule, while countries such as Burundi and Zimbabwe are classified as “hardline
autocracies.”
These trends tend to
mask the diversity of Africa, though. Of the fifty-four nations on the
continent, sixteen are classified as hardline autocracies and fifteen as defective,
or illiberal, democracies. In those countries considered most stable, such as
Ghana, Liberia, Namibia, Senegal, and Sierra Leone, between 2015 and 2017 there
was a decline in their anti-corruption rating.
What appears to be
happening in Africa is a widening divide between democratic and autocratic
countries, with some countries improving slightly and others dipping lower in
the ratings. This only makes things more difficult for the already nearly
ineffective regional groupings such as the AU.
If Africa is to pull
itself out of this decline and develop the continent’s economies to meet the
needs of a rapidly growing and increasingly young and energetic population, it
will need to mobilize all its resources—both natural and human. This will
require a renewed commitment to good governance, establishment and nurturing of
the institutions that provide support to citizens and oversight of government,
more freedom of the press and individual expression, and sustained economic
development.
While international
assistance can be useful in establishing the conditions for the revival of
constitutional democracy in Africa, it is the people of the continent who must
be the prime movers of this renaissance. Regional organizations need to step up
and become a voice for change, standing firm for rule of law and respect for
human rights and speaking out against deviation from this path. This won’t be
easy, and it will not happen overnight—and this word of caution is for
international actors as much as for Africans themselves. Setting
unrealistically short timelines for change will only lead to disappointment and
disillusionment and will further hinder the growth of the responsive,
responsible governance that Africa needs to realize its full potential.
Change, though, is possible.
When Ahmad Tejan Kabbah became the first democratically elected president of
Sierra Leone in 1996—despite grinding poverty and a vicious war that was being
supported by Charles Taylor, the dictator of neighboring Liberia—all the signs
were initially hopeful. Kabbah was overthrown by a rogue element of the army a
year later, requiring the intervention of Nigeria (representing ECOWAS) and the
U.K. (Sierra Leone’s former colonizer) to reestablish the government in 1998.
Unfortunately, after being reinstalled, Kabbah, like many African leaders,
became more and more autocratic and intolerant of dissension. He did, though,
fulfill his promise to end the civil war in 2002 and went on to win a final
five-year term in office that same year, serving until 2007.
Although Sierra Leone is
still one of the poorest countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, it has remained
stable politically. In November 2012, for instance, the country held its
third election since the 2002 end of the civil
war, with Ernest Bai Koroma running for re-election against Julius Maada Bio,
who was the deputy, and then leader, of the military junta, the National
Provisional Ruling Council (NPRC), which took power in 1994 and handed over
power to Kabbah in 1996. Bio lost that election but went on to win the
presidency in 2018.
This demonstrates that
it can be done—and with the will of the people, and the support and
encouragement of the international community, it can be done in other
countries. It’s a matter of having hope and being willing to do what’s
necessary.
Democracy is weakening
in Africa, as it is in many other parts of the world, but it’s not yet in full
retreat.
The views expressed in
this article are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the
position of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, a non-partisan organization
that seeks to publish well-argued, policy-oriented articles on American foreign
policy and national security priorities.
Charles A. Ray, a member of
the Board of Trustees and Chair of the Africa Program at the Foreign Policy
Research Institute, served as U.S. Ambassador to the Kingdom of Cambodia and
the Republic of Zimbabwe.
Is
Democracy in Retreat in Africa? - Foreign Policy Research Institute (fpri.org)
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