African democracy
A glass half-full
WHICH way will African
politics go? The way of Senegal, where the president conceded electoral defeat
on March 25th to a younger rival, extending a democratic tradition unbroken
since independence in 1960? Or is nearby Mali a more troubling bellwether? A
few days before Senegal's vote, junior army officers stormed and looted the
presidential palace in the Malian capital, Bamako, abruptly ending a 20-year
stretch of democracy that had raised hopes for the wider region
Sad tales like Mali's
dominate news from Africa, yet in the longer term its political norms have
evolved more towards politicians in suits than mutineers in battle fatigues.
Democracy south of the Sahara may be sloppy and haphazard, but electoral
contests and term limits are increasingly accepted as fixed rules, to be
flouted at a would-be ruler's peril, rather than distant ideals. Today only one
African state, Eritrea, holds no elections. Even Mali's coup-plotters have
sworn to hold them soon. Tellingly, the country's neighbours united in a storm
of protest. “We cannot allow this country endowed with such precious democratic
instruments, dating back at least two decades, to leave history by regressing,”
said Alassane Ouattara, the president of Côte d'Ivoire.
Yet many
Africa-watchers perceive a gradual erosion of democratic standards. In last
year's Liberian election, the former warlord Prince Yormie Johnson cruised the
countryside wearing a red fez. Winding down a window of his Ford Expedition, he
would toss banknotes at assembled voters and then speed off to the next
village. At one campaign event he lambasted the sitting president for
corruption, while an aide fretted about running out of cash to pay off
journalists for good coverage.
African elections do
not necessarily produce representative governments. In oil-rich but
poverty-ridden Equatorial Guinea, President Teodoro Obiang was “elected” with
95% of the vote. His party “won” 99% of seats in parliament. Many opposition
parties in Gambia planned to boycott elections on March 29th, assuming they
would be rigged. In Zambia, another democratic standard-bearer, the government
has tried to shoo the opposition out of parliament for failing to pay a party
fee.
Academic studies also
paint a gloomy picture. The Economist Intelligence Unit's annual democracy
index ranks only one African country, Mauritius, as a “full” democracy, though
it uses tough criteria that count countries like much-praised Botswana as
“flawed” democracies. The Mo Ibrahim Index, a quantitative measure of good
governance, shows a decline of 5% since 2007 in African political
participation. Freedom House, an American think-tank, says the number of full
“electoral democracies” among the 49 sub-Saharan countries has fallen from 24
in 2005 to 19 today.
Southern Africa,
historically the best-performing region, is now a problem child. Nepotism and
corruption increasingly mar politics in the regional giant, South Africa. The
president of Madagascar, André Rajoelina, has remained in power for three years
after a bloodless coup. President Bingu wa Mutharika of Malawi is behaving ever
more despotically, provoking Western donors to suspend aid. But even here the
news is not all bad. Madagascar may have elections later this year. Angola,
where President José Eduardo Dos Santos has ruled since 1979, making him
Africa's longest-serving leader, will soon run parliamentary polls, and its
ruling party may push Mr Dos Santos into retirement.
Still, Africa has come
a long way. In 1990 Freedom House recorded just three African countries with
multiparty political systems, universal suffrage, regular fraud-free elections
and secret ballots. “Progress comes in waves,” says Alex Vines, head of the
Africa programme at Chatham House, a London-based think-tank. Mali aside, the
rest of West Africa has enjoyed a democratic boom. Sierra Leone and Liberia,
both violent basket-cases not long ago, have set up respectable if imperfect
political systems. Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire overcame spasms of strife and returned
to democratic rule. Coup-prone Guinea-Bissau held a calm election on March
18th. Nigeria and Niger ran their best polls in recent memory last year.
Ghanaian democracy has been praised by President Barack Obama.
Yet the poor,
illiterate electorates of many African countries are obviously keen on
handouts, and thus easy to manipulate. Election violence has also become more
common. Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Nigeria and Zimbabwe saw serious clashes
after their most recent polls, driven by longstanding ethnic and sectarian
rifts.
All these came to a
more or less swift end, unlike Africa's civil wars of previous decades.
Political progress during the next decade may be slower than in the past one.
The easy post-cold-war advances have been made. Reformers must now set their
sights higher. Ensuring better governance by building firm institutions is
harder than putting ballots in a box.
Reformers have plenty
of reasons to be hopeful, among them the growing sophistication of opposition
groups. These used to be a mess—divided, undemocratic and starved of resources.
One observer called them “the skunks at the democratic zoo”. Many are still
hopeless, but some have learnt that discipline can put them within striking
distance of power. Zambia and Senegal are recent examples.
Opposition parties
also benefit from the general absence of ideological fault-lines in African
politics since the demise of Marxism. More than in the West, voters there are
swayed by evidence of individual competence, not party affiliation. This is
useful for hungry opposition members competing with complacent governments.
Africa's high birth rates produce a pool of young voters who are more likely to
take a chance on political newcomers. In many countries a president or party
can win office even where all the supporters are under 30, so long as polls are
fair.
At the same time,
impressively high economic growth rates in many African countries have fuelled
a communications explosion. Political campaigns need no longer depend on
government-owned media or the ability to travel to far-flung places. They can
reach voters directly and remotely via the internet and, especially, the
ubiquitous mobile telephone. They can expose political skulduggery and also
tabulate poll results instantaneously, making fraud easier to detect. In
Nigeria's 2011 election, tens of thousands of monitors recorded local results
and fed them by text message into a central system run by volunteers. Devious
governments have to invent ever more complicated and hence less effective ways
of manipulating results.
The lack of voter data
is a costly obstacle everywhere. Most Africans have no identity documents, so
electoral rolls often need to be drafted from scratch for every poll. In Congo
the government spent more than $500m on elections last year, making them the
world's most costly after America's. High rates of illiteracy and a lack of
capable institutions do not help. In Sierra Leone's border regions, officials
judge who should get a voting card by listening to people's accents.
But setting aside the
quality of African democracy, all but a few of the continent's 1 billion people
now expect to vote in regular national polls. That is something which 1.5
billion Asians, for all their impressive economic performance, cannot do.
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