Africa wrestling with democracy, authoritarianism

As the
African youths are fighting for democracy on internet platforms or on the
streets, politicians pursue their own agenda whether leaning towards democracy
or seeking totalitarianism.
Do recent
coups in Chad, Mali, Guinea and Sudan mean that democracy in Africa is failing?
This notion is fuelled by internet shutdowns, muzzling of the opposition and
rising third termism. But evidence suggests that while there are pockets of
concern, a robust democratic culture is in fact growing in many parts of the
continent.
In 2017,
elections delivered peaceful power transfers in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Protest action was channelled through the courts, and government control was
handed over without incident, reflecting a democratic maturity in countries
with bloody recent pasts.
Nigeria
experienced a peaceful handover to the opposition in 2015 for the first time
since the advent of democracy in 1999. Ghana has done so over the past two
decades, and The Gambia’s long-serving ruler was pressured into vacating his
post after losing the election in 2016.
Meanwhile,
the judiciary stands firm against abuses of power and executive overreach in
several countries (Kenya in 2017 and Malawi in 2019), where election results
were annulled due to misconduct and irregularities. An independent judiciary
also prevailed in South Africa, where former president Jacob Zuma was forced to
serve prison time in 2021 for contempt of court.
In Zambia,
attempts by the ruling party to subvert democracy failed as citizens flocked to
the polls and elected a new president. In the August 2021 ‘youthquake’, power
was handed from incumbent to opposition in a decisive result that made rigging
impossible. With biometric voting being used across Africa and greater civic
engagement and demands for accountability, manipulating elections is becoming
harder. And in Tanzania, the peaceful transition after president John
Magufuli’s death in March facilitated a reformist agenda.
Compared to
Poland and Hungary or even emerging market heavyweights such as India and
Turkey – where significant democratic erosion has occurred – these examples
suggest that Africa’s democratic trajectory is not that grim.
On the
contrary, says Jakkie Cilliers, Head of African Futures at the Institute for
Security Studies, Africa is more democratic than other regions relative to its
level of development. He argues that since democracy generally follows
development, Africa’s early start means the continent must achieve both
simultaneously, which is difficult without quality leadership. The continent’s
premature democratisation leads to instability as it is ‘not accompanied by the
institutions required to move from personalisation to institutionalisation.’
Although the
continent is not regressing, there is certainly cause for concern in several
countries and regions. In 2020, the Mo Ibrahim Foundation’s Index of African
Governance reported the first-ever decline in average governance since its
inception. Freedom House also observed a decrease in freedom in 22 African
states in 2020.
In Egypt and
Zimbabwe, democratic transitions were stillborn. The optimism of seeing
long-serving despots replaced by new leaders turned out to be false dawns. And
the outsized role of the military in political affairs has arguably installed
even more repressive regimes. In Southern Africa, liberation movements have not
matched their electoral promises with reform, and most countries’ political
economies are uncompetitive, unstable and dominated by factionalism.
"Africa’s
young ‘Facebook generation’ want better and more accountable governance and
insist on democracy and development simultaneously, rather than one or the
other."
Authoritarian
tendencies are evident in the physical and digital domains too. Rwandan and
Ugandan opposition figures are routinely jailed on spurious charges, and in
Nigeria and eSwatini, draconian measures to curb dissent through Twitter bans
and internet blackouts are prevalent.
Perhaps most
worrying is the tendency towards ‘constitutional coups’ and ‘third termism’
that sees politicians manipulating the law to remain in power, as in Cote
d’Ivoire. Linked to this is the growth of dynastic democracy (Gabon and
Mauritius), where political transitions are stage managed in favour of family
members.
Coups during
2021 in Mali, Guinea, Chad and Sudan ignite memories of ‘big man’ rule and
chronic instability. Military interventions seldom result in improved outcomes
and reflect a breakdown of trust in governments and society.
Africa’s
democratic trajectory is neither linear nor smooth. Several themes emerging in
the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic will likely impact the picture. First,
COVID-19 has magnified governance problems. Amid rising nationalism,
isolationism and authoritarianism, is democracy fit for purpose? Across the
world, and not just in Africa, trust in democratic governments is slipping, and
alternative systems are attracting attention.
Enamoured by
the Beijing consensus and China’s economic success, African leaders have
advocated its authoritarian model for the continent. Their oversimplified
argument is that China became prosperous without western democratic
prescriptions, and African countries should do the same. Democracy, with all
its checks and balances, impedes growth, they suggest.
Africa is
facing a growing mismatch in values between old and young. A 2019 Afrobarometer
report found that large majorities of Africans continue to support democracy
and reject authoritarian alternatives.
Yet despite
these demands, the supply side of democracy is lacking, creating many
‘dissatisfied democrats.’ This is seen in the wave of recent youth-led protests
– including #endSARS in Nigeria, anti-monarchy demonstrations in eSwatini,
#Fixthecountry in Ghana and #FreeSenegal. Unless the disconnect between the
continent’s frustrated youth and their unresponsive leaders is resolved, a
collision course is inevitable.
Last,
technology has added to an already complex political dynamic. Digital democracy
and digital dictatorship have emerged as two sides of the same coin, with
politicians and citizens vying to exploit technology to further their agendas.
This tension will shape whether countries adopt open, transparent systems or
take the repressive, surveillance state route. Both have significant
implications for social cohesion.
As Africa
navigates internal and external threats to democracy, the pressing issue is not
the system of governance but the quality of leadership. Leadership vacuums
create fertile ground for anti-democratic tendencies and disorderly regime
changes.
Younger,
more responsive and inclusive leaders are needed to reduce the vulnerability of
political systems to despots and coup plotters. The message from Africa’s youth
is clear – the status quo is simply not good enough.
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