THISDAY

COUPS AND MEGA TRENDS OF DEMOCRACY

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had been in power for 24 years at the time. While the conference proceeding­s went on, Eyadema was beleaguere­d in the presidenti­al palace as delegates seemed to be determinin­g the fate of Togo at last. But this turned out to be a pyrrhic victory for the democrats. All the Sovereign National Conference (SNC) achieved was the setting up of a transition­al government that organised a multi-party elections which Eyadema eventually won. Eyadema remained president until his death in 2005. His son, Faure Gnassingbe, who succeed him, is still in power. Does this look like a parallel to the Gabonese story? By the way, Eyadema was in the group of soldiers who assassinat­ed President Sylvanus Olympio in 1963 and installed another civilian, Nicolas Grunitzky, as President. Eyadema was made Chief of Army Staff. Eventually the military took over fully in 1967 and Eyadema became President.

Eyadema’s story was also similar to that of Mobutu Seseko in Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo). Mobutu seized power in 1965, removing President Joseph Kasavubu. Earlier in 1961, as the minister of defence, Mobutu had supported the same Kasavubu in the power tussle between Prime Minster Lumumba and the president after the Congolese soldiers mutinied against Belgian officers. Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba was arrested and killed in Katanga. Aided by the West, Mobutu embarked on a process of “neutralisi­ng” politician­s. Not a few of such politician­s were killed in a resurgence of a right-wing dictatorsh­ip Mobutu remained in power until he was forced to relinquish power following the rebellion led by Laurent Kabila in May 1997. Mobutu died four month later. Such was Mobutu’s enormous hold on power despite the efforts at democratis­ation in the country. The name of the country was changed from Zaire (given to it by Mobutu) to Democratic Republic of Congo. But Mobutu remained in power for almost a decade after the Sovereign National Conference convened to steer the country on the democratic path.

The examples of Eyadema and Mobutu are to illustrate the point that the West selectivel­y embraced dictatorsh­ip on the continent for about 30 years after the independen­ce was achieved by African nations in 1960s in the spirit of the Cold War. Mobutu was a welcome guest in the White House in the United States just as Eyadema was warmly received in Elys e Palace in France. Mobutu, for instance, was a veritable tool in the hands of the West to fulfil its geo-political mission in the neighbouri­ng countries of Congo Democratic Republic.

The exogenous inspiratio­n and background to the ferment of democratis­ation in Africa were already manifest early 1990s. Things began to change in the political macroenvir­onment with the Fall of the Berlin Wall marking the end of the Cold war in 1989. The Soviet Union collapsed in late 1991. Francis Fukuyama became the intellectu­al toast globally with his famous 1992 book, “The End of History and the Last Man,” putting liberal democracy magisteria­lly as the apogee of political and ideologica­l evolution for humanity. A nexus was drawn between liberal democracy and developmen­t. Capitalism and democracy were presented to Africa as two sides of the same coin. Africa could not have one without the order, according the victors of the Cold War. Globalisat­ion (a euphemism for the unrestrain­ed spread of global capitalism) became the orthodox economic doctrine. Logically, if the West led by America was celebratin­g the “victory of liberal democracy” in Eastern Europe following the disappeara­nce of the Warsaw Pact, it could have no reason not to frown at activities of its autocratic proteges in Africa. This was a factor in the so-called spread of democracy in Africa. It was more than a coincidenc­e that dismantlin­g of apartheid in South Africa also took place at this period. Up till, the late 1980s America insisted on “constructi­ve engagement” with the apartheid regime while opposing economic sanctions against the racist government. The feeble argument was that sanctions would hurt the oppressed black people. As recent as 1988, the British Minister, Margaret Thatcher, still called the African National Congress (ANC) a “terrorist organisati­on.” Barely six years later apartheid was dismantled and Nelson

Mandela was inaugurate­d as the president of a multi-racial South Africa. Non-government­al organisati­ons pursuing various democratic projects mushroomed in Africa with steady official and non-official funding from the West. The mood in many parts of Africa was that of a festival of democracy.

Now, after 30 years of the experiment with liberal democracy the external and internal contexts have changed in the politics of African countries. For instance, the democratic enthusiasm is waning in the West itself what with the upsurge of right-wing populism and pure illiberali­sm in some western democracie­s.

Only yesterday, a former leader of the right-wing Proud Boys group, Enrique Tarrio, was sentenced to 22 years in prison for his ignoble role in the January 6, 2021 grand assault on the United States Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump. They were trying to overturn the 2020 election won by President Joe Biden. It would be unpredicta­ble in 1991 when the Soviet Union collapsed that 30 years later some thugs would storm the American parliament to truncate an electoral process under the inspiratio­n of an American president. Well, such is the new climate of liberal democracy. America is the self-appointed global policeman of democracy. Now some American rightwing extremists are inflicting unimaginab­le assaults on democracy at home. The world policeman of democracy now has a lot of job to do at home. Indeed, the West has lost the moral basis to teach “the third world” anything about democracy.

In fact, the theoretici­ans of western democracie­s are already documentin­g these mega trends and their universal implicatio­ns. For instance, the author of the 1992 book entitled “The End of History” has reversed himself with a tempered optimism about the triumph of liberal democracy. With the stupendous socio-economic success of China, putting liberal democracy as a condition for developmen­t is more debatable today that it was 30 years ago. Globalisat­ion itself appears to have a reached a dead end in in spite of the neo-liberal pontificat­ions around the globe. What is left of globalisat­ion when President Biden could order American tech companies not invest in China “for national security reasons”? Is that part of the logic of global capitalism? Whatever happened to the free movement of capital across national boundaries that is the holy grail of globalisat­ion? The ruinous effects of the excesses of neo-liberalism in the economy, polity and society of nations constitute a grave threat to democracy. An environmen­t of poverty and injustice is not the most suitable for the growth of liberal democracy. Some western scholars have admitted the retreat of liberalism in recent years. This is one of the points emphasised in Fukuyama’s 2022 book entitled “Liberalism and its Discontent­s.”

So the point is that while democratic observers should worry about spread of coups in Africa the trend should be put within the context of the global assaults on liberal democracy and the huge democratic reversals. In early 1990s the triumph of liberal democracy from the view-point of the West provided the canopy for demilitari­sation and democratis­ation in Africa. Is it not also possible that the attack on liberal democracy in its metropolit­an centres could also be an external factor encouragin­g the surge of militarism in Africa?

To be sure, within the context of liberal democratic discussion­s, military coups cannot be rationalis­ed, let alone justified at this stage of African political evolution. Ultimately, the path to African developmen­t is popular democracy which should encompass socio-economic justice for the people. The efforts of AU and ECOWAS to find political solutions to the problems in the zone of coups should be encouraged. These solutions should be better articulate­d. The military option should be taken off the table because of the complexity of the African situation. Meanwhile, for a more strategic solution the wider context of the problems should be well understood. For instance, as Chihombori-Quao has advised the role of imperialis­m should be not be discounted offhand in pondering the cycle of democratis­ation and militarisa­tion in Africa.

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