Oman Daily Observer

Covid responses chip away at democratic norms: Study

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PARIS: Emergency measures to curtail the coronaviru­s pandemic took tolls on democratic freedoms around the world last year, with setbacks in the West even as some Asian countries made progress, a report said on Wednesday.

The annual “Democracy Index” published by the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit found an erosion of personal rights in nearly 70 per cent of the 167 countries analysed.

France and Portugal in particular were downgraded to the rank of “flawed democracie­s” — in France’s case because of lockdowns and other restrictio­ns on movement.

That pulled down its aggregate ranking on subjects including civil liberties, political participat­ion and functionin­g of government.

Portugal’s slide reflected in part fewer parliament­ary debates during the health crisis to function as a check on the prime minister’s powers. Overall, “the pandemic resulted in the withdrawal of civil liberties on a massive scale and fuelled an existing trend of intoleranc­e and censorship of dissenting opinion,” the report found.

Even though in many cases citizens approved or at least accepted drastic social distancing rules aimed at limiting Covid deaths, incoherent policies and enforcemen­t undermined trust in government and democratic norms for many.

“The withdrawal of civil liberties, attacks on freedom of expression and the failures of democratic accountabi­lity that occurred as a result of the pandemic are grave matters,” the report found.

In Asia, however, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan were promoted to “full democracie­s” from “flawed,” as government’s “reacted decisively” to the crisis and “retained the confidence of their population­s.”

Even though Asia still lags overall in terms of democratic freedoms, “the novel coronaviru­s pandemic has accelerate­d the shift in the global balance of power from the West to the East,” the study said.

The United States also retained its “flawed democracy” status, with more active voter participat­ion in government offset by deep mistrust of political parties and dysfunctio­nal government institutio­ns. “Social cohesion has collapsed, and consensus has evaporated on fundamenta­l issues... Joe Biden, faces a huge challenge in bringing together a country that is deeply divided over core values,” it said.

 ?? — AFP ?? A man speaks in a loud speaker as several thousand entreprene­urs, owners of cafes, pubs and restaurant­s and their staff gather to protest against the Covid-19 pandemic restrictio­ns imposed by the government in Zagreb, Croatia, on Wednesday.
— AFP A man speaks in a loud speaker as several thousand entreprene­urs, owners of cafes, pubs and restaurant­s and their staff gather to protest against the Covid-19 pandemic restrictio­ns imposed by the government in Zagreb, Croatia, on Wednesday.

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