We reproduce a short piece by Helen Epstein (author of "The invisible Cure" on the fight against AIDS in Africa) in the New York Review of Books reviewing Adam Branch and Zachariah Mampilly’s Africa Uprising: Popular Protest and Political Change and simultaneously addressing the latest episodes of social and political unrest in the African continent (notably Burundi but also Burkina and the DRC with mentions to Senegal and Uganda) within a larger framework of Western support to autocratic and seemingly perpetual regimes in the region. A backing rooted in the adjustment programs dictated by the IMF and World Bank and renewed with the so-called War on Terror. We have added hyperlinks and some context material at the end.
Ndabashinze Renovat/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Security forces facing off with protesters in Bujumbura, Burundi, May 20, 2015 |
Who’s Afraid of African Democracy? Helen Epstein New York Review of Books May 21, 2015
In April, President Pierre Nkurunziza, in power since 2005, announced
he’d be running for a third term in elections scheduled for June.
Opposition supporters, church leaders, student and civil society groups,
much of the international community, and even many in Nkurunziza’s own
party say this violates the Arusha agreement, which limits a president
to two terms in office. They also accuse Nkurunziza—a former warlord who
became a born-again Christian and travels with his own Hallelujah
football club and choir—of presiding over a regime of corruption
remarkable even by East African standards. Many also claim President
Nkurunziza has condoned politically motivated killings of opposition
figures and provided tacit government support to an armed militia known
as Imbonerakure, which could be deployed to intimidate voters during the
election.
Thousands of Burundians took to the streets in mid-April to protest
Nkurunziza’s plans to run for office again. Hundreds were arrested and
perhaps twenty—the number is disputed—were killed. Security forces were
split, with some in the army on the side of the people. On May 13, a
group of army officers led by former intelligence chief Godefroid Niyombare announced they’d ousted Nkurunziza, to much rejoicing in
Bujumbura. Nkurunziza was in Tanzania discussing the crisis with other
African leaders, but he quickly snuck back across the border where he
was met by his own forces and retook the capital a couple of days later.
Niyombare is said to be on the run, and most of his fellow coup plotters have been arrested. Three who were wounded were subsequently shot in their hospital beds by men in police uniforms as horrified nurses, doctors, and other patients looked on. An estimated hundred thousand refugees have fled to neighboring countries. The protestors are continuing their demonstrations, while Nkurunziza seems determined to go ahead with his plans to stand for reelection. On Wednesday, Radio France Internationale reported that police in Bujumbura had cordoned off an entire neighborhood and were shooting at anti-third term activists among their homes.
What makes events in this tiny country so important, and so
heartbreaking, is that they are part of a recent pattern that actually
seemed hopeful. When protest movements swept across the Middle East
region—in Iran in 2009 and then in the Arab Spring countries—they didn’t
stop at the Sahara desert. In their new book Africa Uprising (@ZedBooks),
Adam Branch and Zachariah Mampilly (@Ras_Karya) document more than ninety political
protests in forty African countries in the past decade—most in the past
six years. Many have had the same aim as those in the Middle East: to
force corrupt leaders out of power.
Some have been encouraging: after Senegal’s Constitutional Court
ruled—under duress, some say—that President Abdoulaye Wade could run for
what many maintained was an unconstitutional third term in the 2012
elections, people poured onto the streets in outrage. Police in riot
gear fired tear gas and rubber bullets, and a handful of protesters were
killed. But the country’s citizens got their point across. Wade lost
the election and conceded defeat.
There’s also cautious optimism about Burkina Faso. When President
Blaise Compaoré tried to strongarm the National Assembly into removing
term limits so he could contest the 2015 election, hundreds of thousands
of people gathered in front of the building while some forced their way
in. He was deposed in October 2014, and an interim military council is
now organizing elections to take place later this year. And when
demonstrators in the Democratic Republic of Congo took to the streets of
Kinshasa in January, they managed to halt President Joseph Kabila’s
attempt to alter the constitution, which would have extended his term
beyond its end date of 2016.
Attempts at tyrant-removal are unlikely to end anytime soon. Over two
dozen African countries are headed for elections in the next two years,
including Uganda, Rwanda, Ethiopia, South Sudan, and other countries
whose leaders have signaled an intention to remain in office no matter what. Protest movements in some of these countries are gathering force,
and army commanders are quietly choosing sides between the autocrats and
the people.
Why do so many African leaders assume they can ignore their constitutions, cling to power, and get away with it?
In order to understand this epidemic of folly, it’s important to
appreciate how much influence the West has over these countries—either
through foreign aid given bilaterally, via institutions such as the
World Bank, or in the form of clandestine military support. For example,
Western aid pays for half of Burundi’s budget, roughly 40 percent of
Rwanda’s, 50 percent of Ethiopia’s and 30 percent of Uganda’s . All
these countries receive an unknown amount of military aid as well. This
money enables African leaders to ignore the demands of their own people,
and facilitates the financing of the patronage systems and security
machinery that keeps them in power.
The
problems started with the debt crisis in the 1970s. African countries
that had borrowed and spent lavishly in the years following independence
found themselves unable to repay the commercial banks that had lent
them money. The Western nations, via the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund, took over and restructured these loans, but demanded
large public spending cuts. Huge numbers of teachers, nurses, doctors,
and other public servants lost their jobs; programs to expand health
care and education, improve roads and bring water and electricity to
rural areas ground to a halt; poverty deepened; infant mortality rose.
In many cases, the new austerity programs, intended to lead to more
efficient government, instead encouraged unprecedented corruption. Those
who managed to hold on to government and civil service jobs scrambled
to grab whatever they could for themselves and their increasingly
dependent extended families. This patronage system helped control
dissent, as many African leaders used what Cameroonians term “the
politics of the belly”—bribery—to compromise their critics and coopt
opposition groups. But it also led to deteriorating public services, as I
documented in Uganda, where the maternal mortality rate in the largest
referral hospital had increased seven-fold since the days of Idi Amin,
according to a World Bank consultant who had worked there in the 1970s.
The continent’s foreign aid donors were not oblivious to these
problems. They knew that this new loan regime, known as Structural Adjustment, would hurt huge numbers of people. For example, in a
notorious 1981 World Bank report
about the program , the authors acknowledge that some reforms would be
resisted by “consumers and producers, parastatal managers, civil
servants and industrialists,”—meaning just about everybody in the
nations involved. The state had to be “willing to take strong action on
internal problems,” the report continued. As Branch and Mampilly note,
many African scholars interpreted this as tacit donor permission for
repression in countries receiving loans. This would be consistent with
the donors’ tendency to look the other way when Adjustment-friendly
leaders—like Burkina Faso’s Compaoré, Cote D’Ivoire’s Félix Houphouët-Boigny, Uganda’s Museveni and Kenya’s Daniel Arap Moi—jailed,
murdered, or exiled their critics. The donors’ tolerance for human
rights abuses may help explain why, when ethnic discrimination and
repression escalated into genocide, as it did in Rwanda and Burundi, the
international community did nothing until it was far too late.
Another reason so many African leaders feel they can afford to ignore
their own people has to do with America’s “War on Terror.” During the
1990s, the Clinton administration began securing military ties with
African leaders who seemed willing to cooperate in the fight against
what Clinton officials saw as the rising threat of Islamic militancy on
the continent. These ties have only grown in the years after September
11. According to journalist Nick Turse (@NickTurse), the US military has sponsored
more than one thousand African missions since 2011, with countries such
as Nkurunziza’s Burundi, along with Rwanda, Ethiopia, Chad, and Uganda,
deploying troops and guards across Africa and the Middle East at
America’s behest. The primary purpose of this seems to be to monitor and
prevent the emergence of terrorist groups in weak states. But it’s no
coincidence that the US’s military allies in Africa have often used
security forces against their own critics at home. As the events in
Burundi suggest, providing support to ugly regimes may ultimately
undermine the very stability we are supposedly seeking.
Now, fed up with decades of lies, plunder and abuse, Africans across
the continent are finally rising up to challenge these Western-backed
thugs. Some have been inspired by protests elsewhere in the world; some
are united in new ways by Facebook, Twitter, and chat programs. Foreign
aid has also brought thousands of NGOs into Africa. Not all are
effective, but their American and European employees and volunteers
have, naively or not, exposed African people to liberal Western
attitudes and ideals of human rights as never before.
Branch and Mampilly lament that whereas past African protest
movements had clear ideologies, like Independence, African Nationalism
and Pan-Africanism, the only thing today’s protesters appear to want is
the removal of the current leadership of their countries. But this lack
of a grand objective may not be such a bad thing, as long as whoever
takes over pursues a modest program of obeying the rule of law,
eschewing corruption and respecting human rights. This is why this
spring’s election in Nigeria, in which incumbent Goodluck Jonathan
graciously conceded defeat, was so welcome. Some opposition supporters
had threatened violence if it felt the election was rigged, but this
proved unnecessary. Though Nigeria’s new leader, former General
Muhammadu Buhari, behaved like a tyrant when he briefly ruled the
country between 1983 and 1985, he also cracked down on corruption. For
two years, Nigerians formed orderly lines at bus stops, the streets were
clean, and politicians didn’t steal. Many Nigerians, exasperated with
their supremely corrupt country, are hoping for a spell of modest
probity, as long as Buhari honors his promise to respect human rights
this time. If we’re seeing the dawn of a new movement, let’s forgive it
for lacking a glamorous label. Right now, it’s the best hope this
beleaguered continent has.
Adam Branch and Zachariah Mampilly’s Africa Uprising: Popular Protest and Political Change is published by Zed Books and distributed by the University of Chicago Press.
Original Url. http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2015/may/21/burundi-whos-afraid-african-democracy/
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