Africa’s democratic practices not helping progress, says US-based don

A United States-based Nigerian scholar and Professor of Political Science, Cyril Obi, has said the current Western democracy practised by the majority of African countries has not helped the progress of the nations.

He said the current democratic practices on the continent were becoming more autocratic such that they had rendered the electorate disempowered.

Delivering an inaugural lecture titled: ‘Caught Between De-democratisation and Re-democratisation: Grappling with Africa’s Complex Conjunctures through the Lens of Political Dialectics’, at the University of the Free State, South Africa, Obi, the programme director of the African Peace-building Network of the Social Science Research Council, New York, lamented that despite the adoption of democracy by African countries, recent coups in some countries had shown a decline in the acceptability of the system of government.

He said: “Democratic trends are becoming more autocratic, open to contestation and interrogation as a post-COVID-19 pandemic world is faced certainly led by radical forces of the left and right or those opposed to neoliberalism and idealised configurations of globalised market rule and deregulation, and seek for nationalist, populist, or socially rooted alternatives.

“However, we must not lose sight of those subtle but potent attacks by autocratic tendencies that emanate from cynical manipulation of constitutions, overbearing technocrats wedded to powerful wealthy elite, alienated, divided and disempowered electorate, and the growing socio-economic crisis.

“This suggests that democracy is not only being contested from within, but is also increasingly drowning in the face of growing threats to its norms, values and principles in the context of unprecedented levels of socio-economic inequalities, the erosion of basic freedoms and rights, and confrontation by advancing populist, nationalist, elitist and in some cases, oligarchic interests.”

Citing a recent study, the renowned Professor of Political Science noted that there had been a decline in the acceptability of Western democracy among Africans.

He attributed the worsening democratic practices in the African region to widespread corruption, political manipulation, state capturing and the use of courts to manipulate election results.

He said: “The manipulation of multi-party elections is a central factor in the trend towards de-democratisation. We can cite a couple of examples to see how this has fed into what I call pseudo-democratic governments. You can draw on perspectives from Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea, Burkina Faso, Mali, Sudan and Zimbabwe, among others.

“But there is an interesting trend in a new book that has been published by a Nigerian international human rights scholar, Prof Chidi Odinkalu, who talks about the judicialisation of elections, and he defines this as a situation whereby courts are increasingly being instrumentalised in a manner that uses the appearance of norm abiding processes to engineer authoritarian conditions into being.”

Obi said Africa must adopt a paradigm shift from the principles of Western democracy and focus on terms that aligned with the yearnings of its youths.

“The issue of reversing the current trend towards the democratisation in Africa calls for a paradigm shift based on a deep knowledge of the changing social dynamics and fostering a political dialectic that will contribute to re-empowering Africans to re-democratise the continent on terms that will structurally transform political structures and norms that prioritise freedom, equality and peace.

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“Africa’s future lies in the hands of its youths and the growing impetus for re-democratisation and a generational power shift. Re-democratisation will require a critical understanding of the emerging forces of change, drawing on research, a careful rereading of alternate politics, and moving away from an automotive paradigm of choiceless democracy that has been fast outpaced by social struggles, innovative technologies, regional and global transformation.

“There is a sense in which it can be argued that this is not the first time Africa has been re-democratising. After all, the third wave of democracy caused by the collapse of one-party states and ministry governments and their replacement by elected multi-party states in the 1990s can be considered re-democratisation.”

He stressed that the agitation for redefining democracy should not be seen as a pan-Africanism idea “but an attempt to organically grow a fit-for-purpose African democracy that can engage and embrace global partnerships that respect the validity of the contribution of African knowledge systems, civilisations and institutions to the democratic ideal globally.”

He challenged African scholars to go beyond transforming knowledge to communicating and implementing such knowledge for the betterment of the African continent.

Obi, who was a former Senior Research Fellow at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, concluded that “Africa will have to struggle to break the cycle of the repeated birthing and dying of caricature liberal democratic experiments on the continent. The break will free the continent to embrace a paradigmatic democratic revolution sprung from the rich earth of Africa’s struggles, visions and imaginations.”

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