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- <text id=90TT1286>
- <title>
- May 21, 1990: Africa:Continental Shift
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 21, 1990 John Sununu:Bush's Bad Cop
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- AFRICA
- Continental Shift
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In Africa too, authoritarian regimes are giving way to
- multiparty systems. But can democracy thrive in countries that
- cannot even feed themselves?
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by Marguerite Michaels/Nairobi
- </p>
- <p> The story going around Kinshasa is that one night late last
- December, Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko was entertaining
- a roomful of dinner guests when the television broadcast news
- of Nicolae Ceausescu's precipitate execution in Bucharest.
- Mobutu had long counted as a friend the Romanian autarch, who
- came to power in 1965, as he did. At the sight of that familiar
- face wreathed in blood, Mobutu abruptly left the room,
- abandoning his visitors without a word.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, late last month, the authoritarian ruler of Zaire
- for all but five of its 30 years of independence was ready to
- speak. As his compatriots--who had taken to calling their
- President "Mobutu Sese Sescu"--crowded around radios and TVs
- set at full volume, Mobutu gave his answer to the stunning
- events in Eastern Europe. Reversing positions he had
- tenaciously reavowed only months before, Mobutu announced that
- he would allow two parties aside from his to compete for power
- and would turn the day-to-day running of the government over
- to a new Prime Minister. "Wisdom comes at 60," Mobutu told
- reporters, inflating his age by a year. "It is time to let go
- little by little."
- </p>
- <p> In at least superficially mimicking the revolutions in
- Europe, Mobutu has lots of company in his own neighborhood.
- Since February three other one-party regimes in sub-Saharan
- Africa--those of Benin, Gabon and the Ivory Coast--have
- consented to pluralistic systems. These were radical moves,
- considering that the leaders of these lands, who with Mobutu
- have held power for a combined 96 years, had previously put up
- with virtually no dissent. Tanzania too has said yes in
- principle to pluralism, and Zambia has promised a referendum
- to decide the issue.
- </p>
- <p> All these pledges of change, however, may prove more
- illusory than real. "Establishing a multiparty system is only
- a step on the way to democracy, not an end in itself," cautions
- Francis Wodie, leader of the opposition Ivorian Workers' Party.
- </p>
- <p> If Eastern Europe's liberation inspired the shake-ups in
- Africa's mid-belt, the real detonating force was economics.
- Each of these African countries overspent badly in the 1970s,
- suffered plunging commodity prices in the 1980s, and today
- finds itself flat broke. Desperate for hard currency, each has
- been forced into structural-readjustment programs, which entail
- strict and painful austerity measures, in order to obtain loans
- from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout the 1980s, political leaders told their
- constituents that times would be lean for a few years under the
- belt-tightening policies and would then turn rosy. But their
- deadlines are long past, and their promises are unfulfilled.
- According to a World Bank report last year, the gap in per
- capita income between sub-Saharan Africa and the rest of the
- Third World keeps widening. In 1988 the contrast was $330 vs.
- an average $750 for all developing countries. The nations of
- black Africa, home to 470 million people, together have the
- purchasing power of Belgium, a country of only 10 million.
- </p>
- <p> For the impoverished masses, long willing to accord to their
- rulers the traditional African obeisance to authority, the
- sense of betrayal has reached a flash point. A wave of strikes
- and protests prompted by economic grievances has turned
- political. At the same time, the IMF and the World Bank have
- begun to press African regimes to liberalize their politics as
- well as their economies. In its report, the World Bank also
- admonished that economic restructuring would not "go far, nor
- will much external aid be forthcoming, unless governance in
- Africa improves. Leaders must become more accountable to their
- peoples."
- </p>
- <p> Benin was the first to catch on. Late last year President
- Mathieu Kerekou found his grip on order slipping as civil
- servants and teachers, who were not paid for months at a
- stretch, went on strike, angry students protested in support
- of the teachers, and workers pressed for higher wages through
- go-slow campaigns. Allegedly widespread corruption was another
- sore point.
- </p>
- <p> To assuage the public's irritation, Kerekou in December
- promised free-market reforms, disavowing the Marxism-Leninism
- he introduced two years after he came to power in a 1972
- military coup. In February he convened a conference of more
- than 500 participants, including several opposition figures,
- to draft a new constitution. In effect, the conference
- engineered a coup, stripping Kerekou of most of his powers and
- leaving him a figurehead President. His Cabinet of Old Guard
- stalwarts from the Party of the Popular Revolution was sacked
- and replaced by a fresh team dominated by modern-minded
- technocrats and led by new Prime Minister Nicephore Soglo, an
- anti-government activist and a former executive at the World
- Bank. Opposition parties were legalized, and elections were
- scheduled for next January.
- </p>
- <p> The prescription for Benin's revolution came largely from
- France, once its colonial master. According to a memo to
- Kerekou last December, the French ambassador recommended that
- the government hold a national conference and adopt specific
- constitutional changes. Kerekou followed the advice almost to
- the letter. In exchange, Paris has supplied Benin with what one
- French official called "significant" additional aid. Said
- Jacques Pelletier, France's Minister for Cooperation and
- Development: "The wind that is blowing in the east should not
- stop in the south."
- </p>
- <p> Gabon's metamorphosis was similar. Although once relatively
- prosperous, Gabon's economy has been battered by falling oil
- revenues. In February austerity measures aimed at strengthening
- the government's accounts provoked debilitating strikes and
- weeks of unrest in the capital of Libreville. Even before the
- cutbacks took effect, civil servants had not been paid for
- almost three months.
- </p>
- <p> In March President Omar Bongo, in power since 1967, acceded
- to popular demands for a Benin-like powwow to chart a new
- political course. Following its recommendations, Bongo last
- month ended his Party of Democratic Gabon's 22-year monopoly
- on power. He also named a new Prime Minister, Casimir Oye-Mba,
- formerly a prominent banker, whose Cabinet includes six
- opposition figures.
- </p>
- <p> In the Ivory Coast the weak spot was falling world prices
- for cocoa, its chief export. The government unveiled plans in
- mid-February for sweeping income tax increases to offset the
- public-sector deficit, sparking two months of often violent
- strikes and street demonstrations. Little used to overt
- dissent, the government responded with force. Police and
- soldiers broke up protests using truncheons, tear gas and
- occasionally live ammunition. One schoolboy was shot dead.
- </p>
- <p> Overnight President Felix Houphouet-Boigny, 85, whom
- Ivorians had been conditioned to regard in reverential terms
- since he took power at independence in 1960, became an object
- of vilification. Step by step, the government gave ground.
- Houphouet-Boigny announced that he would relinquish leadership
- of the party at its congress later this month. Next the tax
- hikes were scrapped, and finally, two weeks ago, opposition
- parties were legalized.
- </p>
- <p> None of these developments are a panacea for Africa. Lip
- service to reform notwithstanding, it remains unclear just how
- committed these well-entrenched regimes really are to giving
- up the total control they have enjoyed. The need for foreign
- aid and the fear of social unrest drove President Kenneth
- Kaunda, Zambia's leader for 25 years, to embrace the idea of
- pluralism, but he has yet to schedule a promised popular
- referendum. In the case of Mobutu and Houphouet-Boigny, their
- utterances have contained a hint of "Apres moi, le deluge."
- These old-timers may be calculating that they can stand back,
- allow chaos to break out as competing factions scuffle for
- power, then return triumphantly. Mobutu's police did their part
- to encourage disarray two weeks ago when they fired on people
- at an unauthorized political rally in Kinshasa, killing two
- participants.
- </p>
- <p> Deep-seated ethnic animosities pose a threat to stability
- as these inexperienced countries move toward competitive
- democracies. Many African leaders have long maintained that if
- multiple political parties were permitted, they would
- inevitably form along tribal lines, inviting bitter and perhaps
- bloody confrontations. The Ivory Coast is home to at least 60
- different ethnicities; Zaire has 200. While this argument has
- often been overblown to justify repression, ethnic and tribal
- rivalries inevitably complicate the growth of democracy.
- </p>
- <p> Sub-Saharan Africa is ill prepared for democratic government
- for other reasons as well. These countries lack the critical
- mass of educated voters that is essential. They have few
- democratic roots. "There is no concept of a loyal opposition,"
- notes Smith Hempstone, the U.S. ambassador to Kenya. "Dissent
- is equated with sedition." Most debilitating, though, is their
- sheer poverty, which makes it extremely difficult for a
- pluralist political system to thrive. Says Hempstone: "Africa
- missed the industrial revolution, which formed the basis of
- modern democracy in the West."
- </p>
- <p> Another American diplomat based in Africa is concerned that
- with expectations raised by events in Eastern Europe, Western
- countries will demand too much of Africa too soon and that
- desperately needed aid and debt relief will be hitched to an
- unrealistically rapid schedule of political change. "Are we
- going to force something else on this continent that's
- inappropriate?" asks the diplomat. "Must a country have
- MULTIPARTY stamped on its forehead before the appropriations
- committee will pony up?"
- </p>
- <p> If the answer is yes, such a policy might ultimately prove
- as hostile to the development of democracy as have Africa's
- ruthless dictators. No government, freely elected or not, will
- survive long if Africa's evident destiny--to drown in debt--is not reversed, and that will require enormous assistance
- from abroad. With its current debt of $135 billion roughly
- equivalent to its gross national product and its debt-service
- obligations equal to half its export earnings, sub-Saharan
- Africa faces an intolerable situation that has produced
- instability and promises to breed more. If the West really wants
- to see democracy take root, it must first give a helping hand
- to the continent's economy.
- </p>
- <p>OPTING FOR CHANGE
- </p>
- <p> BENIN. President Mathieu Kerekou renounced the Marxism-
- Leninism he had established in Benin (pop. 4.4 million) in 1974
- and convened a constitutional convention, which stripped him
- of most of his powers, legalized opposition parties and fired
- the old discredited Cabinet. The new Prime Minister, Nicephore
- Soglo, is a former dissident.
- </p>
- <p> GABON. President Omar Bongo gave in to popular demands for
- a conference to chart a new political course for Gabon (po. 1.2
- million). Following the council's recommendations, Bongo
- consented to multiple parties. He also appointed a new Prime
- Minister, Casimir Oye-Mba, who named six pposition figures to
- his Cabinet.
- </p>
- <p> IVORY COAST. President Felix Houphouet-Boigny abolised the
- ruling Democratic Party's monopoly on power in the Ivory Coast
- </p>
- <p>at the upcoming party congress. So far, five opposition groups
- have qualified to take part in presidential and legislative
- elections scheduled for later this year.
- </p>
- <p> TANZANIA. President Ali Hassan Mwinyi accepted in principle
- the concept of multiple parties, as long as the change wad
- grdual. His concession came after his influential predecessor,
- Julius Kambarage Nyerere, chairman of the reuling Revolutionary
- Party, said Tanzania (pop. 24 million) could learn a "lesson
- or two" from Eastern Europe.
- </p>
- <p> ZAIRE. President Mobutu Sese Seko promised a new
- constitution for Zaire (pop. 32.5 million) and announced that
- two parties besides his own will be permitted. New Prime
- Minister Lunda Bululu named a 40-member Cabinet that includes
- only 15 people from the old team.
- </p>
- <p> ZAMBIA. President Kenneth Kaunda promised to hold a
- referendum on the question of legalizing opposition parties in
- Zambia (pop. 7.4 million) after such a vote was endorsed by a
- national convention. But the delegates ruled out proposals to
- allow multiple candidates for the presidency and to limit
- office to two five-year terms.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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