Why Western attempts, genuine though they may be, to
promote democracy in poor countries is anti-democratic
As I write
this article, a debate is raging in America on gun ownership – indeed it has
been raging for generations. Every other day, there is carnage in America. Some
crazy person grabs a gun and goes on a shooting and killing rampage – in a
school, kindergarten, train station, shopping mall or church.
Tens die, many
more are injured. Americans have been debating how to stop this incessant
carnage in view of the second constitutional amendment that gives that nation’s
citizens a right to bear arms. Opinion polls show that most Americans prefer
some restrictions on the purchase of automatic weapons. Yet the country has
been unable to martial a politically weighted majority for gun-reform.
For many outside of America, the fact that a nation can allow all and any of its citizens – even psychopathic ones – to carry automatic weapons with unrestricted rounds of ammunition sounds crazy.
In fact, beyond the second
amendment and its own culture, the failure by America to resolve the
gun-ownership debate has a lot to do with interest group pressure – the gun
lobby symbolized mostly in the power of the National Rifle Association (NRA).
With large sums of money to finance campaigns of candidates to congress,
present its case through the American media and popular culture and to lobby
Congress not to pass restrictive legislation, the NRA carries daunting
political weight.
There is also
something racial about American gun-culture. European Americans (read whites)
are terrified of African Americans (read blacks) holding guns. They see them as
a menace. So when most white Americans defend gun-ownership, it is because they
see weapons as a form of self defense against imaginary (but sometimes real)
crime perpetrated by blacks.
It is very possible that if “the right to bear
arms” was promoted through the mass media and popular culture using faces of
black men brandishing automatic and semi automatic weapons, the gun-lobby would
most probably lose its political muscle.
But the
lesson we learn from America’s past and present is that what seems obvious to
common sense may be difficult to achieve in a democracy. It took the US 90 years
from the declaration of independence (70 years from writing a constitution that
clearly stated that “all men are born equal…”) to ending slavery.
It took
another 100 years from abolition of slavery to the passage of civil rights
legislation that actually extended the franchise to most black people. And even
then, it had taken 15 years of a civil rights movement that involved legal
suits, street demonstrations and reactionary terrorism by white extremist
groups to pass the civil rights bill through congress.
Many
reasonable people would conclude that it is very difficult to get things done
through a democratic process as it calls for constant negotiation and
compromise. One can imagine the number of mid-night telephone calls, lobbying,
pork trading etc that President Lyndon Johnson had to go through to secure the
voting rights acts.
Even today, the gay-rights movement has been going through
the same process in America and the Western world seeking the right of
marriage. Therefore, from the experience of the Western world, we learn that
democratisation is a slow and agonising journey; its greatest achievements
coming mostly through protracted and patient political struggle rather than by
one great leap forward based on enlightened vision. Democratisation is essentially
evolutionary, not a revolutionary process.
Yet this same
process is denied when it comes to western nations push for democracy in poor
countries. They do not see democracy in poor countries as a result of
protracted internal political struggle and the compromise among different
contending groups and interests.
The West wants to dictate – using diplomatic
blackmail, threats of military intervention, economic sanctions, cutting of
foreign aid, etc. – that we democratize. For Africa, whether it is gay rights
or other liberal legislation, democratisation is not supposed to be a process.
It must be an event.
Its outcome should not be a result of negotiation and
compromise among different and contending social forces and/or ideological
tendencies. It must be based on copying and pasting what has happened in the
West.
For example
there is an attempt in Uganda by regime functionaries to pass a draconian law
to hang homosexuals for being who they are. Homosexuals in Uganda and
enlightened intellectuals and citizens within our society who sympathise with
them, need to engage both the state and society in a healthy debate to relax
their stance. They also deserve international solidarity.
But in promoting the
debate, pro-gay rights activists would need to be cognizant of the deeply held
traditions, biases and prejudices among the vast majority of Ugandans towards
homosexuals. So the first aim of the debate should be to foster understanding
in the hope that overtime, they will build a broad consensus in favour of
same-sex relationships.
However,
western governments and institutions do not want an internal debate that
promotes both understanding and compromise within Ugandan society. Instead,
they want rights of homosexuals to be realised through orders from Paris,
London and Washington DC.
As a result, many Ugandans feel that homosexuality is
being forced unto our society by powerful nations with hidden motives. Some
Ugandans ask and legitimately so: how come Western powers are silent when
opposition politicians are brutalised on the streets and when public funds are
stolen with impunity?
How come that it is only when gay-rights issues come up
that US President Barak Obama and British Prime Minister, David Cameron, find
time to call our president to complain? These high profile interventions
therefore tend to undermine the legitimacy of domestic social groups affected
by the anti-gay legislation.
A major
reason democracy is problematic in poor countries is this attempt to realise it
as an external pressure and imposition. Local elites, realising the support
they get from western capitals, begin to disregard the necessity of internal
political negotiation and compromise.
Instead, they seek to rely on external
actors to achieve that which domestic political negotiation is supposed to
deliver. What we are seeing is the development of a belief that once internal
political struggle and compromise have been achieved in the West and a
particular liberal legislation has been passed, poor countries are only
expected to copy and paste this experience as their blue print.
In many ways,
therefore, a lot of Western efforts to promote democracy in poor countries are
actually anti democratic.
amwenda@independent.co.ug
1 comment:
Andrew,
Thank you for this post!
You bring up some excellent points, especially regarding democracy as a process instead of viewing it as a “vision” or “action” that one person takes. In other words, instead of viewing democracy as a noun (static), the idea needs to be seen as a process of dialogue and discussion, and thus verb (action). However, we are now in a techno – happy environment in which information is available instantaneously. As a consequence, might people be less patient than before? For instance, debates between presidential candidates in America were reported to being sometimes four or five hours long – with no commercial breaks. Now a 1-hour dialogue on television is regarded as something special and worth watching, even though participants rarely have enough time to outline anything substantial regarding their own policies.
“Some Ugandans ask and legitimately so: how come Western powers are silent when opposition politicians are brutalised on the streets and when public funds are stolen with impunity?” It’s the same reason that (in my opinion, at least) many aid campaigns fail (read: not all): because the issue of gay and lesbian rights can be promoted within the already written narrative of “third world country being a backwards, hostile, and inhospitable place.” The former is old news, while the latter is new but old in that it can fit in the frame in which the former resides. It’s another “travesty” that is afflicting said country and thus must be cured by those who think they know best; similar to parents wanting the best for their children. I would recommend a piece by Jonathan Kay of The National Post in Canada concerning the difference in medical assistance those injured in acts of terrorism receive compared to those suffering from cancer.
Regards
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