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Home Column Comment Is it time to support liberal autocracies?

Is it time to support liberal autocracies?

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What many advocates of democracy forget is that democracy is one of the many forms of leadership. All leaderships or governments aim at serving the good of the people. Democracy would have been unnecessary if it were unable to serve the common interests of people in particular geographical and political areas. So what happens if an autocracy, another type of leadership, served the interests of the people, to their satisfaction?

Writing in the Journal of Democracy in 2009, Stanford scholar Larry Diamond observed that the continuing absence of even a single democratic regime in the Arab world is a striking anomaly ” a principal exception to the globalisation of democracy. He points out religion, Islam, and an unbroken dependency on oil as the reasons for this 'anomaly'.

Indeed, these factors have produced not democracies ” but a different form of leadership: a rule of the few, by the few, working for the majority.

Since the end of colonialism, many African countries have been struggling to embrace and understand democracy. Student debates at university often rotate around refinement of a form of leadership ” democracy and not autocracy despite its full time presence in most countries. Indeed, we have never believed that a discussion to refine the rule of the few can be helpful. Understanding democracy is an ongoing process which apparently is likely to come later, not sooner.

Often, Western democracies continue to both forcibly and persuasively ” through aid, bribes, sanctions or open invasions ” to push the democratic agenda on countries where other forms of leadership exist. Of course many of us have not asked: For aid dependent Africa, and the oil rich nations in the Middle East, isn't the rule of the few a better form of administration as opposed to democracy ” the rule of the crowd?

Good governments are often expected to produce among others, good public service delivery; provision of healthcare, education, infrastructural constructions, free trade and a respect for human rights. What has often impeded public service delivery and respect for human rights is a list of bad manners: corruption and greed, limited skills, tribalism and sanctions. With these as the main challenges to better lives in a society, is democracy the best way to achieving them? Can't nations thrive under liberal autocracies?

The lead and single marker of democracy in Africa has been an insistence clean election of the heads of state. This works on a rather naive assumption that all other elements of societal progress change with such democratic transition. Many author-fans of democracy even hope that freedoms and civil liberties improve naturally after a change of leadership.

Although, I do not underestimate the power and success of democracy, I have started to think it is woefully weak. And it is sometimes quietly dangerous to the lives of the people, especially in Africa and in several peasant communities such as communities where majority of the people are inadequately educated, poverty strapped, diseased, etc.

For countries like Uganda, Rwanda, Chad, Libya, etc whose budgets are over 50 per cent funded by aid or 90 per cent dependent on oil revenue, democracy is unhelpful. What we know is that democracy is demanded, not given as is oil and aid. In aid and oil dependent countries, leaderships demand literary nothing from the publics and so they are not pressed to give anything in return. This therefore seeks a mechanism to propel them to give services and the related details without being demanded.

There is a difference however between the treatment of democracy and autocracy that needs to be emphasised: as opposed to democracy that continues to receive support at all levels, autocracy is and has been a lot interrupted. Zambian scholar Dambisa Moyo writes in Dead Aid as to how Africa needs, in order to transcend its stagnation, not strong institutions but strong men; 'benevolent dictators'. I argue that this context of "benevolence' is a marker of patriotism- that's being able to work and rally the general populace behind a common object, without suspicion of intent” something close to the slogan'we live together, we die together'.

Paul Kagame became president of Rwanda after the 1994 genocide. He has been so for over 15 years now. By all 'clear democratic standard', 15 years in office is not democracy, but rather an autocracy. The constitution aside, there is a nagging feeling that exceeding ten years for a president is not democracy. But as opposed to other autocrats, working under hatred from the rest of the world, Kagame has picked his country from near extinction to commendable progress. He has improved the standards of the lives of his compatriots” visibly better than his neighbour in Uganda whose leadership helplessly wanders between democracy and crude dictatorship. Many have hailed Kagames's Rwanda a success story. CNN's Fareed Zakaria wrote in Newsweek in late 2009 calling Rwanda 'Africa's success story' and lauded the country's leader, exclusively.

As is for Zimbabwe, Uganda has had a troubled politics since independence. All its leaders have tried dictatorship. 1986 brought in President Museveni who in an attempt to build a strong democracy, started with the economy and introduced various reforms. But his democracy has genuinely blundered and has had to record retardation in some cases. And because of the woes of democracy, Museveni has often tried dictatorship, but indeed shyly.

Dictators who embrace the cover of democracy pay so dearly and end with nothing. They are often filled with paranoia, anxiety and are ready to do anything to popularise their regimes. Because President Museveni heads a largely peasant community, a peasant parliament, he has had to concede to a lot of naivety in the name of liberalism. I believe Museveni would be personally opposed to creation of new districts, but being a liberal demand of the people, he concedes. A new district comes with opportunities for 'unearned eating': an MP, a CAO, an RDC, a Chairman of the District, a District Veterinary officer, etc. This means an extra cost on the government budget. This is the price of disrupting a dictatorship.

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Comments (11)Add Comment
ALL DICTATORSHIPS ARE EVIL AND DESTRUCTIVE, PERIOD!!!
written by Musimenta Joan, July 07, 2010
I strongly believe that the writer of this article is either an NRM cadre "lecturing" at Kyankwazi or someone who simply doesn't fully appreciate the genesis of Uganda's unending socio-political turbulences over the years since 1965 to date. With a synoptic hindsight, Uganda has had more dictatorships of the Obote 1 (1966-191), Idi Amin (1971- 1979), Obote II (1980-85), Okello Lutwa (1985-1986) and Museveni (1986- to date) than any semblance of a democracy save for a short spell of Sir Edward Muteesa II (1962-1965), Yusuf Lule/Binaisa (1980).
ALL DICTATORSHIPS ARE EVIL AND DESTRUCTIVE, PERIOD!!!
written by Musimenta Joan, July 07, 2010
... But inspite of this huge dose of dictatorships Uganda has so far had in the more than 4 decades since its official inauguration as a so-called independent state in 1962, Uganda has only retrogressed in all its socio-economic, socio-political and socio-cultural fabric of its entire polity. In 1986, Mr. Museveni promised a fundamental change to Ugandans that was neatly captured in their 10 Point Program. While they made some little attempts to address Uganda's endemic problems at least from 1986 to 1989, they have since reneged on that fundamental promise of addressing the core problems that have made Uganda to continue to be a pariah and laughing stock.
ALL DICTATORSHIPS ARE EVIL AND DESTRUCTIVE, PERIOD!!!
written by Musimenta Joan, July 07, 2010
Rather than advance on the promised course of a democratic and just political and economical dispensation, they are busy scheming about re-inventing Aminism, Oboteism or even Mobutuism. In the process, corruption, tribalism, election rigging, nepotism, extra-judicial killings, adventurisms, militarism, criminal impunity at levels of the country's governance, etc are the order of the day in Uganda. The entire basic national infrastructure that was in place before the Museveni autocracy assumed power has all gone to the dogs and anyone who hasn't been to Uganda for more than a decade and returned today to the country would imagine that the country is just emerging out of a civil war, all thanks to the cancer of the continuing dictatorship in the country!!
ALL DICTATORSHIPS ARE EVIL AND DESTRUCTIVE, PERIOD!!!
written by Musimenta Joan, July 07, 2010
So for anybody seemingly intelligent and conversant with the history of Uganda to now waste their time and energy on advocating for a continuation of dictatorship and militarism aka "liberal autocracy" in Uganda would not only be a lazy academic but also an evil person who desires for Uganda nothing less than the Somaliarization of Uganda. God save Uganda!!
Reply to author
written by Edgar, July 07, 2010
Yusuf, who blinded you that good leadership skills and distribution of public services are exclusively enjoyed in families? Firstly, autocracy leads to greed as in the case of Cuba where a president falls ill and it is kept secret so as not lose control of plundering public resources by autocrats as we have seen in Cuba and North Korea.
Reply to author continued
written by Edgar, July 07, 2010
Kagame believes no one can rule Rwanda a part from his may be his s son in a military School, Gadhafi, Museveni etc. One of the main reasons why democracy has had it challenges in Africa is b'se autocracy and neopatrimonialism has been a Keith and kin to the legitimacy of the state. But no convicting alternative has so far been put forward to replace battered democracy in Africa. Few countries such as Ghana which has managed to make amends are on a road to progress. So instead of suggesting that democracy has failed and should be abandoned, we should concentrate on finding ways of improving it. Sorry Yusuf, yours is not among.
A really poor article
written by Omeros, July 07, 2010
If I understand Mr. Serunkuma properly, ‘liberal’ autocrats are the best stewards of Uganda’s public life because they (being benevolent) are best placed to herd the ignorant masses into a place of peace and prosperity. The troublesome Ugandan people - with their countless, self-important demands - cannot be trusted to play a constructive role in a democracy since their peasant mentality, so goes this theory, prevents them from properly recognising their own interests, still less those of the country. The petty interests of Uganda’s foolish people should not be allowed to halt the programme of a clear-sighted, strong-armed, kindly paterfamilias, in whose bounty and wisdom his children, the Ugandan people, should trust.
A desperately poor article
written by Omeros, July 07, 2010
This offering from Mr. Serunkuma is exactly the kind of excuse-making that one has come to expect of those who have no taste for incremental change founded on the patient business of building political consensus around an issue and legislating for that consensus. Such people prefer the cynical short-cut of vote-rigging or, should that fail, the jack-booted authoritarianism of dictatorship or any other means by which the will of the people can be ousted and the ‘winner’ can take all.
An tragically poor article
written by Omeros, July 07, 2010
I would advise Ugandans never to trust in the benevolence of autocrats. Autocrats never love their people. Rather they fear them, because they are all too aware of the many resentments among those very people that they have stoked in acquiring and guarding their power. They look at a compatriot and see a potential enemy and it is hard to love one’s enemies.
Liberal Autocracy is like Jumbo Shrimp ...........just another classic oxymoron
written by Margaret S. Maringa, July 13, 2010
Liberal Autocracy is like Jumbo Shrimp ............just another classical oxymoron ...........a bad welding job between tow eternally conflicted systems of governance.

Liberal Autocracy is like having your cake ...................while eating it .............at the same time.

Liberal Autocracy is the usual habit ............of dumping Africans with expired fish and second-hand clothes.

Liberal Autocracy is the old trafficking of precious Africans ...........for the familiar cheap glass-beads.

Totally irrational and strongly condemned !!!!!!!!



This article is very irresponsible and dangerous
written by Marvin Ya Kuku, July 19, 2010
1. Ugandans are not cows that need to be whipped by a benevolent dictator to do good for country
2. Ugandans must participate in the running of their affairs
3. Don't confuse the way things are done in Uganda for "benevolent autocracy". M7 ordering a road to be tarmacked may sound benevolent but its a damning verdict on the very failures democracy would resolve.
4. You can quote scientific statistics for "benevolent strongmen" all you want but always ask yourself what those figures would be like if it was entirely democratic.
May i also suggest some countries are going to regress because of strongmen - benevolent or not. A classic example for you would be Tito in Yugoslavia

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Ocheto Says:
2012-02-08 00:43:52
The solution to Uganda’s problem is the overthrow of Museveni's current government. It has made a mockery of the democratic wishes and aspirations of Ugandans. It is has been in power too long, but

rita Says:
2012-02-08 16:38:02
Thank u Jesus for what you have just done and you too UNEB

 
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