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From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 26 May 2017 11:45
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Can former liberators lead Africa into the
future?
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This article does not mention South Sudan, but...

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Can former liberators lead Africa into the future?

Freedom fighters believe they have a right to govern, but struggle to
deliver the economic development that Africa needs.

ISS  /  24 MAY 2017  /  BY LIESL LOUW-VAUDRAN

During a debate in Johannesburg earlier this month, economist Moeletsi
Mbeki – brother of former South African president Thabo Mbeki – said
he thought the African National Congress (ANC) had done its bit for
South Africa but was now largely a spent force.

Africa Day this week celebrates the anniversary of the establishment
of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in Addis Ababa in 1963. One
of the main aims of the OAU was to fight for the liberation of the
rest of Africa from colonialism and apartheid. Liberation movements
like the ANC across many parts of the continent – from Cape Verde and
Guinea-Bissau to Zimbabwe, South Africa and Mozambique – were
supported by the OAU and its members in the struggle against
oppression.

But can these movements lead the continent into a new era?

Outside of Southern Africa, barring a few exceptions like the National
Liberation Front (FLN) in Algeria, African governments have since
independence changed hands – either through coups or multiparty
elections.

Across Southern Africa, on the other hand, former liberation movements
are still in power and their elites would disagree with Mbeki that
their time is up. These parties include the ANC, the People’s Movement
for the Liberation of Angola (Movimento Popular de Libertação de
Angola, MPLA) in Angola, the South West African People’s Organisation
(SWAPO) in Namibia and the Mozambique Liberation Front (Frente de
Libertação de Moçambique, Frelimo) in Mozambique.

Outside of Southern Africa, most African governments have changed
hands since independence

The Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU) and the Zimbabwe African
National Union (ZANU) fought to liberate Zimbabwe. During this time an
agreement was reached between the two parties and their names changed
to PF-ZAPU and ZANU-PF. After independence ZANU-PF retained its name
and is still in power in Zimbabwe today.

Often, former liberation movements replicate the hierarchical and
authoritarian structures that were prevalent during the struggle
against colonialism and apartheid. Many are also inherently based on a
culture of violence. They often have to rely heavily on the narrative
of the liberation struggle to stay in power.

Jakkie Cilliers, head of African Futures and Innovation at the
Institute for Security Studies, says former liberation movements in
Southern Africa have very little to offer, although they believe they
have a right to govern because they fought for liberation. Whether
it’s the ANC, ZANU-PF or the MPLA, he says, all need a complete
generational renewal if they are to remain relevant, ‘which is very
difficult to do from within’.

The slow pace of development and growth compounds the problems that
many former liberation movements face. Poor states like Zambia, Malawi
or Mozambique lack the capacity to build resilient institutions.
Cilliers says the continent needs credible, competitive, free and fair
elections that lead to real change. Respecting term limits for heads
of state is also important. And to stay in power, ruling parties often
resort to capturing state resources.

The ones to lead the drive for more accountability and for free and
fair elections are the youth. But studies show that young voters – who
make up the majority of Africa’s population – are disaffected by
politics. ‘They’ve lost trust in democratic institutions,’ says
Cilliers.

Of all the ruling parties in Southern Africa, only SWAPO in Namibia
has managed to stay popular, increasing its share of votes at every
election since independence in 1990.

But despite the gains made in Namibia, Pretoria university scholar
Henning Melber points out, development still only benefits a small
ruling elite. Melber, a leading theorist on liberation movements in
Africa, says ‘despite shifting grounds, the party still mobilises
along the heroic narrative of the liberation struggle, much to the
frustration of a younger generation’.

In Zimbabwe, the ruling ZANU-PF has continued to stay in power through
a combination of state-sponsored violence against any dissenting
voices, control of elections and an authoritarian president who uses
pendulum politics to switch support from one faction to another and
back again. In Angola, thanks to easy money from Angola’s oil
reserves, the ruling MPLA has managed to cling to power.

South Africa’s ANC is somewhat different given the major stakes
involved in ‘capturing’ one of Africa’s largest economies. Pressure on
the ruling party has come relatively quickly after the end of
apartheid. For some, the ANC will be able to renew itself and continue
ruling the country, while stemming economic decline, if only it makes
the choice of a ‘progressive’ leader to succeed President Jacob Zuma.

Analyst Richard Calland points out though that the future of the
ruling ANC lies not only in which of the frontrunners are chosen to
lead the country after the December elective conference, but also how
they are elected. If Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, for example,
wins the presidency of the ANC with a very small margin of support, he
will not be able to reform the party, Calland believes.

Independence from colonialism and apartheid came later in Southern
Africa than in most parts of the continent, where the liberation
struggles ended in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Some
post-liberation parties in Southern Africa have thus been in power
only for a few decades and are now suffering the same internal strife
and pressure from popular dissent that happened elsewhere on the
continent in the 1990s.

During the Africa Day celebrations that started earlier this month, a
lot has been said about a new decolonisation campaign to free Africa
of continued ‘neocolonial’ capture of its resources. Neocolonial
syllabi in schools and at universities across the continent have also
come under fire. Not everyone is convinced that this will lead to
economic growth – at least not in the short term.

Nevertheless, there are serious doubts whether the former liberators
are the ones to successfully lead the continent in a new ideological
struggle to drive sustainable economic development that would benefit
all citizens.

Liesl Louw-Vaudran, ISS Consultant

https://issafrica.org/iss-today/can-former-liberators-
lead-africa-into-the-future

END
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John Ashworth

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