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The following essay was
originally published by Pambazuka News. Pambazuka
News is the weekly electronic forum for social justice in Africa,
www.pambazuka.org (Pambazuka
means arise or awaken in Kiswahili) it is a tool for progressive social change
in Africa. Pambazuka News is produced by Fahamu, an organization that uses
information and communication technologies to serve the needs of organizations
and social movements that aspire to progressive social change.
Imperatives of
Transition from Activism to Politics in Nigeria
by Kayode Fayemi
Where does the
intersection between activism and politics take place? Kayode Fayemi explores
this sometimes complex relationship in the context of Nigeria’s fractured
political landscape. He concludes: “I believe we can revive the State in a
qualitative manner and make democracy more meaningful to our people, provide
jobs for the jobless, improve healthcare, modernise agriculture and reclaim our
young people from a future of violence, decadence and despair by linking
activism to politics and not drawing artificial divisions.”
The topic of my
presentation this afternoon gives the impression that there is a difference
between activism and politics, and that it requires moving from one to the
other. If one follows this line of thought, one might be tempted to assume that
the two – politics and activism – are mutually exclusive. There have always been
attempts both in recent times and in our not so recent past to make a
distinction between those who stand at the barricades seeking change in their
quest for a better society and those who wield power in politics in defence of
the State. Indeed, theories have been propounded about State-society relations
deepening the difference between civil society and political society.
Activists are often
seen as occupying the moral high ground, irrepressible in their campaign for
what they believe in, often living in utopia in the quest of the unattainable
and generally cantankerous and obstinate in the pursuit of their beliefs. On the
other hand, politicians are seen to be janus-faced – on the one hand,
charismatic, visionary, fascinating and sophisticated, and on the other,
repulsive, cynical, calculating, and opportunistic. My own interest this
afternoon is really not to indulge in any deep philosophical or political
arguments about these distinctions many of which you are familiar with but to
simply explore – based on my limited experience, the possibilities of harmony in
this pseudo-dichotomy – to explain that this pattern of categorizing people is
at best a luxury, and at worst irrelevant in our own setting.
I am going to
suggest that this pseudo-divide of activism and politics has impeded our
abilities to connect with each other and work together towards a more positive
future. I am convinced that the structuring of actors on the basis of either/or,
and us/them with one of the other being valued more leads to domination and we
need to really try as much as possible to avoid such separation and
fragmentation and work towards community and cohesion. Consequently, I intend to
argue that politics – properly conducted - is a form of social activism and
another stage in the struggle to restore the dignity of humankind – an
integrated continuum rather than discretely compartmentalised oppositional
phenomena, often complicated and contradictory, but mostly in the quest to make
a fundamental difference.
Activists have
always occupied that realm between the household and the State, populated by
voluntary groups and associations, sharing common interests and largely
autonomous from the State, but often promoting core values that are consistent
with what the State ought to stand for – participatory involvement,
transparency, accountability, openness, ownership, legitimacy, equality of
opportunities and respect for fundamental human rights.
Many people always
ask activists and politicians the same question: Why, with all the callings in
this world that could perhaps earn one considerable social, financial and
personal security, would anyone want to go into something like activism or
politics, particularly in a setting as dangerous as Nigeria, unless one has a
death wish? The unvarnished truth is that many activists and, I believe, even
politicians love life too much to want to celebrate death. Many activists who
make a transition into partisan politics have probably done so for the same
reasons they embraced activism. It was not aimless boldness that drew many into
activism. It was often a selfish desire to live their lives in freedom, peace
and in a democracy that transformed ordinary folks into bold activists against
all forms of oppression and in the service of their communities.
This is why perhaps
the issue should not be one of transition from activism to politics, but the
extent to which we are able to achieve citizen participation in our democracy.
Our discussion should really focus more on the making of leaders and citizens in
a good society because without direct citizen participation, the legitimacy of
our political institutions will continue to decline. It is for this reason that
I strongly believe that political leaders – be they politicians or activists
should worry because their ability to lead effectively is being seriously
undermined by the desertion of average citizens from the public space, deepening
the crisis of legitimacy in our State. Yet, this lack of legitimacy cuts both
ways. When we the people withdraw our trust in leaders or discountenance
politicians, we make our democratic institutions less effective and risk making
ourselves ungovernable.
While politics may
have lost its edge globally - suffering a decline, apathy or disinterest, it is
also true to say activism is on the rise in the form of single issues pressure
groups which have continued to thrive around the world – whether in the form of
campaigns like ‘Make Poverty History’ or in the promotion of an international
rights regime in the form of an International Criminal Court or a fair trade
regime in the world.
Yet even these
popular campaigns still suffer from certain limitations in a world that is
essentially statist and in which citizens’ rights are better protected locally,
even if we subscribe to universal ideals. In our case, it is the belief that
another Nigeria is possible – one that embraces democracy, fairness, equity and
justice and the possibility of saying what we like, write what we think,
participate in the political process without fear of intimidation, make our
votes count so that our views will matter. These are the beliefs that have
continued to propel the activists that I know in the struggle for a better
society.
But let me back up a
little and locate this discourse within the context of our recent history in
Nigeria as it concerns the relationship between activism and politics in
Nigeria. Many will recall that with the sudden demise of the dictator, General
Sani Abacha in June 1998, things had begun to look up for the country. We saw
the end of military dictatorship in sight. Those of us who were involved in the
campaign to restore the mandate of Chief MKO Abiola, the winner of the annulled
election of 1993 had expected that it was only a matter of time for Abiola to be
installed as President and for him to convene a sovereign national conference.
Our focus at the time was not elections, but the institutionalisation of a
fundamental restructuring of the Nigerian state and the strategy in the
democracy movement was to put pressure on the new military leadership to release
Abiola and install him as President. The new military leader, General
Abdul-Salami Abubakar was seen as a common sense choice amid a largely obdurate
military clique determined to maintain the status quo.
Clearly under
pressure locally and on the international scene, he made every effort to win the
confidence of the civil society movement by releasing jailed leaders and
requesting exiles to return home. And then, all of a sudden Chief Abiola died
and this threw us into a deeper quandary in the democracy movement and the
country tilted on the precipice. To arrest the religious and ethnic polarisation
that had surfaced, General Abubakar went for elections, even at a time that many
felt the national question had gone beyond simply organising elections and
putting people in authority. Yet, because the military was so despised, the
decision coupled with the sudden death of the most legitimate arrowhead of our
struggle increased the urge for anything but the military, a mood which we
shared but which equally caught us unawares in the democracy movement.
In the ensuing
confusion, the central question for us in the democracy movement was: should the
democracy community and the human rights movement participate in, or boycott the
transition programme announced by General Abubakar? After extensive
deliberations, we agreed that the new dispensation required new strategies,
which should reflect a balance between principle and pragmatism. Some expressed
strong views that the democracy movement’s capacity to influence change would be
severely limited if it decided to boycott the transition programme. Equally,
others felt that getting involved in the military-directed transition would
amount to a betrayal of the last bastion of the people’s defence against
oppression – especially as the professional politicians were eager to return to
business as usual with the military, without addressing the root cause of the
governance crisis in the first place. In the end, there was no consensus on the
way the pro-democracy movement should proceed and we only agreed that
individuals could participate while letting political groups stay out of the
fray.
My own sentiment was
with the latter group since I believed that the path, players, processes and
patterns of the transition adopted by General Abubakar could only result in
neo-militarism rather than a civilian, democratic dispensation. At the time,
many of us were fond of saying that the path we were treading was one of
transition without transformation. We argued severally that it was wrong to
suggest that any opening after Nigeria’s prolonged authoritarian rule was
inherently irreversible and would lead to the deepening of democracy without
interrogating the nature of the opening itself. We felt at the time that we
needed to think more carefully about the implications of what we considered to
be a staged-managed democratic transition, especially in a setting where the
ethos, language, and character of public discourse remain completely
militarised.
Looking back, the
civil society leadership may have been correct to be cautious about embracing
the military transition of 1999, but I now believe we were tactically wrong for
completely eschewing participation in politics. The fact that the military had
not responded to a full-scale defeat by the democracy movement could hardly be
discounted in understanding the nature of post-military governance. The eventual
dominance of the party hierarchy by retired military generals and civilians
closely connected to them certainly set the tone for party formation and also
resulted in authoritarian presidential governance. Essentially, the nature of
that transition ensured a mere reconfiguration of the political space, rather
than a transformation of politics.
Given this context,
the eventual election of an ex-military General with significant support from
the military constituency was seen by many of us in civil society as an
extension of continued military rule. The fact that most of the governors
elected (save in the South West) were all what we referred to derisorily at the
time as “Abacha politicians” was further confirmation to some of us that we had
no business being involved. Yet, even with all of this, we could have started
the process of organising along political lines, rather than agonising about the
dominance of these elements. After all, we were the ones who risked our lives to
fight for the restoration of democracy in Nigeria – only to vacate the space
when power was literally lying on the streets. Indeed, as Nigeria’s Nobel
Laureate Wole Soyinka, recently noted,
“…one ceaseless
complaint against the democratic movement is that its protagonists carried out
this struggle at immense personal sacrifices of varying dimensions, only to hand
over future responsibilities to proven reprobates and opportunists…whatever self
retiring principles may have governed the impulses of a number of us in that
struggle…we have indeed left the field to brigands, parasites and unworthy
custodians of power and authority, including even collaborators, that is those
who have not only made such struggles necessary in the first place, but
contributed to our personal woes, and even stained their hands with the blood of
our fallen comrades.” [1]
So, we ended up
having a democracy without democrats and the result is clear before our very
eyes. In spite of the current government’s best effort, the crisis of governance
remains deep-seated. Yet, for many of our citizens – democracy was supposed to
bring the end of military dictatorship in form and content; they hoped that it
would bring greater involvement of ordinary people in politics, whether in state
institutions or in civil society ones. They hoped for real and immediate
dividends in employment, clean water, better shelter, accessible health care,
improved education, reliable and consistent power supply, rehabilitated roads
and food on the table. Beyond electoral democracy though, it was also obvious
that the nation-state has become a source of unending conflict itself. Many
Nigerians of unquestionable nationalist credentials had begun to question the
very viability of Nigeria, especially if left in the hands of a centralised
state. Constitutional reform was therefore seen as a major pivot for creating
and sustaining democratic institutions that can address deepening conflict in
Nigeria. To our people, the rising disquiet in the Niger Delta and other parts
of Nigeria, for example, may not be a sign of a failing democracy but a sign of
a maturing democracy that is conflictual and contradictory – which should find
its own level through mediation, deliberation and negotiations.
Although the
challenge of reforming the State is fundamentally structural, the issue of
leadership – particularly how we conceptualise leadership is central to it. For
too long, our political culture has perpetuated the myth that strong leaders can
bring about change single-handedly – rather than convert the formal authority
derived from their electoral mandate into a process of democratic renewal. In my
own view, real leadership ought to involve motivating people to solve problems
within their own communities, rather than reinforcing the over-lordship of the
state over its citizens and to build and strengthen political institutions that
can mediate between individual and group interests. The authoritarian residues
of politics over the last seven years have achieved the purpose of turning many
away from politics even if they are still active in their neighbourhood
associations and their community projects. The main challenge of political
leadership therefore is to reconnect democratic choices with people’s day-to-day
experience and to extend democratic principles to everyday situations in
citizens’ communities and constituencies.
Understandably, if
you make political discourse more negative as some do – you deliberately turn
ordinary people off politics; more people grow cynical and stop paying attention
to politics. This experience is not unique to us in Nigeria; in fact it is the
crisis that democracy is experiencing all over the world, with low turn out at
the polls and scant regard for political leaders. Yet, if we as citizens choose
not to play a part in this process of activism in our communities and our State,
we will get the politicians we deserve, allow the hijack of the political realm
by special interests and ethnic jingoists only keen in the promotion of their
narrow agendas.
To avoid this
problem, many of us in the Nigerian civil society sought the middle way after
the election of the new government in Nigeria in 1999, even as we were lukewarm
about the dawn of electoral democracy in the country. We put skills that were
abundant in civil society to the service of the new government as a way of
helping to bridge the gap between civil society and an elected government. At
our own level in my institution - the Centre for Democracy & Development -
we became associated with government at several policy and practical levels –
assisting with the shaping and running of the Human Rights Violations
Investigations Commission (the Oputa Commission); promoting an agenda for
constitutional reform, helping with the reform of the security sector and
democratic control of the defence and security establishments, building civil
society capacity and pursuing issues of transparency and accountability. Our
point always was that democracy is not an abstract concept. It must be relevant
to people’s lives. If democracy is not capable of curbing corruption,
guaranteeing transparency and improving people’s well being and quality of life,
it is at best an empty concept, at worst a sham. Poverty and despair, oppression
and humiliation, economic and social insecurities are breeding grounds – even if
not the only reasons – for violence and conflict and as much as Nigerians want
democracy, they also want to see concrete evidence of democracy making a
difference in their lives.
My own experience of
working with government over the past seven years as an outsider looking in is
captured by the African adage that it’s not possible to shave someone’s head in
his absence. The wheel of government bureaucracy turns very slowly and
frustratingly so if the central actors are not alive to issues of
transformation. No matter how good the policies formulated by outsiders are,
implementation is key to transformation. It is for this reason that those who
want to re-draw the map of Nigeria’s future must return to more solid grounds
rather than tie themselves to the apron strings of power-holders that neither
have a track record nor demonstrate a vision that they are better than what we
can offer our people. This solid ground must be within a larger movement though,
one that accommodates the place of political institutions and not simply the
celebration of astute individuals as the ultimate panacea to our crisis of
governance. The most practical way to link individual choice to collective
responsibility is to participate in the institutions that influence our lives.
We must ensure that formal and informal institutions are democratised and given
more responsibilities for exercising state power. To do it well, we have to see
Nigeria as a permanent enterprise that has to be fought over and restructured in
order to provide cover for all Nigerians.
This is why I see
the debate about whether activists should become politicians superfluous.
Important as they are, the institutions of direct state power and electoralism
are just the tip of the iceberg in the democratisation complex. Indeed, genuine
democracy ought to rest on a much richer ecology of associational and
organisational life and should be nourished and reproduced through every-day
struggles of the citizens. But when we broadly define these everyday struggles
as simply the handiwork of ‘civil society’, we strip it bare of its spontaneity
and deeper meaning and romanticise the civil society as the rationally ordered,
codified and all-knowing alternative to government and overplay our abilities as
activists to counter the inherent inequities of class and markets. Even worse,
we are presented or we present ourselves as antidotes to globalisation, which is
why causes like ‘Make Poverty History’ have been hugely successful in form but
exaggerated in their expectations. The reason for this crisis of exaggerated
expectation that activists suffer is not far fetched. The truth is that as long
as we live in the post-Westphalian world of sovereign states, we exaggerate the
ability of the civil society to stand up to the power of the nation-state or the
mega corporations on its own steam.
This is why I am not
sure that the solution to the current deficit that our democracy is experiencing
can be solved with posing activism as a counterpunch to politics. For autonomous
institutions to play a different role in mediating citizens’ democratic choices,
their organic development must be combined in a more nuanced manner and a more
systematic way with the use of public and state power. The choice is therefore
simple: one can continue to snipe on the fringe and complain that government is
not listening to the yearning of the people. Alternatively, one can stop
agonising about missed policy opportunities and organise in a manner that places
citizens as drivers of change in our quest to restore communitarian values and a
future of hope and possibilities for our people.
I know the world
sees us - Africans - as incurable optimists and hope mongers. The other day, the
New York Times, attempting to unravel the roots of the consistent optimism of
the average African asked for my thoughts and I argued that while it may be
difficult to find a verifiable basis for our collective and individual optimism
amid unremitting misery – hope is God’s last bastion for the African, the
evidence of the unseen future of a life more abundant – since, for many, things
can hardly get worse than they are. [2]
Yet, as I said
earlier, this is not bleary-eyed optimism. It is not the optimism that believes
that the crisis of governance in our land will simply go away; it is not the
hope that we will all be winners of million dollar lottery tickets today. I am
talking about the hope of our founding fathers in the struggle for independence
and freedom and their unshaken belief in our inalienable right to rule
ourselves. It is the hope of the freedom fighters resisting apartheid and racial
discrimination in Southern Africa; the audacity of hope and the determination of
optimism that led us to resist the military oppression in our land because of
our belief that another Nigeria is possible – one that will be accountable to
its citizens, legitimate in their eyes, transparent and respected around the
world; the hope that allows us to hold our heads high, proud of our
accomplishments and contributions to humankind - the hope that help is on the
way.
I believe we can
revive the State in a qualitative manner and make democracy more meaningful to
our people, provide jobs for the jobless, improve healthcare, modernise
agriculture and reclaim our young people from a future of violence, decadence
and despair by linking activism to politics and not drawing artificial
divisions. It seems to me a self-evident truth that where there is no civil
society engaged actively in social activism and the promotion of core values in
society, there can be no political society and the state runs the risk of decay
and illegitimacy. Renewing our democracy through the strengthening of
institutions and public participation increases our collective capacity to
tackle the major problems facing our society – with a corresponding achievement
of individual contentment even as we pursue the common good. This is where we
ought to be headed and I am convinced we will get there in our
lifetime.
NOTE: This is
the text of a lecture presented at the Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs
Center, Howard University, Washington, D.C., USA on Thursday, March 16,
2006. Until recently Director of the Centre for
Democracy & Development, Dr Fayemi is an advisor to the Nigerian government
on NEPAD and Security Sector Reform and to ECOWAS, African Union Secretariat,
NEPAD Secretariat and Economic Commission for Africa. He now aspires to the
Governorship of Ekiti State in Nigeria.
References:
[1] Wole Soyinka, “A Nigerian
Morality Tale”, Foreword in Kayode Fayemi, Out of the Shadows: The struggle for
Freedom and Democracy in Nigeria, (Lagos: CDD & BookCraft, 2005), p.viii.
Also see an interesting interview with Olisa Agbakoba, former President of
Nigeria’s Civil Liberties Organisation in The Guardian (Lagos) on July 20 &
21, 2004 – “I am tired of being an armchair critic”
[2] See New York Times, March 5,
2006 or International Herald Tribune, March 6, 2006
This
essay is reprinted herein with the author's permission.
Posted May 09, 2006
URL:
www.thecitizenfsr.org
SM
2000-2011
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