Highlights

Democracy news

18 / 05 / 2012

Results for Egypt’s expat voting Friday; U.S. group to send 22 monitors to polls

18 / 05 / 2012

Syrian opposition leader Burhan Ghalioun resigns amid mounting criticism

18 / 05 / 2012

Egypt: Military Source Denies Armed Forces' Intention to Issue Constitutional Declaration

16 / 05 / 2012

Syria National Council reelects Ghalioun president

16 / 05 / 2012

Copts to shun Islamists in Egypt’s presidential, vote fear sectarian conflicts

16 / 05 / 2012

Myanmar Vows to Cease Buying Weapons From North Korea

15 / 05 / 2012

Syria's squeezed moderate voices

15 / 05 / 2012

Egypt: 57 Thousand Expats Voted in Elections Until Monday Noon

14 / 05 / 2012

Egypt: Liberal Party Warns of Campaigning in Mosques

14 / 05 / 2012

[Ticker] Belgium: EU is considering military presence in Syria

14 / 05 / 2012

Death toll mounts across Syria as EU readies new round of sanctions against Assad

14 / 05 / 2012

Egypt: Day 1 in Expats Voting - High Turnout in Gulf Countries, Average in Europe

14 / 05 / 2012

Zimbabwe: Mnangagwa Officially Declares His Ambition to Lead Zanu-PF

11 / 05 / 2012

Security Council condemns Syria ‘terrorist attacks’; Syrian U.N. envoy blames al-Qaeda

11 / 05 / 2012

Syria calls on U.N. to fight terror; Arab League says blast aimed to foil Annan’s plan

11 / 05 / 2012

Moussa and Abul Fotouh face-to-face in Egypt’s 1st ever presidential debate

11 / 05 / 2012

[Ticker] Merkel: Ukraine like Belarus

10 / 05 / 2012

Egypt: Expatriates Vote Tomorrow, Foreign Ministry Says

10 / 05 / 2012

Egyptian court issues surprise ruling to suspend presidential elections

10 / 05 / 2012

Syria bomb attacks cast doubt on future of observer mission: U.N. chief

Rss archive
 
21 / 12 / 2011

2012, democracy's challenge, Krzysztof Bobinski

The toppling and scarifying of tyrants has made this an inspiring year. But democracy has to go deeper in the next, says Krzysztof Bobinski.

At the end of 2010 it seemed that all that could be done in the face of autocrats who continued to rule supreme was to protest hopelessly at the fate of imprisoned freedom activists. Then, quite unexpectedly, 2011 became the year when a yearning for human dignity turned into mass movements for democracy that toppled tyrants one by one.

By the year’s end, even as pundits were predicting authoritarian decades to come in Russia, so demonstrators in Moscow and elsewhere confounded them by turning out to protest fraud in Russia’s parliamentary elections. Even the thaw in Burma brought hope of happy outcomes for that country as well.

The late Christopher Hitchens helped explain what is happening in a piece in Slate early in 2011:

"Not long ago, a close comrade of mine was dining with a person who I can't identify beyond telling you that his father is a long-term absolutist ruler of an Arab Muslim state. 'Tell me,' said this scion to my friend, 'is it true that there are now free elections in Albania?' My friend was able to confirm the (relative) truth of this, adding that he had once even acted as an international observer at the Albanian polls and could attest to a certain level of transparency and fairness. The effect of his remarks was galvanic. 'In that case,' exclaimed the heir-presumptive, thumping the table, 'what does that make us? Are we peasants? Children?' The gloom only deepened, apparently, as the image of the Arab as a laughing stock - lagging behind Albania! - took hold of the conversation."

All this gives grounds for optimism that the world is indeed becoming a better place. But the fear is that the drive for democracy is opening the way to new autocratic regimes which reach for religion or nationalism and the promise of stability (or all at the same time), in order once again to plunge the newly enfranchised citizens into a desperate apathy.

Ukraine is a good example. There, the hope of the Orange revolution in 2004 has been frittered away by venal politicians and succeeded by despair at rule by an oligarchy whose sole concern appears to retain power in order to fleece their compatriots with impunity.

The challenge of the coming year is that democratic revolts be followed by democratic institutions and procedures which will keep new autocrats at bay. The fear is that the opposite will happen.

Topics:  Civil society Democracy and government International politics


http://www.opendemocracy.net/krzysztof-bobinski/20
12-democracys-challenge


Send to friend