Response
Courtesy NPR
MICHEL
MARTIN, HOST:
The deposed president of the
Central African nation of Gabon is speaking out in a video from what appears to
be house arrest.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED
RECORDING)
PRESIDENT ALI BONGO ONDIMBA:
I don't know what's going on, so I'm calling you to make noise, to make noise,
to make noise really.
MARTIN: It's a dramatic turn
of events for Ali Bongo, who was declared the winner of Gabon's disputed
presidential election. This is hours before the military ousted him in favor of
the head of the presidential guard. This is Africa's eighth coup since 2020.
And we wondered if there is a through line here, so we called Christopher Fomunyoh.
He's a senior associate for Africa at the National Democratic Institute. It's
an organization dedicated to supporting and strengthening democracies
worldwide. Good morning. Thanks for joining us.
CHRISTOPHER FOMUNYOH: Thanks
for having me, Michel.
MARTIN: Do we really consider
Gabon a democracy? I mean, yes, it was civilian led, albeit by the same family,
you know, for decades now. But even having said that, are you surprised by what
happened?
FOMUNYOH: I'm surprised and,
to a large extent, pretty disappointed because in the last two or three
decades, we've seen incremental progress in trying to consolidate democracy in
many countries across Africa. And in the past three years, we've seen a lot of
backsliding that's culminated in the military coups to which you referred. And
Gabon just happens to be one more case of a country that was making some
progress, albeit faulting (ph) progress. But that is now being taken over by
the military.
MARTIN: So you've called this
backsliding. Do you have a theory about why this and why now?
FOMUNYOH: Obviously, every
country context is different, stands out. But there are three main traits that
are beginning to come through in the coups that we've seen thus far. In the
countries in the Sahel - such as Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger Republic - the
pretext used by the military has been the inability of civilian-led governments
to fight violent extremism in those countries. In the coastal countries - such
as Gabon and Guinea, Conakry, before that - the pretext used by the military
was bad governance and issues, controversies around elections or
constitutionalism and term limits. And then we have a third trait that's come
out of countries such as Chad and Sudan, where it's just the old-style thinking
that only the military can guarantee stability in those countries. So we're
going to have to tease these theories out, but they do differ from country to
country.
MARTIN: It's hard to assess
such things. But did you have a sense that there is alarm about this among, you
know, civilians who would like to see their countries move toward more stable
governance and more stable democratic governance?
FOMUNYOH: Yes, indeed. There
is some surprise because when you look at studies done on Africans' attachment
to democracy by organizations such as Afrobarometer that measure public opinion
across the continent, an overwhelming majority of Africans aspire to living in
democratic societies. So the desire, the demand for democracy is there. At the
same time, some of these populations are very disappointed by the poor
performance of civilian, democratically elected leaders. So you have a bunch of
- a sizable chunk of the population that feels squeezed in between poorly
performing civilian leaders and unprofessional militaries that use any protest they
can find to then find themselves at the helm of power or in statehouses.
MARTIN: And very briefly -
it's such a complex question for such a short amount of time. But is there a
role for foreign governments to play here? Or could they do more harm than good
by intervening?
FOMUNYOH: No, I think there's
a role because Africa is part of the globe and these things don't happen in
isolation, and also because the world has become such a global village. And
things that happen even in places that are geographically distant from the
United States end up affecting us one way or the other. And it's important that
military coups that undercut the principles of democracy that are one of the
underpinnings of U.S. foreign policy should draw everyone's attention, because
ultimately, people are going to determine their partnerships with the United
States based on the commitment that the United States has to foster these
democratic principles.
MARTIN: Thank you so much.
That's Christopher Fomunyoh of the National Democratic Institute. Thank you so
much for sharing these insights with us.
FOMUNYOH: Thanks for having
me
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