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The Winds of Democracy
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# : |
17049 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1990 |
2,420 Words |
| Author
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Michael Johns Michael Johns is a foreign policy analyst at the Heritage
Foundation in Washington, D.C., where he specializes in the
Third World and Africa. |
In the West African nation of Benin, hardly noticed political development may turn out to be the spark that ignites a democratic rebellion throughout Africa. Responding to massive protests to a sagging economy, Benin's Marxist-leaning dictator Mathieu Kerekou renounced Marxism-Leninism, the guiding ideology of his government, and rescinded an order forcing Benin's citizens to address each other as "comrade.” For Africa, where almost the entire continent suffers under authoritarian rule, it was an encouraging step forward.
But what happened next was nothing less than extraordinary. People in Benin's capital of Cotonou, responding that Kerekou's largely cosmetic reforms did not go far enough, descended on the city's "Lenin Square" where, armed with clubs and hammers, they attacked a statue of the Bolshevik leader, nearly tearing it down. Chants of "Kerekou out" and "power to the people" rocked the square, and Kerekou sent his forces into the streets to establish calm.
Like last year's student protests in China's Tiananmen Square, the anti-Kerekou rallies in Cotonou were finally suppressed by government forces, but the message was not. The mass opposition forced Kerekou to relinquish most of his powers to a reform-minded prime minister, who is expected to nudge Benin away from Kerekou's Marxist economics and political authoritarianism. The new Prime Minister, Nicephore Soglo, had legalized opposition parties and scheduled elections for this January.
Authoritarianism's meltdown
Ever since the developments in Benin, the calls for multiparty democracy
... (1998 of 16176 Characters)
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