Friday, 21 August 2015
Friday, 7 August 2015
Social Media Democratization: Accentuating Participatory Democracy and Political Accountability in Africa
By JOHNSON Sesan Michael (www.smbafrica.org, +234 08099312551, 08149382121)
Without mincing words, it will not be out of place to conclude that democracy is gaining impetus in Africa. From Ghana to Ethiopia, and South Africa to Egypt, the last 25 years will probably go down in history as a period of far-reaching democratic reforms and political adjustments in Africa. Across Africa, one government after another succumbed to growing domestic demands for political reforms which became evident in the decline in military rule and one party system. Arguably, the sustainability of democratization in Africa could be said to be the manifestation of what Samuel Huntington popularized as the ‘third wave of democracy’ which he predicted would surely happen after the collapse of the Cold War. The proliferation of democratic institutions, the emancipation of political landscapes, the constancy & creditability of elections hitherto unheard of in certain African countries, particularly the acceptability of defeat by an incumbent president in Nigeria, have all signaled that a thrust towards democratic consolidation on the continent is evident and on a quantum increase.
Without mincing words, it will not be out of place to conclude that democracy is gaining impetus in Africa. From Ghana to Ethiopia, and South Africa to Egypt, the last 25 years will probably go down in history as a period of far-reaching democratic reforms and political adjustments in Africa. Across Africa, one government after another succumbed to growing domestic demands for political reforms which became evident in the decline in military rule and one party system. Arguably, the sustainability of democratization in Africa could be said to be the manifestation of what Samuel Huntington popularized as the ‘third wave of democracy’ which he predicted would surely happen after the collapse of the Cold War. The proliferation of democratic institutions, the emancipation of political landscapes, the constancy & creditability of elections hitherto unheard of in certain African countries, particularly the acceptability of defeat by an incumbent president in Nigeria, have all signaled that a thrust towards democratic consolidation on the continent is evident and on a quantum increase.
Fundamentally, I
am bold to say that a profound benign engine of increased democratic
transduction and transformation in Africa is the Social Media. The Social Media
continues to be a great platform for democratic conversations and political
events, thereby facilitating and accentuating participatory democracy in
Africa. Recently, in a Social Media conversation,
one of the fundamental questions I asked is, can the Social Media help get rid of
tyranny and ‘the sit-tight syndrome’ among incumbent leaders in Africa? But one
thing that is certain to me is the fact that the underlying impact of
social media platforms cannot be denied because they are revolutionizing the
political cosmology of Africa. Social media has thus far had numerous implications
for both African leaders and the electorates. It no longer news that the social
media played a critical part in the “Arab Spring” revolutions, allowing
political actions to be organized through the social networks of people with
shared interest in democracy and common
and common desires for liberty. This ultimately orchestrated the toppling of a
number of autocratic governments of North African countries.
Is social media going to help in advancing democracy in Africa? Politically, as it is obtainable in other spheres of
life, social media has the power to influence millions of people. Recent elections
of Nigeria serve as the best examples of the affirmative affects that social
media platforms can have. In 2011 and 2015, during the voters’ registration and
elections, Nigerians on Twitter, Facebook and other Social Media platforms
actively participated in the political engineering and electioneering. Similarly
in Kenya voters, particularly during the 2013 election, were influenced by SMS
and the Social Media.
The Social
Media is at an alarming rate becoming a veritable campaign network against
corporate malfeasances, governmental fiscal recklessness, political laxity and
other forms of endemic corruption terrorising Africa. However, with the ability
to use the Social Media to mobilize many people either for political activism
or to harvest huge & active support for opposition elements, leaders in
Africa are starting to take steps to control it. A case that comes to mind was what
took place during election time in Ethiopia while the government blocked the
use of SMS services in 2005 thereby limiting the political rights and other
fundamental human rights of the Ethiopians. No wonder, this was one of the
cardinal points raised by President Barak Obama during his recent (July 2015) official
visit to the country.
My candid
advice for African leaders and governments is that they should not consider
trying to limit the use of the Internet and the Social Media for political
purposes. Politics and democracy are all about the people and since the Social
Media helps in virtual and real crowd gathering, the politicians and policy
makers in Africa must romance the New Media. It in their interests and that of
the continent that the Social Media should be consider a veritable tool and
benign engine for accentuating the new waves of democracy pervading Africa. The
Social Media is not just for the proclamation and proliferation of complaints.
It is a veritable tool for positive feedback, political insights, promotion of
political activities/policies and its understanding, endorsement of relevance
and establishment of trust & political will. It is a platform that can help
in initiating community based programs or reforms and also to help in
sharpening existing government programs. It can be used to create awareness
about government policies and activities. It can be used to know the interest
of selected groups and that of the generality of the citizens. In the same
vein, it could be used to motivate citizens to take some actions such as
voters’ registration, elections and payment of taxes.
It is evident
that the use of the Social Media in accentuating participatory democracy among
all stakeholders (the electorates, politicians, policy makers, government
officials, civil societies, etc) and ensuring political accountability will
certainly continue; because, more Africans are having more access to the
Internet, the Social Media and mobile phones. As a matter of fact, more
Africans are accessing the Internet and Social Media via their mobile phones. And
for instance, 80% of Internet use in Nigeria is via mobile phone. About 48
millions of Nigerians are on the Social Media. Recent report shows that Africa
is currently the second largest mobile phone market after Asia, with more than
700 million mobile connections.
Therefore,
the Social Media must continuously be used to hold politicians responsible and
accountable. I also advocate that this should be extended to other state actors
such as the police officer, traffic officers, immigration, customs and prisons
officers, as well as non-state actors. The Social Media must be used to put all
hands on desk, following the aphorism among the Yoruba of western Nigeria: ‘ki Africa ba le dara, ajumose se gbogbo wa
ni,’ (meaning – for Africa to attain development and advancement, it
requires our concerted efforts), particularly via the Social Media and other
socio-political cum economic platforms.
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