Subject: Jean-Bertrand Aristide on Democracy
- Topic: Real Democracies,Not Formal Ones! by Jean-Bertrand Aristide
- Written 8:59 AM Jan 16, 1997 by newsdesk in cdp:headlines
- Written 7:37 PM Jan 14, 1997 by twn & igc.org in twn.features
- "Real Democracies,Not Formal Ones!"
'TURN FORMAL DEMOCRACIES INTO LIVING ONES'
The former President of Haiti calls for the democratisation of democracy,
that is, turning formal, theoretical democracies into living, participatory
ones for the poor. He says people's organisations can help bring about this
change.
By Jean-Bertrand Aristide
If someone had suggested 15 years ago that by 1996 democracy would be
the rule rather than the exception in Latin America, most of us would not
have believed him. But dictator after dictator fell, election after
election was held, and democratic governments were installed throughout
the continent. More than two-thirds of the world's population now lives in
countries which officially are pluralistic democracies.
Ironically, these transitions towards democracy have coincided with the
most severe economic crisis of the century in the countries of the South.
In Latin America alone, 240 million people live in utter poverty; an
increase of more than 120 million since 1980. 1.6 billion people live in
countries with shrinking or stagnating economies, with real wages which
are often lower now than they were in 1970. The gap between the world's
richest and the world's poorest grows every day, with the richest 20% of
the world's population now absorbing 85% of global income, while the
poorest 20% receive only 1.4%.
What does the triumph of democracy mean to the poorest 20%? Today,
there is a risk that democracy might remain a purely formal structure to
them. Elections may be held once every four or five years, but the
day-to-day participation by the population in the decision-making process
necessary to focus state policies on poverty alleviation, may never
materialise.
We may also ask: what does the triumph of democracy mean in an age of
globalisation? International institutions play an increasingly influential
role in national decision-making in the South. And neo-liberal economic
policies dictate a sharply reduced role for the state. The transition
towards democracy is taking place at a time when states are rapidly
running out of resources, being saddled with debt, allowing market forces
to determine the economic situation, and playing an ever smaller role in
the provision of basic human services.
It is as if our experience in Haiti, after the restoration of democracy
in October 1994, is being repeated on a global scale: after a long and
difficult struggle the people arrive at the seat of power, only to find
that the palace has been stripped bare. The dream of harnessing the
resources of the state to serve the needs of the poor is still beyond
their grasp. With states retreating from the field, it seems that the poor
will enter the 21st century alone, facing a global economy in which they
cannot possibly compete. But fortunately this is not the whole story.
Those of us who work alongside the poor, know that even in countries
suffering the severest economic crises, like Haiti, people's organisations
represent a vibrant and growing force for change. These organisations
offer the seeds of hope for the 21st century. Throughout the world, local
church communities, peasant organisations, women's groups, grassroots
environmental organisations and NGOs are struggling for human and economic
rights. Their analysis and convictions are rooted in the day-to-day
reality of the poor. These actors are undertaking the task of
democratising democracy: turning formal democracies into living,
participatory ones. These actors are holding up alternative economic
models, and offering an ethical foundation for debates on economic growth
and human development.
The role of civil society has never been more critical. We must be the
conscience of our age, articulating a view of development which places the
human being at its centre, sees economic growth as a means to human
development rather than an end in itself, and advocates development which
our planet can sustain. As others have remarked, unrestrained growth is
the ideology of the cancer cell.
As the state grows weaker, and the price of globalisation becomes more
apparent, there are growing voices from civil society which testify to
these realities. They have an increasing influence on international
institutions and, perhaps more importantly, they are making contacts and
forming alliances across borders - knowing that in an age when capital
needs no visa or passport, so too must solidarity know no borders.
One of the defining characteristics of civil society is the high
percentage of women participating. Bearing witness against human rights
abuses, organising cooperatives, creating community health projects -
women have long filled the ranks of people's organisations. However, this
degree of participation is not at all reflected in the number of women
involved in decision-making at all levels. World-wide, women hold only 12%
of all the seats in parliament, and 6% of those in national cabinets.
By definition, democratising democracy means both empowering the large
number of women who are already participating through civil organisations,
and increasing their representation at the tables of power.
We will all benefit from this. Studies have shown that when the
household income is managed by women, it is more likely to be used for
human development purposes: health care, education and children's
nutrition. I suspect that if national budgets were in the hands of women,
or if grassroots women's organisations were to participate in preparing
national budgets, the results would be the same. On the economic front,
civil groups are taking the lead in addressing inequitable land
distribution, giving the poor accesss to credit, and building cooperative
economic structures.
In Haiti, the goal of our Foundation for Democracy is to create an
opportunity for dialogue and democratic participation by the population.
But this initiative has to go hand-in-hand with concrete measures to
alleviate misery. To offer a hungry person only words is callous; to offer
him only food is hypocrisy. The cooperative we founded, which now has more
than 12,000 members, makes credit available at a low interest rate to the
poorest sector and enables members to buy food at about half its market
price. There are many similar, small-scale cooperative initiatives around
the world, offering a seed of hope for the next century.
We can become dispirited in the face of globalisation, growing economic
polarisation, environmental degradation and the misery one quarter of the
world's population are facing each day. In Haiti, where 85% of the
population lives in misery, it is the courage and dignity of the very same
85%, who continue to struggle, to speak out, to organise and to fight for
better lives for their children, that constantly inspires us.
In Port-au-Prince right now there is a small radio station broadcasting
each day. Two hundred thousand children live on the streets of
Port-au-Prince: Radio Timoun is their radio station. Children are the
reporters, the announcers and the technicians. I listen every day to hear
what they have to say. They interview children in the prisons and
broadcast stories from the General Hospital, calling on the government to
improve health care for kids. In a recent meeting, one of these young
journalists told me they want to report in their daily news broadcast how
many children are born and die in Port-au-Prince each day.
Our dream is that one day instead of holding out an empty hand for a
dollar, kids on the streets of Port-au-Prince will hold out a tiny tape
recorder and ask for an interview. This radio station is another seed of
hope for the 21st century.
You and I, as citizens of the world committed to fighting poverty,
should tend these seeds where we find them, shelter them when hostile and
changing conditions threaten their very existence, and plant them in other
places where they may take root and bear fruit to nourish the world. As we
are nourished today by the fruits of solidarity and hope. - Third World
Network Features
-ends-
About the writer: Jean-Bertrand Aristide, former President of Haiti, now
works for the Foundation for Democracy. The above, which first appeared in
Novib Network (Vol 2 No. 5, October 1996), is part of an address he gave at
a Novib conference in Oegstgeest on 19 September 1996.
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