Dar residents mingle during a peak shopping hour on the bustling Congo
Street. An analyst argues that most ordinary Tanzanians are too busy
hustling for a living, leaving a lot of room for the elite and
politicians to determine political direction. photo | file
By Sylivester Ernest,The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
- Study says about 75 per cent of Tanzanians are satisfied with the way democracy is conducted
Dar es Salaam. Tanzanians are
the most satisfied citizens in East African on the basis of their
perception of how democracy works in their country, a new report is
showing.
The report depicts the people of this country as
being much more attached to democratic practices than they would do with
other forms of political regimes. According to Afrobarometer’s report
entitled “Demand for Democracy is Rising in Africa, But Most Political
Leaders Fail to Deliver,” Tanzanians are highly regarded as democracy
adherents at 84 per cent.
They are ahead of Uganda (79), Burundi (74) and Kenya (73). Rwanda was not studied.
However, in Africa as a whole, the report puts Zambians (90), Senegalese (87) and Mauritians (85).
Afrobarometer is a cross-national survey managed
by a network of African social scientists who measure public opinion on
key political, social and economic issues of the day.
The reports says about 75 per cent of Tanzanians
are satisfied with the way democracy is conducted. They are followed
closely by Ghanaians at 74 per cent. The findings came almost two
decades after Tanzanians told the Nyalali Commission that they preferred
the one-party system.
“Since Tanzanians are below average in the
rejection of one-party rule, they may well use a much less exacting
democratic standard than Ghanaians,” the report says.
At the other end of the scale, citizens exhibit
extremely low levels of satisfaction with democracy in places like Togo
by 21 per cent, where a family dynasty dominates political life by
suppressing opposition.
However, the overall the poll, conducted in 34
African countries, points to the gap in many countries between popular
demand for democracy and the supply of democracy which is delivered by
ruling elites.
It says that while ordinary Africans clamour for
high-quality elections and leadership accountability, too many political
leaders continue to manipulate the polls, challenge term limits, and
even seize power by coup. In the most common pattern across the
continent, popular demand for democracy exceeds the supply.
In those countries which democracy has taken root,
the reports says, there is an institutionalised form of electoral
democracy. The preference on democratic principles in Africa stands at
74 per cent.
In a survey conducted between 2011 and 2013,
researchers at Afrobarometer found that most Africans prefer democratic
government by 71 per cent while 11 per cent say that sometimes a
non-democratic political regime is preferable. Some 18 per cent admit
they either don’t know or don’t care, according to the research.
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