I
am assuming that the question, as raised, is not rhetorical and that
we are interested in pursuing it with integrity, and in light of
empirical evidence. I will deal with the history of democracy in the
west, present a definition of democracy, and discuss the state of
democracy in Muslim countries.
“Of
all the traditional names for the forms of government, “democracy” has
the liveliest currency. Yet like all the others, it has a long history
in the literature of political thought and career of shifting
meanings.”
One
essential condition of democracy is the equality of all citizens
without any gender, racial, and religious differences. I would revert
to this and other essential conditions again later.
If
gender equality is an essential condition of democracy, then we see
that a Muslim country, Turkey, established the right of vote for women
in 1930 much ahead of France, Italy and Japan. And Pakistan, another
Muslim country, established this right in 1947 at its inception much
ahead of India, Greece, and Switzerland. It may be of interest to
some, that Switzerland gave franchise to women in 1971!
Based on these historical facts can we deduce that Turkey and
Pakistan have been better democracies than France, Italy, Japan,
India, and Switzerland? The answer is an emphatic no.
Another essential condition of democracy is equal participation of the
populace in constitutional decision making and formulation of laws for
self governance. If such is the case, then let’s explore the
percentage of women in the latest elected congresses, parliaments, and
democratic institutions.
We
find that the share of women in the lower houses of parliament in the
US was 14 percent, in the UK was 18 percent, and in Portugal was 19
percent. The share in Pakistan was 22 percent. Can we again infer
that Pakistan has been a better democracy, since it met two essential
conditions of the institution of democracy? I am again confident that
the answer will be negative.
You
may also note that in Rwanda, 49 percent of women were elected to
lower house and in Sweden this percentage was 46. This is a close to
gender parity as one could expect. Can we then also establish that
Rwanda is the best democracy in the world? I am again certain that the
answer to this will also be strongly negative.
Let’s now try to have an overview of history of democracy and
determine if it had kept pace with the evolution of human
civilization. This may allow us to understand as to how deep the roots
of democracy are in our time.
In
his research paper, Prospects for Democracy in Islamic Countries,
Rein Taagepera, Professor Emeritus at University of California, writes
that in the last 50 centuries of written history of humanity,
democracy has hardly persisted for more than 2 of those centuries.
Steven Howe of Ruskin College at Oxford informs us that, a great deal
of the world’s history is the history of empires. And that all history
of governance has been imperial, or colonial.
In
this backdrop we may go back to the Athens of 5th and 4th
centuries BC, which gave us the word ‘democracy’ which is derived from
‘kratos’ by the ‘demos’ and literally means the rule by the common
people. David Beetham, of the University of Leeds discusses in his
book, A Beginners Guide to Democracy, that the rule by the
people in Athens did not include either women or slaves, both of whom
were believed to be naturally inferior to male citizens.
Despite this serious limitation, however, ancient Athens, and its
democratic allies in cities across the Aegean, provided two key
factors which have been an inspiration to democrats ever since. The
first was an effective working example of a popular assembly, in which
ordinary citizens debated and decided laws and policies for their
society in person, including peace and war.
A
second important feature of the Athenian democracy was that its
supporters strongly professed and defended the principle that the poor
citizens were as qualified and capable as the elite of the society to
deliberate on issues of public policy and vote on it.
The
Athenian, in one of the plays of Euripides, says that, “We give no
special power to wealth, the poor man’s voice commands equal
authority. Pericles says in his famous funeral speech at the end of
the first year of war with Sparta, “No one, so long he has it in him
to be of service to society, is kept in obscurity because of poverty.”
These ideas of Athenian equality were not very popular among the
Aristocrats and the elite. Plato considered democracy to be a ship
that had been seized by an inexperienced crew, which had also
consumed all supplies in a drunken orgy.
In
Plato’s view only philosophers with long education and experience and
knowledge of what was good for a society were fit to be the rulers of
a city. Plato even proclaimed that democracy was only one step removed
from tyranny.
These were the debates and arguments that led Aristotle to define in
his classic work on Politics, Aristocracy as the rule by the Elite,
Oligarchy as rule by a selected few and Polyarchy as rule by the
many.
After the short- lived Athenian experience, humanity endured a long
and dark history of imperialism. These included the Greek, Roman,
Persian, Islamic Abbasid, Mogul, Ottoman, Persian Safavid, Chinese,
British, Astro- Hungarian, Prussian, and other Empires. It was only
between the beginning of First World War and the end of the Second
World War that the period of formal Empires and Colonial rule came to
a tentative end.
It
was during the 18th and the 19th centuries that
the divine right of rule by the princes was formally challenged and
gave way to the establishment of democracies in Europe and the USA.
The democracy that began to prevail in the West requires certain
essential conditions.
Robert Dahl, of Yale University defines these conditions, in his book,
‘On Democracy’ as follows:
-
Control of Military
and Police by elected officials.
-
Democratic belief
and political culture.
-
No strong foreign
control hostile to democracy.
-
A modern market
economy and society.
-
Weak sub- cultural
pluralism.
Dahl emphasizes that, unless military and police forces are under full
control of democratically elected officials, democratic political
institutions are unlikely to develop or endure. In contrast to
external threat of foreign intervention, perhaps the most dangerous
internal threat to democracy comes from leaders who have access to the
major means of physical coercion: the military and the police.
David Beetham also defines certain critical principles that are
essential for establishment of democracy, and these are:
-
Public offices open
to all.
-
Selection for
office by election.
-
Freedom of
Expression and media.
-
Access to official
information.
-
Free associational
life.
-
Direct vote on
constitutional change.
-
Rights enforced by
independent judges.
It
is not very difficult to observe that not all the conditions and
principles described above are fully realized even in established
democracies as we know them.
According to Dahl, only 65 of the 192 countries by the end of 1990
could be considered as democratic. This approximates to about 34
percent of the world countries that can be called democracies. Larry
Diamond of Stanford also estimates the same percentage of democracies
in the world by the end of the year 2000. These estimates may lead us
to ask the question, as to why the democracy has not take root in the
rest of the world.
A
careful reflection upon the history of democracy and the empires will
indicate that in the last two centuries various established European
democracies that include UK, France, Spain, Portugal, and Holland,
were also the main colonial powers that subjugated the entire
populations of Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
These colonial powers not only stripped the wealth of lands and
usurped the resources of their colonies, but also stole the humanity
of their subjects.
This dichotomy of the democratic countries and their colonial role may
also help understand the non prevalence of democratic systems in the
post colonial world. We may also note that at least 7 of the top 10
Western democracies are constitutional monarchies.
At
the time that the powers of the European empire were receding, the
star of USA the largest democracy of the time was rising.
John Lucas, the author of recently published Democracy and Populism
discusses this phenomenon in the section, 1917 and the
Americanization of the World.
He
writes that, both in the short run (meaning the outcome of the First
World War) and in the long run (meaning the history of an entire
century) neither Russia nor Communism, but the United States, with
its power, its wealth, and its popular influences was decisive.
In
1917 the crucial event was neither the Soviet revolution nor the
Soviet withdrawal from a European war but America’s entry into it. It
was the reversal of a world movement of four hundred years. For four
hundred years armies and people from Europe had moved westward across
the Atlantic, to America. Now this was reversed.
For
the first time, two million American soldiers were shipped eastward to
decide a European war. For two hundred years, Americans had lauded
themselves that theirs was A New World, and that they should have
little to do with The Old World and its inhabitants. Now young
Americans were going over there, to teach the Old World a lesson.
It
was on April 2, 1917, that president Woodrow Wilson went before a
joint session of Congress to seek a Declaration of War against Germany
in order that the world “be made safe for democracy.”
John Lucas also writes that, the ideas of “ ‘National self
determination’ and ’Making the world safe for democracy’ transformed
the history of the twentieth century more than anything else.’
It
is important to note that, “American foreign policy – indeed America’s
view of the world – has remained Wilsonian ever since, adopted by and
partaken and believed in by such different men as Herbert Hoover,
Franklin Roosevelt, Richard Nixon, and Gorge W. Bush.”
I
mentioned earlier that, ‘democratic institutions are less likely to
develop in a country subject to intervention by another country
hostile to democratic government in that country. This condition is
sometimes sufficient to explain why democratic institutions failed to
develop or persist in a country where other conditions were
considerably more favorable.
It
is in this light that we should look into the overthrow of
democratically elected government of Dr. Mohammed Mossadegh, the
democratically elected Prime Minister of Muslim Iran in 1953. He had a
broad mandate and support from the Communist Todeh Party as well as
from Ayatollah Kashani. After the declassification of US documents it
is clear that both CIA and the British Intelligence directly
intervened in Iran to topple a democracy.
It
is such interventions in Latin America, Asia, and Africa that have
thwarted and crippled any movements towards democratization in these
continents including that of the Muslim countries.
I
also mentioned earlier the requirement of subservience of militaries
of a democracy to the civilian rulers.
We
know for a fact that military of Pakistan, a Muslim country, has
usurped power from civilians for over three decades. Despite this
fact, the US States Department’s recommends that Pakistan’s army which
is the 8th largest army in the world should be kept
strong.
Such are the policies of the established democracies that have
deprived the rest of the world from the blessings that these
democracies have benefited from.
Tocqueville prophetically pointed out the evils of ‘Tyranny of
Majority’ in a democracy while analyzing the US democratic system. And
there is also prevalent literature that discusses the growing
disillusionment of the citizens of the West with regards to the
practice of democracy.
Any
neutral observer will find that the Muslim countries have not fared so
badly in the realm of democracy, when it has meant the governance by
the citizens, and when the Muslim countries have met some though not
all the principles and conditions described earlier. Several of these
countries have gone beyond the fundamentalist interpretations of Islam
that has remained the view of a small minority.
In
two PEW surveys conducted in 2002 and 2003, the majority of
respondents in at least 17 Muslim countries have opined that democracy
can work in their countries.
Several Western scholars have also confirmed these attitudes and
aspirations. Leading among these scholars are John Voll, professor of
history at the University of New Hampshire, and John Esposito,
professor of religion at Georgetown University.
Various findings in the reports by the Council of Foreign Relations,
also verify that there are no major issues of compatibility of
democracy and Islam, that Muslims in many countries aspire for
democracy, and that Islam is not a hindrance to democratic rule.
A
recent citation by the compiler of Wikipedia has provided a list of
Muslim democracies that include Albania, Algeria, Bangladesh, Bosnia,
Burkina Faso, Comoros, Guinea-Bissau, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon,
Malaysia, Mali, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra- Leone,
Turkey, and Yemen.
The
list does not include Iran, Pakistan, and Gambia. I see no problem in
adding Iran to the list. Iranians have regularly gone to polls and
have changed governments through votes. The veto power in the hand of
the clergy is reprehensive, but it is as reprehensive as the Veto at
the United Nations in the hands of a chosen few!
A
count of this list indicates that 19 out of 48 Muslim countries are
considered weak to moderate democracies. That is approximately 40 per
cent of the Muslim countries. And this definitely compares well with
the 34 per cent of the countries that can be considered democracies in
the world.
Larry Diamond suggests in a Policy Review article that, “If
democracy can emerge and persist (now so far for a decade) in an
extremely poor, landlocked, overwhelmingly Muslim country like Mali —
in which the majority of adults are illiterate and live in absolute
poverty and the life expectancy is 44 years
— then there is no reason in principle why democracy cannot develop in
most other very poor countries.”
Professor John Donohue of the St. Joseph University in Beirut, and
John Esposito in their latest book, Islam in Transition, have
echoed the same views. They have referred to major conservative as
well as moderate Muslim scholars, and have observed that, “this cross
section of Muslim thought puts to rest the stereotype that Islam is
contrary to democracy.”
I
close this presentation with the suggestion that Muslim countries have
kept pace with the democratic evolution like all other countries in
the world. …but there still remain significant barriers to the
introduction of democracy in several Muslim countries, often created
by the West that continues supporting military regimes in order to
further its own interests.
The
reasons for slower evolution are the same that have affected the
establishment of the democracies in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
And these reasons include the impact of colonialism, post colonial
hegemony of certain established democracies, overt and covert foreign
intervention, and propping up of military dictatorships by the US for
its own benefit.
The
Western nations took over 200 years to establish viable democracies.
It is but normal that post colonial Muslim countries will take some
more decades to reach that goal.
Democracy, as the will of the majority requires absolute protections
of the rights of all minorities. My hope is that during their
evolution to democratic systems, Muslim countries would give critical
attention to fundamental human rights that include freedom of
religion, speech, thought, and right of minorities.
Bibliography:
Dahl, Robert. On Democracy, Yale
University Press, 1997
Beetham, David. Democracy: A Beginner’s Guide,
One World, Oxford, 2005
Howe, Stephen. Empire: A Very Short
Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2002
Lucas, John. Democracy and Populism, Yale
University Press, 2005
Donohue, John J. and John L. Esposito. Islam in
Transition, Oxford University Press, 2007
Taagepera, Rein. Prospects for Democracy in
Islamic Countries, Center for the Study of Democracy, 2003
(http://repositories.cdlib.org/csd/03-10/)
Voll, John O. and John L Esposito. Islam’s
Democratic Essence, Middle East Quarterly, September 1994 (http://www.meforum.org/pf.php?id=151)
Middle East: Islam and Democracy, Council of
Foreign Relations, September 19, 2003
(http://www.cfr.org/publication.html?id=7708#5)
Adler, Mortimer J. The Syntopicon, Democracy,
Great Books of the Western World, Britannica, 1992
Diamond, Larry. Universal Democracy?,
Policy Review Online (http://www.policyreview.org/jun03/diamond.html)