Many Africans see Kagame’s Rwanda as a model. They are wrong

Its recovery after the genocide has been impressive. But a land ruled by
fear can never be happy or secure

Jul 15th 2017

 <https://www.economist.com/node/21725000/comments> 

WHEN Paul Kagame was 28, he helped topple the government of Uganda. At 36 he
overthrew the government of Rwanda. At 39 he ousted the government of Congo
(which was then called Zaire). It is hard to think of another leader who has
won so many wars, against such repulsive enemies, on such a tight budget. Mr
Kagame is perhaps the most successful general alive, and this is only part
of his claim to renown. The boy whose first memories included watching his
village burn, and who went to school in a refugee camp, grew up to stop a
genocide. As a rebel, he said he had no political ambitions. He has now
ruled Rwanda for 23 years, during which the country has been transformed
from a blood-spattered wreck to an orderly society with robust economic
growth, falling poverty and declining inequality. Many African leaders see
him as a model to emulate. He is not.

Granted, first impressions of President Kagame’s Rwanda are often excellent.
The streets are clean and safe. The traffic cops are honest. Officials
welcome foreign investors and innovators. There is much talk of respect for
women’s rights. “If oppressed women should wage a war, I would readily
smuggle ammunition to them, for it would be a justified war,” Mr Kagame once
said. Donors swoon when they hear that 56% of Rwandan MPs are female—the
highest share in the world. 

Yet there is another side to the Rwandan miracle that has so impressed the
Davos crowd. Rwanda is a police state (see
<http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21724982-rwanda-more-prosperous-coun
try-ever-it-also-repressed-one-paul-kagame> article). The media are stifled.
Members of opposition parties are harassed and occasionally murdered. Senior
defectors from the regime typically flee abroad, where they are still not
safe. A former intelligence chief was strangled in a luxury hotel room in
South Africa; a former interior minister was shot dead in Kenya. The
parliament that boasts so many women is little more than a rubber-stamp.

On August 4th Rwandans will re-elect Mr Kagame. The outcome is not in doubt.
He has always won more than 90% of the vote in the past. His opponents are
largely prevented from campaigning. He was barred by the constitution from
standing again this year, but a “spontaneous” petition to let him do so
attracted only ten “no” votes in a country of 11m. The petition was followed
by a referendum in which 98% of voters gave him the go-ahead. He could
remain in charge until 2034. That is a terrible idea. Rulers seldom improve
in their second decade in power, let alone their third or fourth.

The problem from hell

Any fair assessment of Mr Kagame’s record must start by noting that, 23
years ago, he took over a country that looked ungovernable. The population
was 85% Hutu at the time of the genocide, and probably most Hutus either
took part in or did nothing to prevent the killing of 500,000 mostly Tutsi
victims. Mr Kagame, leading an army of Tutsi exiles, fought his way to power
with one aim—to prevent a repeat of the genocide. He has pursued it with
ruthless singlemindedness. When the genocidal Hutu militias fled into Congo,
he hunted and slaughtered them. When the Congolese government abetted the
génocidaires, he overthrew it. When the next Congolese government made the
same mistake, he tried to overthrow it, too, sparking a many-sided war in
Congo that killed millions.

Mr Kagame no longer meddles as much abroad, partly because donors leant on
him but mostly because he has wiped out his greatest external threats. At
home, however, he maintains a suffocating grip over his people, fretting
that if he lets go, they will rise up and wipe out the ruling Tutsi elite.
His party, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), has eyes in every village, and
enforces obedience through fear. Peasants face ruinous fines for minor
offences, such as looking scruffy or refusing to dig communal ditches. Any
criticism of the RPF can be deemed “divisionism”, or incitement to genocide.
Speech is less free in Rwanda than in any other African country, except
Eritrea. “Everything is taboo,” says one opposition candidate who has been
barred from running for president.

No man is indispensable

There is much that Mr Kagame gets right. If other poor countries wanted to
learn from the way he has rolled out basic health insurance or held cabinet
ministers accountable for measurable targets, that would be fine, and donors
should support such things in Rwanda and elsewhere. But for many
poor-country potentates, the appeal of the Rwandan model is precisely the
unchecked power that it bestows on the president and his party. Some cite
Rwanda, along with China and perhaps Ethiopia, as evidence that
authoritarianism is more likely than democracy to bring stability and
growth.

This is self-serving and dangerous. All Rwanda’s bursts of ethnic slaughter
since its independence took place under authoritarian regimes, as did those
in next-door Burundi, which has a similar ethnic make-up. Silencing
alternative voices does not banish discontent; it bottles it up. Rwanda must
allow more space for dissent or risk an explosion in the future.

The things Rwanda’s government does well, such as data-driven policymaking,
are compatible with more pluralism. And a more open system would be more
durable. The current set-up, which concentrates power in the hands of one
man and one party, is brittle. Mr Kagame cannot live for ever, and the only
robust, independent institution he has built is the RPF itself. He may have
kept street-level corruption in check, but cronyism is rampant. The
investment arm of the RPF, which has stakes in most of the biggest companies
in Rwanda, dominates the economy. Having the ruling party, rather than the
state, exert such control is trebly worrying. It is an invitation to
rent-seeking. It is a deterrent to private investment at a time when growth
is slowing and debts are rising. And it virtually guarantees that no other
party can compete with the RPF.

In 1994 Mr Kagame was a necessary (if too brutal) solution to a problem from
hell. Now he is the problem. He once said that if he was unable to groom a
successor by 2017, “it means that I have not created capacity for a post-me
Rwanda. I see this as a personal failure.” He was right. After the election,
Rwanda’s hard man should retire gracefully.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the
headline "Intimidation nation"

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

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