By Henry Umoru
…Fundamentalism, corruption threaten democracy — Shonekan
ABUJA — FORMER President of Ghana, Flt. Lt. Jerry Rawlings, Monday said
if Nigeria and other parts of Africa must get it right and strengthen
democracy, corrupt politicians must not be allowed to go scot-free.
This came as former Interim Head of State, Chief Ernest Shonekan,
declared that religious fundamentalism poses a serious threat to the
nation’s democracy, including other parts of Africa.
According to Rawlings, Nigeria must not continue to pay lip service
to eradicating corruption, especially against the backdrop that poor,
petty thieves get imprisoned for several years, while businessmen evade
taxes in millions of dollars and politicians embezzle state funds and go
unpunished.
Speaking yesterday at a conference on Emerging Democracies in Africa:
Challenges and Opportunities, organized by the National Institute for
Legislative Studies, Abuja, Rawlings said: ‘’We cannot continue to pay
lip service to the strengthening, empowerment and independent management
of our multiple anti-corruption institutions.
“We live in countries where poor, petty thieves get imprisoned for
several years, while businessmen who evade taxes in millions of dollars
or a politician who misappropriates millions of state funds escape
punishment.
“These inequalities are recipes for the retrogression of our
democracies and we cannot allow the negative tide to continue. A
democracy that cannot provide socio-economic justice cannot be a healthy
democracy and will remain vulnerable and fragile.”
He noted that the primary challenge for emerging democracies in
Africa was the failure of Western democracy to acknowledge its inherent
flaws and encourage a system of democracy that was dynamic, home grown
and imbued with the socio-cultural backgrounds of individual African
states.
Rawlings, who noted that a practicing democracy that could not create
the climate to correct economic ills and corruption, could not and
would not be a democracy, adding that a democracy that could protect the
sanctity of its electoral process was engaging in a fraudulent
electoral coup d’etat.
According to him, equally destructive is the unfortunate practice of using money to buy the conscience of the electorate.
“Democratic institutions across the continent are poorly equipped to
offer the best support to governments. As a capacity building
institution dedicated to provide professional research, advice, training
and advocacy for members of the legislature, your organization is in a
unique position to be a pacesetter in empowering our senators and
parliamentarians to better serve the interests of their constituents,”
Rawlings said.
Speaking at the event which took place at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel,
Abuja, former Interim Head of State, Chief Ernest Shonekan, stressed
the need for Africa and Nigeria, in particular, to deepen democracy by
ensuring that there was internal democracy in political parties.
He said: “Religious fundamentalism is posing serious threat to
democracy in parts of the continent, particularly in West Africa, North
Africa and in the Horn of Africa. There is, therefore, an urgent need
for the countries concerned to constitutionally separate the state and
religion and also enforce the provisions of the constitution in this
regard.
“Another major challenge to democracy is corruption. Corruption
debars progress and discourages foreign investors. It is encouraging
that many African countries have established agencies to investigate and
prosecute cases of corruption.”
Source: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/06/corrupt-politicians-must-pay-for-their-sins-rawlings/
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