A Collapsed Transition: Democratization In Burundi
...of USD 700 , Burundi differentiates itself as a unique outlier among case studies of African democratic experiments. Its first attempt at a democratic transition in 1993 spiraled into a decade long bloodbath, though this latest stretch of warfare continues a history defined by cyclical violence. Often omitted from the history books, what Stephen Weissman calls “the first clear genocide since the Holocaust” ravaged this small central African state in 1972 – one of four uprising-and-repression cycles since Burundi’s independence. Delving into Burundi’s colonial history is critically important to understanding its failed democratic transition; it illuminates the precipitating causes that one may site as not conducive to democracy such as the structural factors of ethnic stratification and economic underdevelopment. However, as important as such factors were, structural determinism gives way to institutional factors: the history of Burundi’s military rule and its powerful corporate interests that it sought to protect. This, with the exploitative leveraging of structural factors, sealed Burundi’s fate.
Late in 1988, consistent with the wave of democratization that had begun sweeping through the African continent, Burundi President Pierre Buyoya initiated a top-down liberalization scheme, in the form of constitutional reform (including legal multi-party competition), ‘national unity’ measures, and relaxed restrictions on free speech. Scholars such as Floribert Ngaruko and Janvier Nkurunziza point toward precise self-interest motivations for Buyoya’s decision to take liberalization steps: “an increase in inflation…[and] the exhaustion of international reserves and monetary devaluations threatened those who relied on imports the most.” Those who purchased imports were the wealthier political elites. Taking notice from other countries across the continent,...
View Full Essay