The current crisis in eastern Europe reflects one of the downsides of this trend. Experts tell me that Russia was opening and modernising in the 1990s, but under President Vladimir Putin and his former KGB pals, it has become an authoritarian society again. It now emulates the Soviet Union, the mother of authoritarian states it escaped only 23 years ago. This retreat into authoritarianism lies at the heart of its current ultra-nationalistic policies trying to recreate Soviet hegemony in eastern Europe.
Putin’s nostalgia for this imagined past glory, driven by knowledge that nascent democratic states on Russia’s western border would threaten his political survival, has led to the kind of political crisis in eastern Europe not seen since 1939. Many Western commentators see parallels between current Russian policies and the nakedly aggressive, revanchist, irredentist policies of those sad days 75 to 80 years ago, which ultimately led to the Second World War and well over 30 million civilian deaths.
The Ukraine crisis coincides with the centennial of the beginning of the First World War in the summer of 1914. This has provoked Niall Ferguson, the controversial and creative economic historian, to point out, also in the FT, the similarities of the present crisis with the “sleepwalk” of European leaders into that conflagration. The Great War, in which at least 17 million people died, is often blamed as the precursor that made inevitable the rise of aggressive, irredentist, ultra-nationalist states after 1930, and the bloodbath of 1939-45. Why, we should ask, has democratisation gone backwards in the early decades of the 21st century after seeming to be, in the late 20th century, ‘the end of history’? Some would argue that it reflects the economic stumbling and apparent political sclerosis of most established democracies at present, which because of political gridlock or ineptitude, have not been delivering the economic and political security that their citizens expect and demand. But I know of no great flow of aspiring immigrants to Russia, China, or Turkey. The flow seems entirely toward democracies, as millions seek freedom and rule of law.
No, the answer is not in the current underachievement of democracies. The drift backwards towards authoritarianism is a matter of choice. The backsliding states have essentially themselves chosen to abandon democratisation. Until the Russians forcibly annexed Crimea, no aggressor had forced authoritarianism on a neighbour since the Soviet Union collapsed. This, of course, does not count instances in which authoritarian states have forcefully prevented would-be breakaway provinces from leaving their embrace despite the will of the people to secede.
But even successful secession, in which much blood and treasure were expended in a struggle for political and economic freedom, is no guarantee against a subsequent reversion to indigenous authoritarianism. Bangladesh is an example, and perhaps, a lesson. Almost 45 years after its bloody secession, the governing party appears to be heading towards a one-party authoritarian system. Its introduction of a press-gag law is simply the latest step in that direction. A law constraining NGOs is in the works. The voices of opposition are being silenced. At some point, the question of choice will be moot unless a coherent and inclusive opposition comes together. We wait for signs of that.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 12th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (5)
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Bangladesh is as bad as other Muslim states in terms of governance and instability. The are worse off in the sense that they have the added burden of suffering from floods and climate change in which the coastal areas will be under water in 50 years. I don't envy their situation.
" the same western media considers it ‘blasphemy’ to examine Zionism using the same standards. Instead any questioning of Zionism, as a political ideology, is immediately labelled as anti-semitism. Is it not a double standard?"
@Faraz Kakar: I don't know if this comment will get past the mods but I'll do my best. Zionism is fundamentally different from militant Islam. In Zionism Jews are a people and Judaism is their religion; Zionists thus sought the right to peacefully re-settle in the land of the Jews' origin, since they were so often unwelcome anywhere else. The test of Israel's right-of-return isn't religion but peoplehood. And the system of government sought was Western-style democracy.
To hold that the Zionists have the same goals as militant Islamists is thus either ignorance or deliberate misrepresentation. If ignorance, that needs to be corrected; if deliberate misrepresentation, that's a lie, and lying to demean Jews is anti-semitism.
I agree with most arguments of the Ambassador. The problem with political setups established as a result of majority vote in most developing countries is that it marginalizes ethnic, religious, sectarian and tribal minorities. As long as the these (medieval) social fault lines exist in developing societies and majority does not exhibit an inclusive attitude, true democracy and freedom of expression would always be considered a 'threat to national security' and even fair and free elections would continue to turn elected governments into authoritarian regimes. Lastly, one comment on freedom of expression in the western world. I would like to point out a double standard here. I am against politics and militancy in the name of Islam. The western media and liberal intelligentsia over the last one decade, have examined, challenged and criticized Islamic traditions and practices in the most extensive ways in order to condemn the ideological foundations of militant Islam (I am not against any neutral academic criticism. No idea should be above questioning). However, the same western media considers it 'blasphemy' to examine Zionism using the same standards. Instead any questioning of Zionism, as a political ideology, is immediately labelled as anti-semitism. Is it not a double standard? Best regards
do opposition have responsibility towards citizens/bangladesh/democracy/freedom of speech/liberalism or is it only the ruling party should care for all this?
author should try to advice the opposition first, that is if they entertain him
While not ideal, one party is still better than dictatorship, case in point being Malaysia. Also to note is that in the case of Bangladesh, there is little possibility of a military takeover in the near future
Don't know why the author is so worried about Bangladesh that he mentions it in every article. There are bigger things in the world to worry about right now.