Election milestone
by Brian Whitaker
Originally published in Middle East
International, 16 April 1993
YEMEN'S first multi-party elections,
scheduled for April 27, will be a milestone for the country
itself and the Arabian peninsula as a whole. For Yemen, they
will be the final seal on unification, ending the period of
transitional government which began in May 1990 when the
northern and southern states merged. For the peninsula, they
will be the first elections under universal suffrage - a
development which Yemen's richer and more autocratic
neighbours view with disquiet.
If voting is completed successfully, few
will be sorry to see the end of the "temporary"
power-sharing government comprising the General People's
Congress (GPC), which once ruled the north, and the Yemen
Socialist Party (YSP), which previously ruled the south. Their
three-year partnership has been far from easy; the
difficulties came to a head last year when the Socialist
vice-president, Ali Salim al-Baid, staged a one-man strike
which lasted some three months.
While the elections will undoubtedly give
politicians of all parties a measure of legitimacy that they
have hitherto lacked, it remains to be seen whether that will
be translated into a government with the strength to tackle
Yemen's daunting problems. Despite hopes of modest prosperity
in the future (thanks to discoveries of gas and oil), for the
moment the economy staggers along almost on a day-to-day
basis, with reports of banks running out of cash and of
government employees failing to get their pay packets. Wild
fluctuations in the value of the Yemeni riyal last December
were officially blamed on greedy money-changers in the suqs -
an easy scapegoat.
Whatever happens at the polls, the new
government is widely expected to be another coalition - almost
certainly led by the President's GPC. Besides the GPC and the
YSP there are some 50 other parties, plus numerous independent
candidates, all preparing to fight for just 301 seats, so the
emergence of a clear winner would mean a lot of losers.
Consequently most political leaders reject the idea of a
British-style winner-takes-all election: they would rather
make sure of getting something by striking a bargain with
their opponents than risk losing everything.
Furthermore, although the GPC and YSP
officially regard themselves as rivals for power in the coming
contest, there are persistent reports that they will shortly
merge. Despite strenuous efforts by the Socialists to shake
off their Marxist past and to develop their organisation in
the north, they are almost certain to lose ground in the
elections because of changes in constituency boundaries.
Merger with the GPC could thus be a means of self-preservation
for some Socialists, if not for the party itself.
There are even suggestions that the
Islamic-traditionalist party, Islah ("Reform") may
join the new government. For the moment, though, Islah boasts
that it is "the only real opposition party". In the
past, President Salih has skilfully played off Islah against
the Socialists at opposite ends of the political spectrum, and
bringing Islah in from the cold would help him to maintain
this balance - and might also improve the strained relations
with Saudi Arabia.
This process is not without its critics
inside Yemen, particularly among the tiny western-educated
middle class, who compare it unfavourably with American and
European elections. On the other hand, the ferociously
competitive nature of the American elections last year
surprised and even shocked many Yemenis who watched them live
for the first time on CNN. But generally there is little
appetite for a fiercely-fought contest which might result in
an Algerian-style election debacle; and with the time when
Yemen was two states still fresh in people's minds, national
unity has a high value.
The danger in this is that coalition can
lead to mediocre government: ministerial appointments based on
the need for political balance rather than talent. "What
our country really needs," one Yemeni businessman said,
"is government by technocrats."
The other important question is what will
happen to the opposition. While electoral pacts or private
understandings will probably help some of the smaller parties
to gain a foothold in parliament, as a political force they
will be fragmented. Thus, according to the more gloomy
predictions, while the trappings of democracy may remain, the
prospects for effective opposition could simply wither away.
Against that, however, is the hope that
almost three years of openness and freedom - of a kind never
seen before in Yemen - may have begun an irreversible change
in attitudes. Parliamentary debates are televised live,
attracting huge audiences - and many of the speakers show
little deference to those in power. Meanwhile, dozens of new
newspapers and magazines have sprung up, offering a diversity
of opinion and debate unparalleled anywhere in the Middle
East. As one western observer put it: "People have lost
their fear of government". In the end, that may offer the
best hope for Yemeni democracy.
|