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Mexicans casting their ballots on July 1 to vote for the country's next president.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Editor's note: Kofi Annan
is the chair of the Global Commission on Elections, Democracy and
Security. From 1997 to 2006, he served as the seventh Secretary-General
of the United Nations.
(CNN) -- Democracy is a universal value and
aspiration, unbound by region, ethnicity, culture or religion. In the
last two decades, it has spread across the world in unprecedented ways.
Elections are fundamental
to the ethos and principles of democracy. They provide citizens with a
say in the decisions that affect them and governments with a legitimate
authority to govern. When elections are credible, free and fair, they
can help promote democracy, human rights and security.
But when elections are
fraudulent, as we have seen in a number of countries, they can trigger
political instability and even violence. This means that for democracy
to fulfill its potential as a means of peacefully resolving social and
political conflict, the integrity of elections is crucial.
Kofi Annan
Threats to electoral
integrity are not limited to poor, divided or war-torn countries. They
can be found in every democracy. Many of the countries that embraced
democracy in the last 20 years now struggle to entrench democratic
governance. In some long-standing democracies, citizen trust and
confidence in democratic institutions have dropped precipitously.
Global recession and
rising inequality are putting pressure on older democracies to show that
they are relevant to their citizens' concerns. The infusion of money in
politics, for example, threatens to hollow out democracy.
And recent events in the
Middle East and North Africa demonstrate that revolutionary transitions
hold both opportunities and dangerous pitfalls.
In response to these
concerns, a group of former political leaders and leading figures have
come together to create the report, "Deepening Democracy," which stresses the crucial importance of integrity in elections in advancing democracy, security and development.
Elections with integrity
by themselves will not build citizen trust in democracy. But they can be
an important step in achieving the goal. Our report identifies five
challenges for countries to overcome.
First, the need to strengthen the rule of law so that elections and the rights of voters and candidates can be protected.
Second, professional and
independent national bodies should manage elections so that they are
credible and the results are legitimate. I saw for myself in Kenya the catastrophic impact
of the failure of the country's electoral commission to deliver these
goals in the 2007 disputed presidential contest, when 1,300 people were
killed and over 600,000 displaced in waves of unprecedented
post-election violence. We must prevent this kind of tragedy from ever
repeating.
Third, greater efforts
are needed to build the institutions, processes and behaviors that are
vital for genuine multi-party competition and division of power. They
would bestow legitimacy on the winner, provide security for the losers,
and end the "winner-takes-all" politics that discourages democratic
practice.
Fourth, the integrity of
elections requires political equality. The barriers that prevent voting
and wider participation in political life must be removed. Too often,
women, young people, minorities and other marginalized groups are not
given a full opportunity to exercise their democratic rights.
Finally, unregulated
money in politics undermines voters' faith in elections and confidence
in democracy. Vote buying and bribery of candidates, including by
organized crime, have to be prevented in both aspiring and mature
democracies. And we must tackle the explosive growth in campaign
expenditures that is damaging confidence in electoral equality by
strengthening fears that wealth buys political influence.
These are all, of
course, political challenges. But politicians cannot resolve them alone.
Civil society and the media play their roles and have responsibilities
as well.
In addition,
international funding ought to support democratic reform and electoral
integrity rather than, as happened too often in the past, prop up
authoritarian regimes. This entails increased efforts to prevent abuse
throughout the political and electoral cycle and not just around a
particular ballot.
Our report provides a
strategy on a global level. Governments need to regulate political
donations and spending, and require full transparency and disclosure of
donations with penalties for non-compliance. Organizations that manage
elections in each country must come together to create international
standards of professionalism, independence and competence against which
they agree to be measured.
A new transnational
organization should be created to grade countries on their elections and
to sound the alarm about electoral malpractice. The international
community can then agree clearly on "red lines" of extreme electoral
abuse, which would trigger condemnation and, if necessary, sanction.
Such a program for
delivering elections with integrity -- with its emphasis on inclusion,
transparency and accountability -- can promote better governance,
greater security and human development.
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Friday, 21 September 2012
Annan: Why we should grade countries on their elections
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