Obama should tell Latin Americans what he told Africans
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER
aoppenheimer@MiamiHerald.com
During his trip to Africa earlier this week, President Barack Obama gave
a powerful speech asking the region's long-entrenched leaders to end
corruption, respect freedom of the press and stop changing the
constitution to remain in power indefinitely. I wonder why he doesn't
make the same speech in Latin America.
During a July 28 speech to the African Union at its headquarters in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopa, Obama told African leaders that "Nothing will
unlock Africa's economic potential more than ending the cancer of
corruption."
"Corruption exists all over the world, including in the United States,"
he added. "But here in Africa, corruption drains billions of dollars
from economies that can't afford to lose billions of dollars — that's
money that could be used to create jobs and build hospitals and schools."
After his call on countries to take actions against corruption, Obama
spent much of his speech calling on governments to stop harassing
independent media, and asking leaders not to stay in power indefinitely.
Several of the African Union's 54 member-countries have leaders who have
been in power for a decade, or longer.
"We all know what the ingredients of real democracy are: they include
free and fair elections, but also freedom of speech and the press,
freedom of assembly," Obama said. "These rights are universal. They're
written into African constitutions."
"Yet at this very moment, these same freedoms are denied to many
Africans," he went on. "When journalists are put behind bars for doing
their jobs, or activists are threatened as governments crack down on
civil society, then you may have democracy in name, but not in substance."
In what was the most daring part of his speech, Obama said that
"Africa's democratic progress is also at risk when leaders refuse to
step aside when their terms end."
Mixing his stern message with humor, he reminded the audience that he is
nearing the end of his second term, and that he loves his job, but that
under the U.S. Constitution he can't run again.
"I actually think I'm a pretty good President. I think if I ran I could
win," he joked. "But I can't.....The law is the law.... And no one
person is above the law. Not even the president."
He concluded, "When a leader tries to change the rules in the middle of
the game just to stay in office, it risks instability and strife... And
sometimes you'll hear leaders say, well, I'm the only person who can
hold this nation together. If that's true, then that leader has failed
to truly build their nation."
My opinion: It was a phenomenal speech, which Obama should also make in
Latin America. It would demand no extra work: He would just have to copy
and paste it, and replace the word "Africa" for "Latin America."
In Latin America, just like in Africa, corruption is rampant, freedom of
the press is routinely repressed, and current or previous presidents of
Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Colombia and several other
countries have in recent years changed their constitutions to remain in
power — or allow their appointees to do it for them — indefinitely.
Cuba, with which Obama has just reestablished diplomatic relations and
where Secretary of State John Kerry is scheduled to preside over the
flag-raising ceremony at the U.S. Embassy in Havana on Aug. 14, is an
hereditary military dictatorship run by a general. There has not been a
free election or an independent TV station in Cuba in more than five
decades.
Obama probably doesn't dare make his African Union speech in Latin
America because much more U.S. trade and investments are at stake there.
He did refer to these issues during the recent Summit of the Americas in
Panama, but not nearly as bluntly as he did in Addis Ababa this week.
Granted, if he told these things to Latin American leaders, the region's
populist demagogues would immediately accuse him of meddling in their
internal affairs in order to allegedly pursue sinister "imperialist" plans.
But after several years of corrupt leaders who hide behind nationalist
demagoguery to justify their pursuit of absolute powers, many people in
several Latin American autocracies want more rule of law, and more
democracy.
To stress his point, Obama would just need to repeat what he said in
Africa: that countries don't need strong leaders, but strong
institutions. And that if a leader claims to be the only one who can
hold his nation together, the leader has failed to truly build that nation.
Source: Andres Oppenheimer: Obama should tell Latin Americans what he
told Africans | Miami Herald -
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/andres-oppenheimer/article29477938.html
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