Thu05242012

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Elizabeth Gowing


Democracy is trickier than I thought; lessons from Kosovo to the North Pole

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Elizabeth Gowing

Democracy is trickier than I thought; lessons from Kosovo to the North Pole

I’ve been thinking a lot about voting recently. On 12 December I spent the day in polling stations around Pristina municipality as an election watcher. It was a long day and as good as watching a play. It was life and also death (the names on the electoral roll who had long passed away), hate (the look on the faces of some voters as they shoved their ballot paper into the box made it clear that there were scores being settled) and love (the long-married couples shuffling into the voting booth together, and resisting being parted by polling station officials protesting about family voting and the secrecy of the ballot). But overall, I saw it as a day of hope. Every person who bothered to get off their sofa and out into the chill to mark a sheet and put it in the box was expressing some kind of hope; for change, for power, for influence, for the triumph of justice, for victory – the basic human instinct that makes you want your guy to win. The faces passed before the observers’ table like a succession of portraits, and I thought I saw a dream in every one.

We left the polling station groggily at 1am when finally the count had been reconciled, 20 hours after we had first entered to watch the box being declared empty and ceremonially sealed. Already, at 1am, some reports were coming in of electoral irregularity – the ballot stuffing, voter payment, spoiling of opposition ballot papers, multiple voting. 12 December had passed; it felt like the day of hope was over.

I turned my attention to other countries, newer pastures – virgin lands. I have always wanted to travel to the North Pole, and I’ve never been able to afford it, but a few days after Kosovo’s elections I saw a competition offering a place for an official blogger to accompany a trip to the North Pole. To qualify, you had to write a piece about a journey you’d taken, showing how you would be suited to the role of blogger. The winner would be decided by votes received.

I posted a short piece at www.blogyourwaytothenorthpole.com/entries/159, started my own small electoral campaign through Facebook and Twitter, and waited for votes to come in. It was my own taste of running for election victory – I even had friends who posted the link as their Facebook status for me, like the best election agents do.

Some people voted – in their tens and twenties, though not more. Those from Kosovo couldn’t help but see the parallels with the rather more significant poll they had just been through. Posted comments included ‘I just voted but do me a favour, if you lose because not enough people do the same, don’t blame it on election fraud’ and ‘Come on Skenderaj, let’s see a 101% turnout for this’. One friend wrote that he had voted with all three of his email addresses – but then removed his comment, presumably thinking of the Central Electoral Commission in Pristina and their recent judgements.

I could take this kind of cynicism, but the next stage in my journey out of democratic naivety came when I started researching the other contestants who were doing better than me. One entrant had received 1943 votes and I wondered what his secret was. Googling his unique entry link showed at least one of the ways he had done it, because it took me to a site called getonlinevotes.com. I found the woman currently running second in my blogging competition there too, along with people entering photography competitions, Beach DJ contests, New Year’s Eve outfit contests and cooking competitions. They were vote swapping and, when their listing had run out, paying to be relisted. Was this democracy?

But then my friends on Facebook had voted for me, and some of their friends had done so too – people I didn’t know, just because they wanted to do me, or our mutual friends a favour. That’s how society, and social networks work. No money changed hands of course, but there was no doubt some distant sense of favours being traded, a delicate patronage system being set up between us. If one of them were to contact me in the future asking me to ‘Like’ a group they’d set up, I might now take the trouble to do it – just to be friendly, to show gratitude.

And when the local party organizer comes to your house and suggests you might want to turn up to vote for them on election day, you might do it – irrespective of the party’s policies (what party policies?). If the local party organizer comes to your house and offers to pay off your tab at the local minimarket, and then suggests you might want to vote on election day, you might still do it.

So did I pay my subscription to the site to get votes for my travel blog entry? No. Do I think it is the healthy way forward for Kosovo’s political system to be fuelled by money so that votes go to the highest bidder? No. But can I fully unravel the unspoken obligations which might cause someone to vote in a certain way, in an online contest or in a desperately important national election, irrespective of the quality of what they are voting for? No.

And tomorrow I will go to the polling stations in the municipalities where the Central Electoral Commission has determined that December’s elections were irregular. And I will watch like a hawk, like a double-headed eagle. But I don’t think I’ll be able to see anything going on at all.



Elizabeth Gowing is a travel writer who has lived in Kosovo for the past 4 years.

Follow Elizabeth on Twitter:@elizabethgowing.

Election day for Kosovo, learning to choose and choosing to learn

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ImageI had two invitations for Sunday 15 November.  One was to monitor a polling station in Kosovo, the other was to speak about Kosovo at the Royal Geographical Society  in London.  It was probably vanity that made me choose the latter; as 45% of the Kosovar electorate made their way to the ballot box, I was talking about the villages of western Kosovo, and a volunteer project there offering English teaching, environmental education and the principles for sustainable tourism to the young people of Rugova.  

With the people of Kosovo's day of choices in my mind, I ended my RGS presentation with a photograph of a young Kosovar boy I met in these mountains in the summer.  "English teaching and thoughtful tourism can offer him more than money - it can bring him choice," I argued.  "He will have a more realistic understanding of the world beyond this village, and this country, and increased freedom to decide what his future will be."

This week I have been reading a book which has given me plenty more to think about the political issues of choice in southeast Europe.  '89: The unfinished revolution by BBC journalist, Nick Thorpe, www.reportagepress.com, is described by the author as being about 'the simple desire of ordinary people for the freedom to influence their own lives'.  This desire manifested itself in 1989 in movements as varied as Estonia's 'Singing Revolution', the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Romanian Revolution - to all of which Thorpe was an eye-witness.  His book takes these events, and others of 1989, including Milosevic's grotesque exploitation of the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo, as a starting point for a wider exploration of the new world order and the lessons that can be learned from these twenty years of history.  There was a frisson in reading this book on the day that Kosovars - Albanian and Serb - were going to the polls with the chance to create a new world, the way they wanted it.

Thorpe's narrative is powerful.  He narrates his experience in the Belgrade Hyatt during the NATO bombing ("Arkan's coming up the stairs") and the publishing of his own face on radical Serbian TV with the instruction that if anyone saw this man they should kill him.  He writes of visits to Kosovo in the 90s and the atmosphere of surveillance and fear he found there then.  Sometimes the focus narrows from these big political moments issues to the private, fundamental battles, including a powerful chapter on the struggle for the right for women to give birth at home in Poland and Hungary, outlawed by the vested interest and male machinery of the hospital.  The strength of the book is in the vignettes it offers: his conversations on 24 March 1999 with people in the streets of Belgrade - Will NATO bomb you? "'No way, they're too smart,' said a young businessman... 'No, they're too dumb...'  said the bricklayers", or the man at the Hotel Grand on his Pristina visit in the '90s who sat at the next table with a microphone pointing at Thorpe's conversation with representatives from the Council for the Defence of Human Rights and Freedoms.

It's inspiring to feel the ways that Kosovo has moved on in the 20 years since the book's title, but this week with my eye on the internet for news of Kosovo's election results, there is also a sobering final analysis.  Three pages from the end of the book, Thorpe mentions recent surveys of the skills of the young people of Central and Eastern Europe.  The weaknesses found in the critical faculties of analysis rather than simply learning are a political as well as educational failing.  "In the new democracies citizens feel weak, and as reluctant to challenge their elected rulers as they once were to challenge their unelected ones.  The institutions of state get away with too much," Thorpe concludes. In Kosovo it is not the new leadership now in place in the municipalities, but the country's teachers who will determine the quality of democracy and the real choice available to that young boy from the mountains.

 

The author can be reached at elizabethgowing at hotmail dot com. 

Making business dreams a reality - at school and beyond

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ImageThe bakery has a sales department, a marketing department, a number of enthusiastic employees... but no bread.  No, this is not a money laundering operation, but an educational initiative working in Peja.

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When books sell better than macchiatos

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ImageWalking around Prishtina in the last few weeks you cannot have failed to have seen the signs of change. Literacy is on the rise.  The Prishtinases’ coffee habit is being united with another habit - reading. The billboards call to you ‘Sell your TV; buy books.’ They are advertising a new concept, a new cafe for the capital.

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Shining examples: aid for Kosovo in a time of global recession

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ImageOn Friday morning I had a meeting with one of the international NGOs working in Kosovo.  Discussion was downbeat; in the current economic crisis, despite the clear and present need for support in shoring up the newest country in the world, the world has less to give. Internationally, individuals and governments alike are now more wary of commitments to charity, and charities are cutting back on their operations.

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Anna Wiman

Anna Wiman
Freelance Writer and photographer

Elizabeth Gowing

Elizabeth Gowing
Co-Founder at The Ideas Partnership NGO

Henry H. Perritt Jr.

Henry H. Perritt Jr.
Professor of Law Chicago-Kent College

Drilon Gashi

Drilon Gashi
Comm. Counselor to the Prime Minister

Arlind V. Bytyqi

Arlind V. Bytyqi
Editor-in-chief
New Kosova Report
 

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