|
Back to Index
Grass-Roots
Effort Aims to Upend Mugabe in Zimbabwe
Michael
Wines, New York Times
March
26, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/international/27zimbabwe.html
HARARE, Zimbabwe
- She is in her 40's and the mother of four, though in the dappled
sunlight of an outdoor restaurant here, clad in a floppy hat and
a thin cardigan, she looks too young to be either. Nobody would
see her as a provocateur, much less a revolutionary.
But when Rebecca
took one child to the doctor on a recent morning, she left behind
a clinic restroom plastered with stickers urging resistance to the
25-year reign of Zimbabwe's president, Robert G. Mugabe. Later,
she littered her bus seat with condoms emblazoned with a large Z
and a call to "Get up! Stand up!" against the government.
"There are more
than 10,000 of us," she said. "And every one is excited, because
you know you are playing a part in something you believe in."
The Z stands
not for Zimbabwe, but for Zvakwana,
an underground movement that aims to resist - and eventually undermine
- Mr. Mugabe's authoritarian rule. With a second, closely related
group called Sokwanele, Zvakwana's members specialize in anonymous
acts of civil disobedience - a meld of guerrilla theater and the
philosophies of Gandhi and King.
In ideology,
and sometimes even in identity, Zvakwana mirrors grass-roots efforts
in any number of authoritarian nations. From Zubr in Belarus to
Ukraine's victorious Pora to nascent groups in Egypt and Lebanon
(whose names, in English, mean "enough"), such civic movements may
be the hottest phenomenon in global democratic politics. Many take
their inspiration from Otpor, the movement that played a major role
in ousting Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia.
The groups sprang
to life here three years ago, shortly after Mr. Mugabe won a re-election
campaign that many international election observers said had been
stolen from his democratic opponents. Their rationale is embodied
in their names: in Shona and Ndebele, Zimbabwe's two main languages,
both names also mean "enough."
That the groups
truly number 10,000 seems doubtful. Yet the government is nettled
enough to paint over much of their graffiti, and news media reports
say the police assembled a team of senior investigators 14 months
ago to find and destroy Zvakwana.
The police have
failed. In fact, one Zvakwana member in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second-largest
city, said members of the movement stole into a police station in
January to slip antigovernment messages under supervisors' doors.
"We informed
them that we are not their enemies, but their liberators," a member,
who would be identified only as Magamula, said in an interview.
"Even members of the police - the army, the C.I.O. and the C.I.D.
are working with us," the member said, referring to Zimbabwe's intelligence
apparatus and its criminal investigations division. "That's how
we've managed to survive this far."
Michael McFaul,
a Stanford University political scientist and student of grass-roots
movements, has spent much of this year studying groups in Georgia,
Ukraine and Serbia. To a remarkable degree, he said, they and similar
groups are driven by the Internet and by the increasingly global
nature of television.
Although many
speculate that movements like Zvakwana are Western inventions, Mr.
McFaul said the opposite appeared to be true, at least for the moment.
In Lebanon,
"They're modeling what they're doing on the Ukrainians," he said.
"And they're watching the Ukrainians on Al Jazeera, of all places.
It's not an American-centric thing that's being channeled through
the White House. It's more global."
Some movements
do receive foreign money, but no amount of money will sustain a
democratic movement, he added, if a nation's dissidents lack the
passion and numbers to carry the battle on their own.
In personal
conversations and an extensive interview via e-mail, Zvakwana members
insisted theirs was a homegrown protest movement, free of foreign
control. But not of foreign influence. In a long conversation, Rebecca
said she and fellow members had begun their membership in Zvakwana
by viewing videotapes on resistance movements in Poland, Chile,
India and Serbia, as well as studying civil rights tactics used
in Nashville.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|