| |
Back to Index
, Back
to SASF Index
SASF Harare: Another Zimbabwe is possible!
Indymedia.org
October 15, 2005
http://southafrica.indymedia.org/
HARARE, ZIMBABWE - The third and last
day of the Southern African Social Forum (SASF) dealt with the crisis
in Zimbabwe and presented resolutions produced in the different
topical workshops. Starting off with presentations from Zimbabwean
activists on the crisis in their country, the Forum closed with
a way forward for struggle in the whole southern African region.
One of the reasons why Zimbabwe had been chosen to host the SASF
was that so much focus was placed on the country, and activists
wanted to come here to see with their own eyes what is happening,
organisers of the Forum explained to Indymedia/South Africa. While
it was a challenge to organise the logistics of the Forum, especially
since the lack of fuel in the country made transportation of delegates
difficult, Zimbabwe is a key country in the struggle against imperialist
oppression causing poverty and social under-development, as well
as the struggle against internal repression and lack of democratic
rights. As such, the SASF was held in the midst of a place where
all the reasons for struggle exist too obviously.
Delegates from around southern Africa pledged solidarity with Zimbabwe
and acknowledged the poverty and oppression to its people. The speakers
from Zimbabwe held loud and clear inputs and did not spare any words
to describe the situation. Briggs Bomba, a representative of the
parallel Uhuru Youth Forum of the SASF, said that Zimbabwe faces
its worst economic crisis ever. The hospitals are no longer hospitals
but ‘death cells’ and it is a struggle only to live until the next
day. The Structural Adjustment Policies (SAPs) imposed on Zimbabwe
by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank has
created an enormous social disaster, which, compounded with a ‘democratic
deficit’, put Zimbabwe in a ‘state of emergency’. Briggs Bomba considered
the SASF a place where both the IMF/World Bank and the Mugabe dictatorship
could be rejected, and where there is an opportunity to create a
United Democratic Front - ‘South African style’ - to solve the crisis
of Zimbabwe. The vision the Uhuru Youth Forum had of a future Zimbabwe
included political freedom and freedom of expression and identity,
community-based participation, international solidarity, free public
quality education for all and education for liberation, an economy
with communal control of all resources, and a nation free from debt.
Munyaradzi Gwisai, part of the national organising committee of
the SASF, commented that despite the fact that Zimbabwe is ‘on the
verge of collapse’, the SASF managed to gather in Harare because
activists do believe that ‘another Zimbabwe is possible!’. Munyaradzi
Gwisai also criticised both the Mugabe government as well as the
economic system of Zimbabwe, which ‘has failed completely’. Mugabe’s
regime is guilty of ‘genocide’ in the form of Operation Murambatsvina
(where tens of thousands of people were brutally evicted from their
homes in informal settlements and their goods and furniture destroyed
or confiscated by the state’s representatives), said Gwisai. All
in all, the brutal Mugabe regime is a ‘puppet’ of the IMF and the
World Bank and has deliberately entered an agreement to pay back
a huge amount of debt to the institutions instead of directing money
to the starving population. The urgency of the struggle for a free
and living Zimbabwe could not be emphasised enough: ‘If we have
to fight, we have to fight now!’ Munyaradzi Gwisai concluded to
storming applauds.
The end of the Forum pulled together all the topical workshops that
had been held over the previous two days. Recommendations, statements
and programmes of action had been debated and adopted in smaller
groups. Discussions had been held on the topics of HIV/AIDS and
gender, housing and evictions, labour issues trade justice and poverty,
economic alternatives constitutions and governance, as well as a
broad range of issues taken up in the Uhuru Youth Camp. Many of
the recommendations included demands for more democratic participation
and a people-driven economy and political process.
Some recommendations were detailed and direct to the point, others
more general: No to privatisation of basic services; no to trade
barriers that discriminate against southern Africa; an immediate
an unconditional cancellation of all debt; reparations for the damages
caused by debt; against the IMF and the World Bank; end neo-liberalism;
yes to civic education and participatory democracy; for a common
front between social movements, NGOs and trade unions to advance
the rights of workers; build militant, well-resourced and radical
trade unions; mainstream sensitivity for gender, disability and
other categories of discriminated people; development and training
of all but especially women and youth; create friendly courts for
rape victims.
These were but a few ideas that came out of the SASF and its more
or less 3000 participants. Concrete activities included the launch
of the Uhuru Arts Collective in the Youth Forum, which is a regional
network of conscious, radical artists. Action plans include regional
days of action in solidarity with workers and marginalised people
in Zimbabwe, and a week of action against capitalism in the whole
region, starting on 1 December this year.
The SASF attracted a wide variety of participants. NGOs, social
movements, trade unions, informal traders’ associations, and more
took part. As such, widely differing views were present, and some
very conservative and even reactionary voices were heard. However,
it was the calls for regional solidarity and unity, and end to neo-liberalism
and capitalism, including demands for the creation of socialism,
that took centre stage. The SASF 2005 provided a platform for networking
against the world capitalist system that destroys lives for the
sake of profits, and activists made sure that proposals were made
to map out real alternatives. In the middle of extreme poverty and
repression, thousands of southern Africans still claimed that ‘Another
southern Africa is possible’.
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
|