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A
disempowered people - Zimbabwe
Sokwanele
January 18, 2006
http://www.sokwanele.com/articles/sokwanele/disempowered_18jan2006.html
Dumisani - not
his real name - is a young man in his early 30's. He is but one
of the hundreds of thousands of victims of the Mugabe Tsunami, officially
called "Operation Murambatsvina" - another "moment of madness" in
which the dictator destroyed the homes and livelihoods of 700,000
of the poorest of the poor, with severe consequences for another
2.4 million Zimbabweans. Dumisani himself lost a wife, a home, and
a source of livelihood in that man-made disaster. Less tangibly
but of no less significance, he also lost his dignity as a human
being and any hope for the future.
A clearly troubled
Dumisani stands on the pavement outside a Bulawayo Church, waiting
to see his pastor who has been summoned from a meeting. In his arms
he carries the only thing he cares for in the world - his baby son,
Themba. The baby is a little under three months old, thin-faced,
clearly malnourished and restless in his father's embrace.
The Pastor emerges
from the Church. Pastor Andrew - again not his real name -greets
Dumisani and enquires after the baby's state of health. Despite
the courtesy he can see well enough for himself the grim state of
both father and child. He has been their pastor ever since Dumisani
and his late wife were living at the Killarney informal settlement
on the outskirts of the city. Pastor Andrew has a vivid memory of
that fateful day in June 2005 when Dumisani and his young wife,
pregnant at the time, together with hundreds of others were violently
herded together like so many cattle by Mugabe's uniformed thugs,
who then torched their makeshift dwellings. On that sad day the
poor but once-contented community of Killarney was brutally destroyed,
the 1000 or so resident families ruthlessly dispersed.
Dumisani and
his wife had been rescued by one of the Bulawayo churches that bravely
offered hospitality and a place of refuge to the displaced residents
of Killarney and Ngozi Mine. But that blessed tranquillity had lasted
only until midnight on July 21 when Mugabe's armed militia invaded
the church sanctuaries and violently abducted the startled victims.
In the case of Dumisani and his wife they were forcibly removed,
first to a temporary holding camp and then on to what became a squatter
camp mid-way between Pumula and St Peter's Village. There in the
bitter cold of mid winter they were abandoned by the state, without
food, water, shelter or any provisions whatsoever. And there, some
months later, and in those wretched conditions Dumisani's wife gave
birth to their first child, Themba. Miraculously the baby survived
though, soon after the birth, Dumisani's wife finally succumbed
to the trauma and unremitt ing hardship.
Pastor Andrew
knew all this well enough, as he could recall the plight of countless
others of his flock. What he did not know however was how the young
father had managed to protect and provide for the baby. Dumisani
explained. He himself was earning a few dollars a day by selling
vegetables on the streets. (Back in Killarney he had earned significantly
more, as well as having a modest home to call his own). His new
life as a street vendor however meant that he could not care for
his infant son any more.
He had therefore
come to an arrangement with another destitute Murambatsvina victim,
a young woman who agreed to care for Themba during the day in exchange
for a share in the pathetic daily meal purchased with his meagre
earnings as a street vendor. He had been coping said Dumisani until
the young stand-in mother had informed him that she was going back
to her ancestral home in Malawi. This news was the rea son for his
obvious consternation.
The compassionate
pastor listens attentively to the tale of woe - not unlike so many
others he hears every day. Then he asks quietly, "What help do you
want?"
"Tell me what
I should do, Pastor", says an anguished Dumisani. What indeed should
a young father do - a widower, homeless and destitute himself -
with a little baby, scarcely weaned, to care for?
A long conversation
ensues between the pastor and the desperate parent. In the end it
is agreed that that Dumisani should take the baby to his grandmother
(Dumisani's own mother) to see if she can care for him. They talk
about an arrangement for a few months though both know it may continue
indefinitely. What resources Gogo (the grandmother) has and how
many other grandchildren she has already have taken on responsibility
for, the pastor dares not ask. The fact is there is no realistic
alternative for Dumisani. He cannot himself provide the care and
nurture little Themba requires.
But where does
Gogo live and how is Dumisani to reach her? Another problem emerges
at once because she lives at Buhera, more than 350 kilometres to
the east. The journey will cost well over a million dollars each
way and of course Dumisani has nothing to put towards it. Who will
pay? Can the church assist? Pastor Andrew is not sure if the much
depleted reserves of his church will be sufficient but he refers
Dumisani to the secretary's office to find out...
Such is the
daily struggle to survive for Dumisani, Themba and countless thousands
like them in Zimbabwe. This is what it means to be so poor and vulnerable
that you lose control of your own life and are forced to rely completely
on others on a daily basis - assuming that is, someone will be there
for you. This is what it means to be one of the disempowered people
of Zimbabwe who have lost hope of any better future.
And, make no
mistake, this is precisely what the dictator intends. A major thrust
of the Mugabe regime's socio-political programme of the last five
years has been the progressive disempowerment of the people of Zimbabwe.
From the chaotic land invasions orchestrated by ZANU PF in 2000
to what U.N Secretary-General Kofi Annan called the "catastrophic
injustice" of Operation Murambatsvina in 2005, this has been the
regime's one overriding objective. In the most cynical and calculating
manner the ruling elite has first identified every section of the
community thought to pose an immediate or potential threat to its
hold on power, and then systematically set about disempowering that
group. This has been ZANU PF's grand strategy.
In the year
2000 it was the turn of the farm workers. Justice for Agriculture
(JAG) estimates that prior to the land invasions some 350,000 workers
were employed full-time and a further 250,000 as casual workers
on a seasonal basis on the commercial farms. They with their families
numbered about 2 million people which translated into close on 1
million votes. ZANU PF was probably correct in supposing that the
farm workers' employers were largely MDC supporters and that they,
the workers and their families, would also tend to vote for the
opposition. Hence the brutal and calculated displacement of these
people from the farms. At a stroke they became unemployed and homeless
and between 1.5 and 2 million people were added to the list of destitute
internally displaced persons. As Pius Wakatama wrote in 2002 in
a moving piece describing their plight,
they
have become part of the 'wretched of the earth', described so graphically
by Franz Fanon. The only difference is that their wretchedness is
not caused by white xenophobia, but by the heartless cruelty and
greed of their own black brothers and sisters.
A section of
the community who, on any reckoning, have made a major contribution
to the development and prosperity of the country, find themselves
displaced, disenfranchised and disempowered.
So it was again
in 2005 with the victims of Operation Murambatsvina. Accepting the
figures of the U.N. Special Envoy Anna Tibaijuka whose estimate
has never been seriously questioned, this upheaval produced another
700,000 internally displaced people, without home or livelihood.
Here was a major segment of the population, this time drawn largely
from the urban centres in which the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC)'s influence was greatest, again displaced, disenfranchised
and effectively disempowered. Aware no doubt of the seething discontent
at the increasing hardships caused by their own misrule - aware
also that popular revolutions tend to start in the cities rather
than in rural areas - ZANU PF moved decisively to counter the perceived
threat Never mind the appalling suffering inflicted on so many of
the poorest of the poor - in the final analysis never mind the huge
damage inflicted on their own already besmirched reputation in the
international community - it had to be. According to the grand strategy
it simply had to be in order to remove another potential threat
to ZANU PF's hold on power.
One can of course
trace the same grand strategy all the way back to the Gukurahundi
genocide in the early 1980s. Aware that he could never hope to win
the willing support of those who had rallied behind the ZAPU leadership
both in the liberation struggle and subsequently, Mugabe took the
action he deemed necessary to neutralise the potential threat he
saw from this quarter. Never mind that it was to cost an estimated
20,000 lives and that the barbarities perpetrated by his Fifth Brigade
were to traumatise a whole generation of those living in Matabeleland
and the Midlands, it was a price Mugabe was quite willing to pay
in order to disempower those who might otherwise have challenged
his own supreme authority one day. And with the so-called Unity
Accord of 1987 the emasculation of ZAPU was complete.
The problem
for Mugabe and his strategists has always been that as one perceived
threat to his rule has been removed so another has sprung up in
its place. "Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown" and, with
apologies to Shakespeare, we should perhaps rephrase that: "uneasy
lies the paranoid head that wears the stolen crown"! ZANU PF has
therefore felt obliged to attack, covertly if possible though openly
if necessary, one group after another in society. Just in the last
few years, in addition to the millions of farm workers and the urban
poor, they have taken on teachers, students and women's groups,
to say nothing of a wide range of civic groups, the whole trade
union movement and the MDC. After 25 years of corrupt, elitist and
increasingly authoritarian rule the ruling ZANU PF clique finds
itself in a state of undeclared war with virtually the whole of
civic society in Zimbabwe.
It is this essential
fact that Zimbabweans must not lose sight of as they battle the
pervading sense of hopelessness resulting from the systematic disempowerment
of the population. Otherwise we shall be doomed to remain helpless
spectators before the unfolding tragic drama - the collapse of the
rule of law, meltdown of the economy and last dying spasms of the
education and heath-care systems. If we ever forget that we who
oppose this destructive tyranny are the majority - the vast majority
- and that those driving the nation to the edge of the precipice
are a tiny, tiny minority, we shall of course give up hope.
Frankly, this
is where many Zimbabweans are today - without hope. They watch the
tragic drama moving into the final scenes with a sense of fatalistic
despair, not thinking for a moment that they have it in their own
power to avert the final tragedy and bring about some different
outcome. They watch like so many dazed spectators observing a national
catastrophe, thinking that only the too-long delayed death of the
dictator or some spectacular divine intervention might change the
pre-determined ending. Yet in so doing they overlook the elementary
fact that they who oppose the trashing of Zimbabwe are the vast
majority.
Those who courageously
fought against the Smith regime (that is the previous dictatorship)
did not forget.
They knew that
they were the majority and that knowledge gave them untold strength.
They knew that one day they would wear down Smith-the-dictator and
his minority forces, and sooner rather than later, they did just
that. By the same token we, black and white, Shona and Nedebele,
young and old, who oppose the new form of tyranny, know that one
day we shall wear down Mugabe-the-dictator and his small clique
of reactionary supporters. The future is ours, not his. The days
of the dictator are numbered. The future belongs to those who believe
in - and yes, are ready to sacrifice for - freedom, democracy and
peace. One day Zimbabwe will be a proud nation again, a nation not
run for the exclusive benefit of a small ruling elite but in which
all the little people - including the likes of Dumisani and Themba
- will have a share in the sunshine of security and opportunity.
Mugabe has almost
succeeded in creating a disempowered people whom he and his chosen
successor might keep in bondage for ever. Almost - but not quite.
For we know that WE ARE THE MAJORITY. What is more we have truth
and justice on our side. Therefore we know WE SHALL OVERCOME!
Anti-Mugabe
protests in Bulawayo
Early on Monday
16 January on the approach roads to Bulawayo from the western suburbs
groups of protesters tried to turn the traffic back, away from the
city. Protesters were out on the roads from 7.00 a.m. at the time
when commuters are normally heading to work. On Luveve Road approaching
the high density suburb of Mzilikazi protesters were attempting
to block the traffic and stoning vehicles that would not stop or
turn back. At the same time they were chanting slogans such as "Mugabe
must go". It is understood that the protest may have been related
to a letter that was circulating covertly, urging workers to stay
away from work when commerce and industry would otherwise have returned
to full strength after the Christmas and New Year break.
By 2.00 pm Monday
the protesters had left the streets but for the rest of that day
and the day following a heavy police presence was noted in both
the city centre and the western suburbs. Riot police, armed and
in full combat gear, were observed patrolling the streets in large
numbers.
Our enquiries
have revealed that there were several other incidents of youths
throwing stones at passing vehicles in the western suburbs of Bulawayo
the previous week. The riot police again intervened to restore order.
It is not known if any of the protesters were arrested or charged.
The state media
are yet to report any of the protest incidents.
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