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ZCTU National Labour Protest - Sept 13, 2006 - Index of articles
Suppressing
demos will invite bloody violence
Comment, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
September 17, 2006
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=21&id=4779
THE government
never learns. No amount of force will quell genuine grievances.
Last week's
arrest of workers' leaders and brutal suppression of the demonstration
of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) by police showed just how scared
the government is of public disaffection with its mismanagement
of the country.
The government is also aware that its days are numbered.
More importantly, it is haunted by recognition of its incompetence
at finding a viable solution to the myriad problems it has created
for this country. It is precisely its inability to fashion creative
alternatives to the current crises that causes it to react with
such disproportionate intensity and brutality.
For some time the labour movement has sought to
engage the government and employers through the Tripartite Negotiating
Forum, but the outcome has always been inconclusive. The government
insists the parties should return to the negotiating table -
without addressing the reasons why previous attempts have failed
to produce an agreement.
In its panic, the government frames any public manifestation
of discontent with the way it has mismanaged the country as a regime
change agenda. It is this obsession with its ouster that clouds
the manner in which it looks at issues that are genuine. There is
no regime change agenda when the people protest that they cannot
make ends meet. There is no regime change agenda when people demand
access to anti-retroviral treatment. There is no regime change agenda
when the people demand a new beginning. There is no regime change
agenda when the people protest against increasing impoverishment.
There is no regime change agenda when the people protest the betrayal
of the goals of the struggle for independence.
In cranking
up its propaganda machine, the government declared the ZCTU-led
mass action had failed. Only imbeciles would believe such puerile
offerings. By deploying police details onto the streets of the urban
centres almost a week before last Wednesday's strike, the
government made sure protesters would not be allowed freedom to
stage a demonstration. The demonstration did not flop because it
was never afforded the space.
By arresting
the leadership of the labour movement, the government intended to
deprive the workers of their leaders during the demonstration.
But the government has a short memory. The history
of the struggle for independence in this country teaches us that
no amount of force can keep people oppressed forever. Time will
come when they will be prepared to sacrifice their lives in order
to gain freedom.
The government also does not learn that when it
uses force to suppress peaceful protest, the oppressed will resort
to violence. That is how the freedom fighters decided on a change
of tactics in confronting the regime of Ian Smith.
The struggle
for independence started as a peaceful demonstration but evolved
into an armed struggle because of the intransigence of Smith's
government. The government needs to appreciate that when it is the
one that promotes and practises violence and the use of force, the
next demonstration will not be peaceful.The
government may have survived for another day, but deep down they
understand how increasingly unpopular they have become because of
their intolerance to alternative views. The clock is ticking and
their days are numbered.
Freedom can
only be denied temporarily. It can never be denied permanently.
The government's penchant for the good life is legendary for
a country on its knees. It is lack of empathy for the plight of
the workers that fuels increasing discontent and no amount of force
can suppress it.
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