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Zimbabwe's
new rise of class struggle
Steve
Marks,Green Left Weekly
February 16, 2007
http://www.greenleft.org.au/2007/699/36307
Mike Sambo, the national coordinator of Zimbabwe’s International
Socialist Organisation, explained to Green Left Weekly’s Steve Marks
on February 16 what lies behind the regeneration of class struggle
in the country.
Inflation, officially running at 1600%, and the economic crisis
are making people desperate. Transport is out of reach and we all
now walk long distances to get to our places of work and study.
Basic commodities can’t be found in the shops and those sold on
the parallel market are simply unaffordable. Companies go bust and
thousands of workers are sacked each week. In schools and colleges,
fees are now so high that education is almost unaffordable.
The students in Bulawayo who started to protest last month
against the fees and the manoeuvres of President Robert Mugabe to
stay in office for an extra two years have ignited a spark. This
time police repression didn’t deter them and they kept at it and
other students have followed their example. Electricity workers
and doctors in the public health sector have also started to press
their demands and have gone on strike.
This week, more than 1000 Women
of Zimbabwe Arise activists staged their annual Valentine’s
Day marches in Harare and Bulawayo. The police arrested hundreds
of the women, including babies, as they distributed roses. Public
servants, nurses and teachers are now threatening strikes as well
We last saw a rise of class struggle like this in 1997. The
government only extricated itself then by a series of manoeuvres,
including a partial shift to the left — such as implementing measures
like price controls, land reform and food subsidies.
The time bought then has now run out and Mugabe is now besieged
by both local and international capital and a hungry mass of people.
In desperation he is reversing his state capitalist stabilisation
strategies and eliminating the last of the welfarist measures.
The government has basically moved towards implementing a
full neoliberal economic program. However, this is all backfiring.
Deregulation has only fueled inflation: 5000 Zimbabwean dollars
(in reality $5 million as they took three zeroes off the currency
last year) is only worth one US dollar on the parallel market. It
will now be almost impossible for Mugabe to fool people again. Not
even the capitalists are really impressed by his policy-making on
the run. No-one takes his talk of recovery seriously.
To avert a total economic implosion, Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono is trying, unsuccessfully, to convince the government
to make a peace deal with the opposition and capital via some transitional
arrangement. This would allow the official “opposition”, the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), to join the government as a junior
partner. However, this will mean intensified attacks on the workers
and the poor in general.
The MDC has its own problems anyway. It is split down the
middle, and one of the points of difference is whether it is best
to aim to strike a deal with the ruling party, ZANU-PF (Zimbabwe
African National Union — Patriotic Front), or try to ride the mass
movement and oust Mugabe that way. However, both MDC factions are
committed to a pro-capitalist solution to Zimbabwe’s crisis.
Serious opposition organisations need to intervene and to
advance the economic struggles and generalise them into political
challenge to the state. We can take advantage of the fact that ZANU-PF
is divided into three factions, each backing a different candidate
to eventually succeed Mugabe. Even the state apparatus is at this
juncture relatively weak. The police themselves are now among the
least paid in the country. There is less hostility from the police
to protests as there was in the past — that’s something we certainly
notice!
The sharp economic situation has pushed workers and students
towards a desperate struggle for survival and their struggles for
a living wage will certainly intensify in the coming weeks. The
lightning announcing this thunder is already flashing.
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