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2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
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Election
Bulletin
Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition
February 22, 2002
Editorial
- African Renaissance … or the last kicks of a dying horse?
Since its surprise
defeat in the Constitutional Referendum in February 2000, the government
strategy has been to use the nationalist rhetoric of the liberation
struggle to defend its unconstitutional actions to grab land, muzzle
the media or obstruct the opposition and generally ride roughshod
over the Zimbabwean people’s fundamental freedoms. Despite the undemocratic
actions of the government, this strategy has gained support from
large sections of the population in Africa. Understandably, on the
continent, there are large swathes of the population who strongly
resent the continued domination of the former colonial masters in
the continent, whether this is because of a long history of political
interference by Western governments, the exploitative activities
of western companies or finally, the indefensible policy prescriptions
of the World Bank and IMF, which have laid to waste the social gains
of post-independence in defence of the almighty market. Indeed western
criticism of the actions of the Mugabe regime are received by Africans
with skepticism, perceived as they are as being mainly motivated
by the attacks on Zimbabweans of European descent.
The soft line
taken by SADC governments in reponse to the actions of the Zimbabwe
government can in part be attributed to the skillful ideological
framing of the latter’s positions. Despite the negative impact on
the region, SADC and African governments seem at a loss for a response
to ZANU-PF’s assertion that its fight is one of defending Zimbabwe’s
sovereignty and right to self determination. Issues of race and
land have been skillfully played to delegitimise any protest that
might come from within or outside. To criticize the Zimbabwe government’s
stand is to appear to be supporting Western arrogance, racism and
indifference to the plight of Africa’s people.
The truth however
is that in Zimbabwe, as in the rest of Africa, behind the veneer
of various governments’ claims to be defending the high ideals of
pan-Africanism lies a story of capitulation to the dictates of the
international financial institutions, at the expense of the country’s
black majority. This capitulation has been in the face of popular
resistance to structural adjustment programmes of the World Bank
and IMF. Indeed, during the 15 years of implementing SAPs, government
has actively suppressed resistance, including from social movements
such as trade unions. Such protests were castigated by the government
for chasing away foreign investors and giving a bad external image
of the country.
Much as in theory
its own ideological positioning fell in line with the working class
and peasantry, the government continued to pursue and defend ESAP,
not least because to do otherwise would compromise the accumulative
tendencies of the ruling class. For ESAP opened the way for increased
enrichment for a section of well-connected black elite through corrupt
processes of privatization of state assets. And despite the rhetoric
in support of indigenisation to create greater racial balance in
the share of the formal economy, the government has been conspicuosly
lethargic in taking forward widespread demands for indigenisation
policies which faciliate the entry of more black Zimbabweans into
the formal economy. Rather, indigenisation has amounted to little
less than a means to extend patronage of party supporters, while
the privileges enjoyed by the business elites and multi-national
corporations remained intact. Redistribution is a word that has
long been dead in the Zimbabwean discourse, such that the inequalities
between the rich and the poor are more gaping than they were at
independence.
The agenda for
democracy on the one hand - meant to guarantee people’s fundamental
rights - and that of fighting what is clearly hostile globalisation
and corporate imperialism are not mutually exclusive. Quite the
contrary. Governments that genuinely seek to shelter their countries
from the latter can only do so if they actively nurture and are
sensitive to the expression of popular will. There should be no
doubt that Zimbabwean voters are clear that social justice must
of necessity include political and civil rights and freedoms and
that this is a principle they are going to the polls to defend.
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