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Zimbabwe:
Contradictory constructions of the crisis in Zimbabwe
Professor
Linda Freeman
October
16, 2004
A striking aspect
of Zimbabwe’s crisis has been the struggle over its meaning within
Zimbabwe, Africa and the wider world. Differences have split those
who had been allied during the liberation struggle and have made
odd bedfellows of former foes. Thus, Zimbabwe has become a site
for intellectual as well as political and material contestation.
Questions of
liberation and democracy have been at the heart of the debate. The
discussion has reopened questions about the legacy of the liberation
struggle for contemporary politics and the issues of its "unfinished
business" especially in the continuing racial imbalance in
land ownership in southern Africa. Central to the discussion over
democracy in Zimbabwe is the question of the state’s legitimacy
given highly contested results of elections in 2000 and 2002, the
nature of subsequent by-elections and the closing of space for opposition
forces between as well as within elections. A third important area
of debate is over the significance of global pressures in creating
the crisis.
At least two
major approaches have emerged: one largely supportive of the actions
of the Zimbabwean government and the other profoundly opposed.
For one section
of opinion, the previous decades since independence have been obliterated
and Zimbabwe is once again battling neo-colonialism and imperialism.
The past history of ZANU as a liberation movement has been remodelled
to serve as the source of legitimation for the beleaguered government
of Zimbabwe.
For this camp,
the key issue (indeed, the only issue) in understanding Zimbabwe’s
troubles is the refusal of forces within and without Zimbabwe to
accept the radical reform which has resulted in the transformation
of commercial farmland from white to African farmers. The next step
in redeeming what is rightfully African will include the transfer
of mining shares to black Zimbabweans, with some suggestion that
the process may ultimately move into the manufacturing sector.
In this view,
concern about abuse of human, civil and political rights is simply
a smokescreen to cover efforts to remove the current government
in Zimbabwe and to restore old enemies in power. From this point
of view, the Mugabe regime needs to be celebrated for completing
an important task which had been integral to the liberation struggle.
A central proposition
of the opposing view is that the current crisis is less about finishing
the tasks of the liberation struggle than a reaction by the current
government in Zimbabwe to the most serious challenge to its power
since independence. In this view, the impetus for land reform was
an opportunistic attempt by the ZANU (PF) government to regain popular
favour. Support for Mugabe, according to this school of thought,
represents a betrayal of mass public opinion in Zimbabwe and backing
for a regime riddled with venality and corruption.
In sum, the
first approach puts an emphasis on external factors and regards
the current regime in Zimbabwe headed by President Robert Mugabe
as a tribune of the South. The second school of thought focuses
more on internal dynamics, the nature of the regime in power, and
its refusal to accept the popular will.
Discourse #1:
the Mugabe regime is a Tribune of the South
The theoretical
provenance of the first approach is almost entirely structuralist
and historicist. It employs the grand narratives of anti-colonialism,
imperialism and even socialism. These link the Zimbabwe of the present
crisis to the struggle against white minority rule which ended with
independence in 1980 and the larger struggle of the South against
domination from the advanced industrial world
Therefore the
explanation of the Zimbabwean crisis given by this approach has
the following five main dimensions:
- Land reform
is misconstrued by racist opponents. Land reforms are designed
to end racial inequality in land ownership and to pave the way
for redistribution in other sectors of the economy. Arguments
that land reforms are responsible for the decline in agricultural
production are untrue and racist.
- Past difficulties
which provide the larger context for the crisis are held to reside
in neo-liberal structural adjustment policies which the government
adopted in the early 1990s. In this view, Zimbabwe has been penalized
for its refusal to continue with what it believes to be counter-productive
policies and for its inability to service its debts to international
financial institutions.
By countering
the common wisdom allowing the market to reign and attempting
instead to continue with state control over key parts of the economy,
the current government in Zimbabwe considers itself "socialist".
On occasion, President Mugabe has suggested that Zimbabwe is capable
of delinking from the global economy and surviving on its own
resources.
- The crisis
is primarily the fault of the British and also of other Western
powers. These interests have imposed formal sanctions and actively
plot ways to unseat the Mugabe regime. Since the beginning of
the current crisis, Zimbabwe has been subject to a donor and investor
strike - which it considers to be a regime of informal sanctions.
- The rise
of the opposition political party, the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) in 1999 represents the backlash of the wealthy white
farming sector and its external supporters. The choice between
the MDC and ZANU (PF) is thus a choice between the return of colonial
domination or a continuation of rule by the party that brought
Zimbabwe to independence. In this view, the MDC does not have
the right to take power even if the majority of people support
them. Attacks on MDC officials and supporters are justified as
a means to prevent the return of Zimbabwe to white rule and a
continuation of the liberation struggle in the post-colonial period.
- The liberation
struggle conferred exclusive legitimacy on ZANU (PF). In this
view, ZANU (PF) leaders, members and supporters paid dearly and
sacrificed immensely during the struggle for independence; hence
power belongs to them and them alone.
II) Discourse
#2: Internal Dynamics of Power Explain Difficulties
The second school
of thought emerged most powerfully towards the end of the
1990s (especially
after 1997) as socio-economic difficulties, political repression
and corruption mounted. This understanding of the current state
of affairs in Zimbabwe is based on five principal propositions:
A) External
forces, especially international financial institutions and Britain,
are not primarily responsible for the current state of Zimbabwe.
One part of the opposition in Zimbabwe (excluding trade unions and
some civil society groups but including the independent press, key
economic advisers to the MDC and the private sector) supports the
neo-liberal policies and ideas dominant in many northern countries
and in international financial institutions.
B) The crisis
in Zimbabwe is a product of the Mugabe regime’s attempts to shore
up an eroding power base. By the end of the 1990s, disaffection
had produced strong opposition within civil society and a new political
party, the MDC. The defeat of the government in a referendum over
a proposed constitutional reform in February 2000 precipitated the
government’s attempt to regain lost ground. Subsequently, in two
elections, the Zimbabwean government violated most norms laid down
in regional (SADC), continental (AU)
and global agreements specifying internationally accepted criteria
for human and political rights and governance in general.
C) ZANU (PF)’s
struggle to stay in power has produced an extreme non-liberal form
of politics which has become highly abusive. Legislation now prohibits
basic freedoms of the press, of association, and of dissent. Above
all, the current government has removed the concept of impartiality
before the law.
The government
(1) has tightened control so that all institutions of the state
and employees are meant to serve only the ruling political party;
(2) has militarized the state, putting retired military figures
into key positions and creating paramilitary forces drawn from the
"war veterans" and then the youth militia; (3) and has
developed a politics of exclusion which denies full citizenship
to those who do not support ZANU (PF ). The exclusion also determines
who is able to get food relief or to buy food from the government’s
Grain Marketing Board - i.e. people who hold ZANU (PF) cards.
D) Land reform
has had, primarily, a political agenda. In this view, land reform
was less the equitable transfer of land from a small class of white
commercial farmers to land-poor farmers from the communal areas
than a tool in service of a regime and a president whose power rested,
to no small degree, on patronage. Proof that the land reform had
a largely political agenda can be seen in its reckless imposition
and the resulting collapse in agricultural production.
E) The crisis
has produced the Zairization of Zimbabwe. As the formal economy
collapses, this school points to what they consider to be wholesale
looting not only of the white commercial farming sector but also
of state assets by an ultra-corrupt elite. The expensive military
intervention in the DRC brought benefits to a few key individuals
but not to the country as a whole.
In this period,
fortunes have been made by a small class of Zimbabweans at the top
while the vast majority lead a perilous existence, lacking even
the basics. From the point of view of this school, ZANU (PF) has
overstayed its welcome in power and has become incompetent, repressive
and corrupt.
III) An assessment
of the competing claims of this discourse:
A) The question
of external responsibility for the Zimbabwean crisis: Here one can
agree with erstwhile allies about part of their argument.
1) It is clear
that the policies pushed on Zimbabwe by external forces - international
financial institutions and other donors - in the late 1980s and
early 1990s set the stage for the tragedy which has unfolded. The
government hoped to find a way to accelerate growth, fund social
services and, above all, employ the hundreds of thousands of secondary
school leavers coming out on to the job market.
However, the
neo-liberal policies of the IFIs did not deliver significantly in
the fields of growth and investment and the government went ever
deeper into debt. Significantly, the deterioration of living standards
and the growing population of unemployed literate youth provided
fertile grounds for opposition politics. At the same time, the Mugabe
regime became increasingly frustrated at being no longer able to
afford the reforms of the 1980s
(especially
social sector funding) to sustain popular standards of living and
thus to retain popular support.
No wonder that
many in Zimbabwe still see this crisis through the lens of their
relations with the international financial institutions. Clearly,
external forces set the stage for the desperate struggle which the
Mugabe regime has launched to stay in power.
2) However,
the focus on the external input of Britain seems more a displacement
of responsibility rather than an accurate portrayal of events. To
be sure, Britain’s handling of the Zimbabwe crisis, especially in
the early years, was inept. Two officials, Claire Short and Peter
Hain, in particular, acted in ways that inflamed and aggravated
difficulties between the two countries. But it stretches credulity
to accept Mugabe’s insistence on the nature and extent of British
sabotage of his regime.
B) Anti-imperialism
and Zimbabwean nationalism: While one can argue that the IFIs and
the West bear part of the responsibility, they do not provide an
excuse for much of what has transpired in Zimbabwe. As lecturer
Devan Pillay noted, "the "imperialist" card, like the "racist"
card, is inevitably played whenever politically expedient. The Mugabe
regime has used nationalism, and pan-Africanism to great effect,
winning support from the region, the continent and from a wide swathe
of African public opinion.
The reasons
may not be too hard to find. This is a region and a continent which
has been force fed an economic agenda in the last 25 years which
has produced widespread global impoverishment and inequality. African
economies and societies have experienced directly a "policing"
of internal economic policy through structural adjustment programmes
which has been more draconian and severe than experienced even in
colonial times. The return in the last years to an overt imperial
role by the US and Britain in the Middle East has only strengthened
the reaction in the South and in Africa to Northern dominance.
C) Racism and
Opposition in Zimbabwe:
In terms of
the claim that opposition to the current Zimbabwean regime and its
policies is a product of racist attitudes, there is no question
that the plight of white farmers attracted international attention
and strong reactions from the British press and government.
That said, the
government in Zimbabwe itself has operated on a racial basis - targeting
farmers, primarily but not exclusively, on the grounds of race.
At the same time, the issue of racism has had a crucially important
second dimension. While the beneficiaries of the land reform are
black, the overwhelming majority of victims of the land reform have
also been black - not only the hundreds of thousands of farm workers
and their families but also black settlers (30,000 to 35,000) who
are now being pushed off farms in favour of more elite interests
and the odd member of the ZANU (PF) elite that is losing out in
current internecine struggles.
In addition,
the membership of the coalition opposing Mugabe is primarily black
as is the independent press and judiciary. The reality is that it
is opposition to the regime, not the purported racist prejudice
of a tiny white minority (some say now as few as 30,000 out of 11
million) and their external supporters that the government finds
unacceptable.
D) The issue
of the "progressive" or "socialist" nature of
the current Zimbabwean state;
It is also hard
to accept (as some on the left would have it) that the approach
taken by the Zimbabwean government in the period since 1997 is "progressive"
or "socialist".
In terms of
the socialist nature of the Zimbabwean state, it can be argued that
the government has imposed its will on the economy and not permitted
the free reign of market forces. Secondly, Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros
have pointed to the number of families originally receiving land
(127,000 small farmers and 7,000 large farmers) as a fundamentally
progressive reform.
In addition,
Moyo has argued that the land reform has provided significant gains
for the broader democratisation process. The process of land occupations,
he argues, has created space for greater awareness and participation
in basic social struggles hitherto dominated by formal state structures
and urban civil society organisations.
Yet progressive
and socialist policies have within them fundamental notions of popular
control and popular benefit. On the issue of popular control, there
is no question that the state played a significant role in organizing,
animating, funding and transporting prospective settlers in the
land invasions. While settlers may have taken the initiative in
certain areas, they were responding to signals from the state and
assisted by state institutions.
In other respects,
the state in Zimbabwe, with its extreme abuse of human, civil and
political rights, has operated in ways characteristic of a quasi-fascist
rather than a ‘socialist’ state. Carte blanche has been given to
paramilitary forces (the youth militia and ‘war veterans’); national
security forces (police and military) have been pressed into direct
service for the ruling political party; and, as noted earlier, Zimbabwean
institutions have been militarized and transformed into partisan
bodies.
On the issue
of popular benefit, one sees an "idealism" in the Mugabe
regime ’s blithe disregard for the sobering material realities of
most Zimbabweans that would have done most European aristocracies
proud. The blatant enrichment of a tiny elite in this period also
sits uneasily with the socialist claim.
There remains
the question of whether this is but an early phase of primitive
accumulation which may ultimately result in progressive change.
So far there is little to indicate such trends. As David Moore argues,
"there is no evidence to date to show improvement ...in Zimbabwe,
except in the case of a conspicuously consuming ‘élite’ (wealthier
than a ‘middle class’ but with little interest in the production
signifying a ‘proper’ bourgeoisie) with its base in ‘trade’ and
rent-seeking at best, speculation and crime at worst.
Does this group
represent the embryonic stage of a productive bourgeoisie, creating
an industrial proletariat along with it? Reports on the new capitalists’
farms suggest much lower ...wages and worse conditions than those
that afflicted the now decimated agricultural workers historically."
At any rate, the state under ZANU (PF) has always expressed ambivalence
about a successful autonomous capitalist class, giving short shrift
to figures like Econet’s Strive Masiyiwa or confiscating the properties
of those who fall out of favour (as in the case of Edwin Moyo’s
Kondozi farm).
E) The sombre
dénouement of post-colonial, post-liberation politics
A central question
that this case opens for us is a familiar Orwellian one: why do
"revolutionaries" come to look like their opponents in
all too short a time? Why do the laws and the actions of the Mugabe
regime resemble, in a macabre and eerie way, those of the government
of Ian Smith?
In this case,
the historical legacy of the war for liberation provides an important
part of the answer - especially in the inculcation on both sides
of authoritarian patterns of rule and undemocratic practices. Armed
liberation struggles did not provide the experience or habits which
would help foster democratic systems of governance after independence
or respect for human rights.
The colonial
states which liberation movements moved into had also been militarized
in the war against black majority rule. Hence, when liberation from
white minority rule finally came in Zimbabwe, it did not usher in
the substance of a democratic culture. Instead, its vision was the
one-party state.
Hence, to understand
the roots of the Zimbabwean crisis one must go back to interrogate
the myths, legends and historical record of the liberation movements
both during the periods of struggle and also during their period
in power. After all, the darker shadows of the internecine battles
within ZANU during the 1970s were followed by the repressive horrors
of the gukurahundi in Matabeleland and a record of rigid intolerance
to opposition forces in the post-independence period.
Here the work
of John Saul is extremely prescient. In an early (pre-1980) and
controversial article, Saul emphasized the ways in which "petty-bourgeois
politicking" - the jockeying for position within and between
Zimbabwean liberation movements based on factionalism and personality
and the instrumentalism of ethnic issues - had forestalled the deepening
of the revolutionary project.
At the time
of Zimbabwean independence, he wrote cautiously of Mugabe "cast
.. in the role of Sphinx, guarding his options and seeming deliberately
to muddy the ideological waters", and warned the left against
"waiting for Mugabe". While he looked at the prospects
for Zimbabwe moving beyond "primitive" or bourgeois nationalism
to a more revolutionary nationalism
(defined as
realizing the interests of the people as a whole rather than the
interests of a small group), he noted that "considerable controversy
swirls around the question ... of just what kind of promise of continued
forward movement ZANU has to offer".
In the current
period of crisis in Zimbabwe, one finds the deepening of a pathology
foreshadowed by this analysis - the intense petty-bourgeois politicking
as rivals begin the battle to succeed Mugabe and Mugabe still the
Sphinx, guarding his options and muddying the ideological waters.
So what is left
for a more hopeful future?
The broad coalition
of opposition forces which emerged in Zimbabwe, battered and bruised
though it may be by government repression, held and may still hold
within it the promise of a different phase in the political life
of the country and the region.
As Joe Hanlon
argues, it might be more appropriate to use the term "Chimurenga"
for this phenomenon - not as the government does to describe the
initiatives it has taken since 2000, especially in land reform,
but more to refer to the uprising of the next generation of political
leaders no longer prepared to accept the negative side of rulers,
like Mugabe and his comrades, who came to power with independence
at the end of a liberation struggle.
Beyond this
goal, however, the purpose of such new groupings is not clear. With
such a wide array of forces grouped under the umbrella of dissent,
the struggle over policies will only begin with their success. At
any rate, at writing, the repressive efforts of the state have contained
this promise; for the time being, the old forces of liberation have
triumphed over the new.
Endnotes:
[1] See David
Blair, Degrees in Violence - Robert Mugabe and the Struggle for
Power in Zimbabwe (London: Continuum, 2002), 132-138.
[2] Devan Pillay,
"Playing the "imperialist’ card has cast a spell on Mugabe
’s critics," Sunday Times (SA), 26 October 2003.
[3] Sam Moyo
and Paris Yeros, "Land Occupations and Land Reform in Zimbabwe:Towards
the National Democratic Revolution," Reclaiming the Land: The
Resurgence of Rural Movements in Africa, Asia, and Latin America,
eds. Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros, London: Zed Books, forthcoming.
[4] Sam Moyo,
"The Land Occupation Movement in Zimbabwe: Contradictions of
Neo‑liberalism," Millenium: Journal of International
Studies, XXX, II,
330.
[5]David Moore,
"Marxism and Marxist Intellectuals in Schizophrenic Zimbabwe:
How Many Rights for Zimbabwe’s Left? A Comment," Historical
Materialism, (forthcoming).
[6] See C. Leys
and J. S. Saul, Namibia’s Liberation Struggle: The Two-Edged Sword
(London: James Currey, 1995).
[7] See Luise
White, The Assassination of Herbert Chitepo - Texts and Politics
in Zimbabwe (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2003).
[8] Breaking
the Silence Building True Peace - A Report on the Disturbances in
Matabeleland and the Midlands 1980 to 1988 (Harare: The Catholic
Commission for Justice and Peace in Zimbabwe and The Legal Resources
Foundation, 1997).
[9] See Norma
Kriger, "Electoral Patterns in Zanu(PF)’s Incendiary Discourse
and Organized Violence", September 2004, unpub.
[10] John Saul,
"Transforming the Struggle in Zimbabwe," Southern Africa,
February 1977 reprinted in John S. Saul, The State and Revolution
in Eastern Africa (New York and London: Monthly Review Press and
Heinemann Educational Books, 1979), chapter 5.
[11] John S.
Saul, "Zimbabwe: The Next Round," Monthly Review, XXXII,
4
(September 1980),
38.
[12] Saul, "Zimbabwe:
the Next Round," 34.
*Chimurenga
is a Shona word meaning struggle. The ‘First Chimurenga’ refers
to the 19th century resistance to British colonialism and the ‘Second
Chimurenga’ was the national liberation war of the 1970s.
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