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COSATU
and Zimbabwe: Signalling left, turning right
Fikile
Mbalula, President of the ANC Youth League
November 04
http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/anctoday/2004/at45.htm#art4
For some years
now, Zimbabwe has occupied a prominent place in the international
discourse. President Mugabe and the political situation in Zimbabwe
have served as a central focus of this discourse. Certainly in the
Western countries it is taken as given that President Mugabe is
an evil and demonic dictator, and the political order in Zimbabwe
the very epitome of a vile anti-democratic dictatorship.
The most extraordinary
statements have been made in this regard. For example, the well
known conservative scholar on African affairs, Professor Robert
Rotberg, Director of the Harvard Programme on Intrastate Conflict
and President of the World Peace Foundation, has written that "Africa
has its very own Pol Pot. Everything that President Robert Mugabe
has done to Zimbabwe since the stolen March (2002) elections qualifies
him for that despicable allusion".
In 2001, the
British 'Telegraph' newspaper carried an article entitled "Murderous
Mugabe should be treated like bin Laden". After mentioning the Taliban,
the author, Alice Thompson, said "America and Britain are looking
for their next target in the war against terrorism. Zimbabwe hasn't
even been mentioned. Yet it is full of terror. Imposing sanctions
or sending in troops could tip the country over the edge".
What made it
possible for these outrageous statements to be made, that Robert
Mugabe stood in the same league as Pol Pot and Osama bin Laden,
was the fact that a very powerful global propaganda machine had
succeeded to paint an entirely negative image of the President and
the government of Zimbabwe, as well as the political situation in
that country.
Hard realism
dictates that we accept that in this situation it is most unlikely
that, as of now, the truth about the situation in Zimbabwe is likely
to see the light of day. Lies and half truths will continue to prevail
because some in our country and elsewhere in the world have a vested
interest in the prevalence of a particular perspective about Zimbabwe,
regardless of the real situation in that country.
What accounts
for this, and why should we, a liberation movement, surrender to
such fatalism!
In the aftermath
of the 2002 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Australia,
'The (British) Guardian' correspondent, Seamus Milne, wrote: "Since
Blair's ministers began openly to champion the cause of the white
farmers who made up the backbone of the former Rhodesian regime
- while denouncing the black leadership which defeated it as 'uncivilised'
- British interference in Zimbabwe has been ceaseless.
"There are only
two possible explanations for Britain's role. One is a racist concern
for the privileged white minority. The other is that, unlike Zambia
and Kenya, Mugabe is no longer playing ball with the west's neo-liberal
agenda and talking, credibly or not, of taking over private businesses
and a return to socialism. That cannot be tolerated and, in the
new world order, the US now appears to have subcontracted supervision
of Africa largely to the former colonial powers, Britain and France."
This had been
preceded by another report in the same newspaper, 'The Guardian',
written by one of its veteran correspondents, Jonathan Steele. He
said: "It
was a disgraceful election which European Union observers and local
monitors severely censured. The media were controlled. Criticising
the president risked criminal charges. The police regularly moved
in to prevent opposition candidates campaigning and the vote-count
was marked by irregularities. This sorry spectacle happened three
weeks ago in a former British colony in southern Africa.
"Statements
of indignation from Jack Straw? Not a murmur. Furious coverage in
Fleet Street? A few column inches on inside pages. Talk of "smart"
sanctions to punish the men who stole the election? You must be
joking.
"So what is
it that keeps Zambia, where this travesty of a poll was conducted,
safe from the west's outrage-stirrers, unlike Zimbabwe?"
Jonathan Steele
answered this question as follows: "The
issue is racism. Zimbabwe's best land is still in white hands, and
this provokes inordinate interest in Britain. Mugabe's approach
to land reform has been inconsistent and volatile. His methods have
often been violent and unlawful. But for largely racist reasons
he had very little support from successive British governments.
They put a 10-year block on changes in the land tenure system in
the constitution drawn up at independence, and have failed to provide
much cash for the international fund which they promised to set
up to buy the settlers out. Racism pervades other aspects of Whitehall's
(the British government's) approach."
Another commentator,
Decca Aitkenhead, writing in the same newspaper in August 2001 about
the experience of white farmers in Zimbabwe, as reported in the
British press, said: "Reporters who cover Africa will be more familiar
with the spectacle of atrocity, of course, but less accustomed to
the swell of foreign horror. Not known for our sympathy for African
misfortune, all of a sudden we are appalled.
"Bad things
should obviously not happen to white people. How else to explain
the indignation? The knowledge of unspeakable horrors inflicted
on black Africans is seldom allowed to interfere with our peace
of mind, as if they were in the natural order of things. Over there
it is hot, zebras live in the wild, and bad things happen to blacks.
But when white families are dispossessed, it is another matter altogether."
This explains
why we accept that cold realism dictates that we understand that
we will not succeed in the near future to have the truth, the whole
truth and nothing but the truth told about the situation in Zimbabwe.
Where racism pervades the approach on a (British) Labour Government,
who else in the West will be immune to the cancerous disease of
racism!
Our movement
and Government have disagreed with ZANU PF and the Government of
Zimbabwe about a number of issues relating to the situation in Zimbabwe.
We have not hesitated to discuss any and all these matters with
both ZANU PF and the Government, as well as intervene practically
where this was necessary.
We did this,
and will continue to do, not because somebody else demands that
we do so. We will continue to engage the broad spectrum of the Zimbabwe
leadership because it is in our country's direct and immediate interest
that our neighbour, Zimbabwe, should overcome its political, economic
and social problems.
We fully understand
the challenges facing Zimbabwe. At the same time we understand other
things about Zimbabwe, which self interested and ideologically driven
propaganda against the Government of Zimbabwe is determined to deny
and hide from the public eye.
Zimbabwe has
an elected parliament, in which the MDC is a formidable elected
opposition. Because of its electoral strength, the MDC is the predominant
representative of the urban population of Zimbabwe. The main urban
municipalities of Zimbabwe are controlled by elected MDC councils.
In some instances where the MDC has challenged specific constituency
election results, the courts have upheld the petitions of the MDC,
resulting in the removal of ZANU PF members of parliament. Accepting
the bona fides of the judiciary in this regard, the MDC has asked
the courts of the land to rule on the legality of the 2002 election
of Robert Mugabe as President of the Republic.
In 2000, the
Government and ZANU PF were defeated in a referendum to approve
a draft Constitution which, among other things, sought to establish
a new constitutional framework to address the land question. ZANU
PF and the Government accepted this outcome.
At the suggestion
of COSATU, South Africa deployed a civil society Observer Mission
to observe the 2002 Presidential Elections. The Mission included
trade union, business, religious, NGO and other representatives.
Properly to
discharge its responsibilities not only to observe the elections,
but also to ensure that they were free and fair, the Observer Mission
intervened promptly in all instances where it felt that the integrity
of the elections could be compromised. To facilitate its access
to the Zimbabwe Government, our Government deployed two Ministers
in Harare who helped to ensure that the Zimbabwe Government addressed
the concerns of the Observer Mission expeditiously.
In its Report,
and having expressed itself on the negative factors relating to
these elections, this Observer Mission said:
"It appears
that the will of the people was demonstrated to a degree reflected
by the number of people who came out to vote and who did get an
opportunity to vote. The turnout at the polls and the number of
people who voted was second only to the first election following
the liberation of Zimbabwe. This view must be seen in the context
of the obstacles and problems that characterised the pre-election
period that is described boldly and frankly in the body of this
report. The Mission is, therefore, of the view that the outcome
of the elections represents the legitimate voice of the people of
Zimbabwe."
Being certain
about the integrity of the eminent South Africans who constituted
the SAOM and the thoroughness with which they did their work, we
accepted this determination that President Mugabe is President by
virtue of the legitimate voice of the people of Zimbabwe. In this
context, we have repeatedly made the statement that we respect the
right of the people of Zimbabwe to determine their own destiny and
that Zimbabwe is not a province of South Africa.
The last fact
about Zimbabwe we would like to mention is that the pervasive impression
created that Zimbabwe has no privately owned and so-called "independent"
media is completely false. The story that has gained currency as
the absolute truth, that only the "Daily News" was such an "independent"
paper is an outright falsification of reality. In this regard we
must also say that, in time, the real truth will also be told about
the circumstances that led to the "Daily News" ceasing to publish.
Concerning the
foregoing, it is clear that Zimbabwe is a "dictatorship" of a special
type. It has regular multi-party elections in keeping with the prescripts
contained in the National Constitution. It has elected national
and local legislatures in which the opposition has a strong presence.
Regularly the
courts rule in favour of the opposition. It has many "independent"
publications that are registered according to the law, appear regularly,
and are highly critical of the Government.
The reality
is that in the Zimbabwe case, we are dealing with a very peculiar
kind of "dictatorship". However, powerful forces in the contemporary
world have decreed that none of the foregoing exists. Instead, they
argue that we have a dictatorship that should be treated as an equivalent
of the Cambodian Pol Pot and Afghan Taliban and bin Laden dictatorships.
It therefore follows that like these, the Mugabe Government must
be overthrown, destroyed, and replaced by another acceptable to
those who are ready to tell lies about the real Zimbabwe.
COSATU has now
intervened forcefully to make its own statement about Zimbabwe.
This was preceded by a strange demonstration it held in Cape Town
to oppose the re-election of President Bush and urge the US electorate
to elect the Democratic Party candidate, Senator John Kerry!
But interestingly,
as reported by a determined Zimbabwe opponent of the Mugabe administration,
the Zimbabwe journalist Basildon Peta, President Bush 's Ambassador
in South Africa, Jendayi Frazer, had expressed the same views about
Zimbabwe upheld by the COSATU that is seemingly opposed to the re-election
of President Bush.
Reporting in
August this year for the London newspaper 'The Independent', Peta
said that, at "a meeting with journalists in Johannesburg", Ambassador
Frazer had indicated that: "The United States has called for the
building of a "coalition of the willing" to push for regime change
to end the crisis in Zimbabwe. The new American ambassador to South
Africa, Jendayi Frazer, said quiet diplomacy pursued by South Africa
and other African countries in its dealings with the Zimbabwe president
needed a review because there was no evidence it was working. She
said her country would be willing to be part of a coalition if invited."
The Peta report
went on: "She noted that repression in Zimbabwe had worsened and
was making it impossible for the opposition to operate ahead of
elections next year." 'So we have got to re-look at the approach,
that South Africa is taking in terms of quiet diplomacy ... It's
not evident that it's working at this point."
'We have always talked about building coalitions of the willing
and I, for one, believe that the coalitions of the willing are going
to be the newforce in global affairs ... "Instead of quiet diplomacy,
Ms Frazer suggested an open admission by regional countries that
there is a crisis in Zimbabwe. That was an important first step
followed by pressure to force Mr Mugabe to return the country to
democracy."
On November
6, COSATU stated this position more delicately when it said: "Diplomacy
has its role and place, but we cannot afford to place all our eggs
in the basket of diplomacy. Mass mobilisation and solidarity have
an equally important role. The challenge is to co-ordinate these
efforts to reinforce one another and not use one to the exclusion
of the other."
The day before
COSATU made this statement, the Zimbabwe 'Daily News Online' reported
on a conversation it had held with one Roger Bate, whom it described
as a "Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute". This is one
of the neo-conservative institutions of the US that have helped
to define that country's right wing agenda. 'The Daily News Online'
said "A fellow at the Institute, Roger Bate, the powerful think-tank,
the American Enterprise says there is need to step up pressure on
the government of Zimbabwe by increasing sanctions on President
Robert Mugabe and his cronies. Bate said there was need for the
international community to put more pressure on President Mbeki
to help facilitate the restoration of democracy in Zimbabwe."
Obviously, like
Ambassador Frazer and COSATU, Mr Bate thinks that our "quiet diplomacy"
needs to be "coordinated" with some other kind of action, such as
the sanctions proposed by COSATU. All this had been foreseen by
the conservative newspaper, "The Washington Times" which, in January
this year opined: "Despite all of South Africa's misplaced support,
the government of Zimbabwe has no qualms about publicly embarrassing
Mr. Mbeki. What will it take for South Africa to finally change
its approach?"
In the immediate
aftermath of the deportation of the COSATU "fact finding mission"
from Zimbabwe, this same newspaper, one of those COSATU thanked
for their expression of solidarity, said: "South
Africa's self-deprecating silence in the face of Zimbabwe's escalating
contempt is defining the Mbeki government's Africa policy. As despotic
leader Robert Mugabe continues his catastrophic dictatorship in
Zimbabwe and puts the South African government in increasingly difficult
positions, Pretoria continues to respond with its ineffectual "quiet
diplomacy." That policy is becoming a national embarrassment for
South Africa."
Obviously Ambassador
Frazer, COSATU, the Zimbabwe Daily News and the American Enterprise
Institute are not alone in challenging the approach we have taken
towards the resolution of Zimbabwe's problems!
Denigration
of the reasons for Zimbabwe's land redistribution programme and
charges of gross economic mismanagement have been part of the armoury
that has been used to justify the right wing demand for regime change
in Zimbabwe.
As long ago
as 2001, communicating through its General Secretary, COSATU spoke
in the same terms about these two matters. Speaking at a conference
in 2001, the General Secretary said:
"However, we
could not associate ourselves with the chaotic and anarchic fast
track land resettlement programme unleashed by the Zimbabwean government
in 2000. This programme was in flagrant disregard of the law and
unleashed a wave of violence that threatened the very stability
of the society. What is even more disgusting was that the violence
by party hooligans was also directed at farm workers.
"We are not
convinced that this was a genuine programme since government has
failed for 20 years to address the central question at the centre
of the revolution in Zimbabwe - the land question. In order to mask
its failures and faced by prospects of a credible opposition government
opportunistically used the land question to deflect attention from
its failures. The fast track land resettlement programme was nothing
less than an election gimmick."
With regard
to the economy, the General Secretary said: "What we have witnessed
in Zimbabwe is a study in irony. Government for a long time failed
to address critical issues facing the masses but in a rather Orwellian
fashion turn up revolutionary rhetoric to try to whip up support.
Additionally,
government embraces neo-liberalism only to discard it towards election
and immediately after the elections adopt IMF-World Bank-type adjustment
programmes."
The reality
however is that the economic problems of Zimbabwe emanated from
the implementation from independence in 1980 onwards, of precisely
the same policies that COSATU demanded of our government, as part
of its opposition to GEAR.
These included
high budget deficits to fund social spending on health and education
as well as rural development. Borrowed money was also used to pay
an expanded public service required to implement these programmes.
At the same time the budget was used to sustain a whole range of
food, transport and other subsidies on items of direct benefit to
the masses that the COSATU General Secretary falsely claims the
Zimbabwe Government failed. These distinctly pro-poor policies were
financially unsustainable. A large domestic and international debt
became a fetter on further development. The domestic capital market
dried up. These and other developments and the responses of the
Government to the then growing crisis led directly to macro-economic
imbalances of high interest and inflation rates, a rapid decline
in the growth rate, and so on.
In these circumstances,
Zimbabwe had to turn to the IMF and the World Bank for support.
Not unexpectedly, these imposed a structural adjustment programme
on Zimbabwe, which necessarily required cuts in public expenditure
and therefore a roll back of the social programmes that had been
put in place to ensure the upliftment of the formerly colonised
millions.
Had our movement
and government succumbed to the pressures from COSATU to abandon
GEAR, sooner or later we would have ended up in the same situation
as Zimbabwe, having to appeal to the IMF and the World Bank to bail
us out.
We have said
this many times that we will never allow ourselves to be forced
into this situation.
The "study in
irony" consists in the way that COSATU attacks the Government of
Zimbabwe for the consequences of economic policies that it sought
to impose on our movement and government, even through resort to
the instrument of general strikes.
But even more
of an irony is the very strange coincidence of the positions of
COSATU on Zimbabwe with those of the domestic and international
right wing forces.
COSATU considers
and describes itself as belonging to "the left". Others who also
consider and describe themselves as "left" hold somewhat different
views about the situation in and the contest about the future of
Zimbabwe.
For example,
the US "Workers World" wrote in 2001: "The art of public relations
goes back a long way, as the old expression "a wolf in sheep's clothing"
shows us. Disguise something bad or give it a cuddly name and by
the time people find out it has fangs, it may be too late.
"A bill called
the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act (ZDERA) now making
its way through Congress is a case in point. Democracy, economic
recovery--who could argue with that? But this bill is an open attack
on Zimbabwe's economic and political independence. It was passed
by the Senate on Aug. 1 and is now before the House.
"President Robert
Mugabe and the Patriotic Front government are the targets of ZDERA.
In the name of democracy, the bill would allow the U.S. Congress
to spend $6 million to influence the upcoming national election,
in the name of "voter education," and would put sanctions on the
country's leaders."
Reflecting an
understanding of the land question different from that expressed
by the General Secretary of COSATU, The "Workers World" said: It
is obvious that the whites are into farming as a lucrative business,
not for survival. The Black people, however, are desperately poor
and need the land just to live. The land question has become the
focus of a giant political battle."
There is another
"left" NGO, the Independent Media Centre (IMC), with branches in
various countries, including Zimbabwe. It describes itself as "a
volunteer non-corporate effort to provide news coverage and media
resources to the disempowered". Commenting about the situation in
Zimbabwe, a contributor to its "chat room" has written:
"The point that
we are all aware of should perhaps be reiterated, ie. that not all
"civil society" actors are engaged in a struggle against neoliberalsm,
not all trade-unions are progressive, and not all NGOs are "grassroots".
In fact it is precisely on the issue of what a "grassroots" organization
is that I have the most trouble.
"The National
Constitutional Assembly in Zimbabwe for instance receives funding
from the US congressionally funded National Endowment for Democracy,
(which has been used to finance the attempt to overthrow President
Chavez in Venezuela), and most NGOs with a web-presence receive
some assistance from major donor governments. In fact 85% of recognized
professionalised NGOs receive assistance from Northern governments.
"Professionalised
NGOs need to be distinguished from truly grass-roots movements in
that they lack a mass-base, are usually urban based, staffed by
middle-class individuals, and have widespread access to international
networks. Many of these groups already have sufficient space on
the Internet and a strong voice in it as well.
"What I am concerned
about is the marginalisation of rural voices, of those poor Zimbabweans
who support the land-reform program (including youth, women, etc.),
the views of black workers on white farms (who often face terrible
conditions and are also victims of intimidation and biased/narrow
news sources (i.e. exposed to corporate media instead of government
media)), etc.
"These are all
important questions that should be addressed, instead of only airing
the views of the Western funded MDC and its supporters. I am not
against critical debate and input from any party or faction in the
country, but I think it is important to consider what IMC's role
should be in this process.
"There are plenty
of good reasons to criticise Mugabe and his inner-circle -and I'm
not suggesting that their positions that should be placed front
and centre - but there are millions of Zimbabweans who support ZANU,
its sectoral organisations and its democratic-mass-base that are
also disillusioned with Mugabe in a way very different from most
of the MDC.
"It is difficult
to find such voices online, especially since ZANU supporters are
overwhelmingly concentrated in rural areas with low access to computers.
"It is interesting
to note that there is very little on land reform on the Zimbabwe
IMC site even though this is a major issue in the country. Anyway,
I trust your judgement overall, but just wanted to prod you guys
a bit to consider some of these issues and to throw a little more
critical eye on that broad term "civil society".
"I really have
nothing against the ISO and especially not the Zimbabwean students
struggle in the face of repression, but I also think the other side
of the story should be told - i.e. the repressive acts carried out
by white-farmers, the land-question, and the grass-roots activists
within the ZANU-PF, which hold critical views of the government
as well but are also far more critical of Western interference in
the country and collusion between the racist white-settler elite,
corporate interests in the country and the whole discourse of "economic
emancipation" and the "Third Chimurenga (liberation war)" that is
the core of ZANU's beliefs (including even industrial action to
seize ownership of factories and indigenise these).
"Anyway no point
in continuously repeating the same points...Of course the difficulty
is finding out why/how these voices are marginalised, and how they
can be brought into the mainstream."
Opposed to these
left groups are others such as COSATU, the US parastastal NED and
the US International Republican Institute, which is funded by the
NED, the ICFTU, the AFL-CIO and others, standard bearers of anti-left
policies throughout the years of the Cold War.
With regard
to Zimbabwe, the NED itself said: "The American Center for International
Labor Solidarity (ACILS) used NED support to provide vital assistance
to the trade unions during the (2002) elections in Zambia and Zimbabwe,
and both NDI and IRI helped democrats in Zimbabwe's sadly unsuccessful
process."
The International
Republican Institute, one of the four principal channels for NED
funds has said: "We're very active in Zimbabwe, which does have
an extremely authoritarian government. And that is one country in
Africa where we're not working with the majority party; we're working
with democratic reform activists in that country, both with the
opposition political party and with civil society there because
we believe that our work can help them achieve results."
These "democratic
reform activists" promoted as part of the US right wing agenda in
Africa and the world, are the same "civil society organisations"
COSATU and US Ambassador Frazer want to join in a "willing coalition"
to bring about regime change in Zimbabwe.
The positions
of the US Ambassador in this regard do not surprise us. What is
of the greatest interest is where COSATU will end with its policy
of indicating left and turning right.
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