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The
future looks black
Andrew Kenny,
Cape Town
April
12, 2005
http://canadiancoalition.com/forum/messages/6486.shtml
The day after
the election in Zimbabwe, the Cape Times (of Cape Town) carried
a front-page story on the South African government's new policy
to `turn the tide against poverty' by cutting back on the tax-funded
opulence of ANC politicians. President Mbeki's private jet would
be sold and he would in future travel by South African Airways.
There would be no more mansions and Mercedes for ministers and no
more full-page advertisements in the newspapers singing the praises
of the ANC government. This story appeared on 1 April.
Being naturally
gullible and tired after a long night before, I read it in a dreamlike
state, feeling that I had been transported into a different universe
where the ordinary laws of African politics had broken down. In
this strange realm, African leaders put the welfare of the people
ahead of their own luxury and vainglory. Then I came to the last
line of the article, designed to make dimwits like me check the
date, and was bumped back to reality.
Part of this
reality was the grisly farce of the Zimbabwean election, the inevitable
result and its equally inevitable endorsement by the South African
government. President Mugabe of Zimbabwe must be extremely grateful
to President Mbeki of South Africa, without whose constant support
and encouragement he would probably not have been able to sustain
his tyranny. The ANC shouted and screamed against apartheid South
Africa and Ian Smith's Rhodesia and called for sanctions against
both. It denounces what it sees as crimes of the Israeli government,
such as the building of the wall to shut out Palestine. But against
the mass murder, torture, terror, gang rape and deliberate starvation
of the Zimbabwe people by Mugabe's dictatorship, neither President
Mbeki nor any other leading figure of the ANC in his government
has whispered one word of protest. Mbeki's policy of `quiet diplomacy'
towards Zimbabwe has usually consisted of picking up a big megaphone
and bellowing the virtues of Robert Mugabe. The ANC's support for
Mugabe is total.
The most frightening
question hanging over the future of South Africa is this. Does the
ANC support Mugabe out of political expediency or because it agrees
with his actions? If the latter, will South Africa go the way of
Zimbabwe?
Expediency would
be easy to understand. The curse of black Africans, in Africa and
abroad, is their unrequited obsession with the white man. Black
Africans try to reduce all human existence to a simple morality
tale in which the white man is the source of all evil and misfortune.
They have little interest in black people beyond their borders but
enormous interest in white people. If there is an atrocity in an
African country, black people outside that country will not care
unless there are white people concerned, either as instigators or
as victims.
When Mugabe
slaughtered 20,000 black people in southern Zimbabwe in 1983, nobody
outside Zimbabwe, including the ANC, paid it the slightest attention.
Nor did they care when, after 2000, he drove thousands of black
farm workers out of their livelihoods and committed countless atrocities
against his black population. But when he killed a dozen white farmers
and pushed others off their farms, it caused tremendous excitement.
Mugabe became a hero in the eyes of black activists in South Africa,
the US and England. That he has ruined Zimbabwe, a beautiful and
naturally blessed country; that he has turned it from a food exporter
to a hungry food importer; that he has caused 80 per cent unemployment
and 600 per cent inflation; that he has killed and tortured tens
of thousands of Africans; that he has crushed democracy; that he
has reduced life expectancy from 55 years in 1980 when he came to
power to 33 years now ^× none of this matters compared with his
glorious triumph in beating up a handful of white farmers.
Whenever there
is a South African radio phone-in programme on Zimbabwe, white South
Africans and black Zimbabweans denounce Mugabe, and black South
Africans applaud him. Therefore, one theory goes, Mbeki cannot afford
to criticise Mugabe. This explains Mbeki's constant support for
Mugabe, his endorsement of the fraudulent presidential election
in 2002, and his recent statement made after Mugabe had shut down
independent newspapers, rigged the voters' roll, terrorised opposition
supporters and banned opposition party meetings that `I have no
reason to think that anybody in Zimbabwe will militate against elections
being free and fair.'
The most plausible
advocate of this theory is Jeremy Cronin of the South African Communist
party (SACP). The ANC is in a three-party alliance with the SACP
and the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu). In a strange
but hopeful twist, the SACP and Cosatu have denounced Mugabe and
declared the 31 March election a sham. I heard Cronin speak at the
University of Cape Town. He is a middle-aged white man with an endearing
demeanour, rather like one of those earnest schoolboys determined
to be good and often bullied for it. He said that Mbeki had been
painted into a corner by Mugabe. Mugabe's skill at evoking the devils
of white imperialism, Tony Blair and the IMF, had outmanoeuvred
Mbeki. Mbeki genuinely wanted democracy in Zimbabwe and had hoped
for democratic reform before this election, but unfortunately the
cunning Mugabe had tricked him by declaring the election suddenly
before anything could be done.
I listened to
this nice man and thought, `Come off it!' Mugabe's skill? It needs
no skill at all to win the applause of black activists around the
world. Any African president can kill as many black people as he
likes knowing that, if he then condemns white imperialism, he is
guaranteed acclamation. Idi Amin, no Machiavelli, did it in the
1970s. He murdered about a quarter of a million Africans but became
a great African hero by expelling Asians from Uganda and announcing
himself as a conqueror of the British empire. For this achievement
he was made president of the Organisation of African Unity. Mugabe's
tactics are almost as crude. Mbeki would be an idiot to be surprised
by them, and he is not.
Moreover, the
ANC is now almost unassailable in South Africa. It won 70 per cent
of the vote in the election last year and has no credible rival
for power. Mbeki could easily stop supporting Mugabe's reign of
terror without losing significant support at home.
So then there
is the sinister possibility that Mbeki genuinely approves of Mugabe's
actions, both the persecution of opponents and the confiscation
of white assets. Mugabe and Mbeki are similar in many ways, and
so are their parties. Both men spend fortunes on pomp and ceremony.
Both attack white Western culture while adoring it. Both try to
dress like English squires and to sound like Oxford dons while at
the same time ranting against white colonialism. Both silence all
critics by calling them racists. (A difference, which probably does
not have much practical importance, is that Mbeki seems to be a
genuine racist whereas Mugabe's racism is simply a device for retaining
power.) The ANC and Zanu-PF both believe they are not just political
parties but divinely ordained `liberation movements', entitled to
rule in perpetuity. Both seem unable to distinguish between the
state and the party, and the opposition and the enemy.
South Africa's
press is free, even if it labours under heavy self- censorship,
but the national television broadcaster, the SABC, increasingly
resembles Mugabe's state television with much of the `news' consisting
of the mighty accomplishments of the ruling party and the great
utterances of its supreme leader. At present the ANC faces no serious
challenge at elections. If it did face a serious challenge, as Mugabe
did in 2000, would it act as he did?
Unfortunately,
there are many signs that this is exactly what it would do. The
ANC has long experience in using violence and terror against its
black opponents in the 1980s and 1990s, and would probably put this
to use if too many blacks began to vote against it. This might be
a reason why the ANC so enthusiastically supports Mugabe, saying
in effect to potential black dissidents, `Be careful. We can do
what he does.'
Mugabe became
heroic by seizing white-owned farms in Zimbabwe (most of which were
bought during his government with its full legal approval). Since
farming is a negligible part of the South African economy, the ANC,
to reproduce Mugabe's heroism, would have to seize other white assets
such as mines, banks and factories. The farms taken from the whites
in Zimbabwe did not, of course, go in the main to ordinary black
people in Zimbabwe but to a handful of rich cronies in the ruling
party. In the ANC's ideology of `transformation', this is fine.
`Transformation' does not mean reducing inequality or improving
the living standards of all. It means changing the race of ownership
and power. It is not about rich and poor; it is purely about black
and white. If all South African industry were owned by a dozen black
billionaires while the majority of black people were living in penury,
this would count as successful transformation, just as Zimbabwe,
which is now in ruins but has black ownership of the farms, is seen
as having had a successful transformation.
In South Africa,
the main instrument of transformation is Black Economic Empowerment
(BEE). This requires whites to hand over big chunks of the ownership
of companies to blacks and to surrender top jobs to them. Almost
all the blacks so enriched belong to a small elite connected to
the ANC. BEE is already happening to mines, banks and factories.
In other words, a peaceful Mugabe-like programme is already in progress
in South Africa. What are the chances of its turning violent?
Before the fall
of apartheid in 1990, the ANC was Marxist in thought and believed
in the command economy. It abandoned this, thanks in large part
to Mbeki, because it felt constrained by the realities of the global
economy after the fall of communism and the need for foreign investment.
Does it now really want to follow Mugabe's violent example but feel
constrained by these same considerations? If circumstances changed,
as they did for Mugabe, would the ANC cast aside constraint and
unleash the `comrades' on white-owned businesses and properties?
Such a move would provide a marvellous opportunity for mayhem, for
the multitudes of unemployed young black men would be ecstatically
received by the rich but resentful black elite that spends its energy
obsessing about whites, and would be cheered to the rooftops by
the UN, the African Union and `progressive forces' around the world.
Imagine TV pictures of the white executives of Anglo-America being
manacled and whipped through the streets of Johannesburg by grinning
black youths. What could be more delightful?
White South
Africans are told that they should `learn the lessons of the white
farmers in Zimbabwe'. What lessons? That you should never trust
a black government (since they bought their farms with the approval
of a black government)? That you should never invest in Africa or
pour your sweat into Africa? That you should not try to befriend
black people and improve their living standards (since those Zimbabwean
farmers who did so were the first to have their lands confiscated)?
When Mugabe took power in 1980, there were about 300,000 whites
in Zimbabwe. Now there are about 25,000. Is the lesson for white
South Africans that they should all emigrate?
I do not know
the answers. I did not predict the fall of communism or the fall
of apartheid. I am not a good prophet. Zimbabwe is an imperfect
comparison with South Africa. But looking at all the evidence as
clearly as I can, it seems to me that Zimbabwe is the best comparison
we have; and if you want to see the future of South Africa, it might
not be a bad idea to look at the present in Zimbabwe.
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