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Response
to critics
Patrick
Bond and David Moore
April 14, 2005
http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=27727
Read
the original article by Patrick Bond and David Moore
Read responses to the original article by:
Patricia
McFadden, Thomas
C. Mountain
We cannot do much
about the colour of our skins or our ancestors but we are democratic socialists,
a pre-requisite of which is freedom of expression and participation in
the means of decision making regarding the conditions of material life.
'Free and fair' elections of representatives to parliamentary institutions
reflecting popular consent are a necessary - but not sufficient - component
of this process. On those grounds we could accept a 'liberal' label for
now or temporary alliances with 'liberals.' Long-term ones would include
'workers' in the traditional Marxist sense and underprivileged people
in countries like Zimbabwe, the analysis of which has perplexed Marxist
analysts for a long time (including the 'agrarian question,' arguably
at the root of the Zimbabwean experience).
The responses to our note on
the recent Zimbabwean elections illustrate the complexities - 'confusions'
might be too derogatory - of a 'progressive' take on this crisis-ridden
society. Unreflective nationalism in defence of authoritarianism is not
helpful, but does reflect the ideologies floating about in what Ibbo Mandaza
has famously called the 'schizophrenic post-colonial state.'
In such situations maintaining
the truth might be (more) important than class allegiances. Truth must
be spoken both to power and to resistance against colonialism, racism,
globalisation, patriarchy and the long, long list. Refuge in a dying nationalism's
exhausted slogans does not help in this struggle.
Regarding the election's funding,
we are condemned for neglecting the MDC's receipt of around three billion
Zimbabwean dollars (less than $US 250,000 in 'real' terms that make people
with access to official exchange rates billionaires over-night). True,
the Parliamentary Finance Act allocates these funds to parties on the
basis of their seats in the legislature. However, the President's Office
receives unaccountable billions every year expended on everything from
the Central Intelligence Organisation to helicopter rides to ZANU-PF rallies.
Because they are invisible funds, only rough estimates get to the public:
but we are told they approach 60 billion Zimbabwean dollars. Check that
out against the heath and education budgets. The three billion covers
about 90% of the MDC's legal fees for their challenges on the last elections'
count, to take a small example and on top of that the party had to pay
$2 million for each candidate's election deposit. Bourgeois democracy
is not free: but for ZANU-PF, as long as it remains in control of the
state - and the counting - it is seen as a free lunch.
Yes, we are in solidarity with
"those who strive and persist in crafting new African social worlds,"
as Dr. McFadden has it. Not, though, if the 'new political traditions
[crafted] after hundreds of years of vicious, colonial exclusionary politics'
include intimidation, vote-rigging, and other forms of chicanery rivaling
those of George W. Bush and family, in the cause of a new, 'post-colonial'
bourgeoisie hiding under the cloaks of anti-colonial discourse.
Elections carried out with
honesty and in peace - for more than a three week window to a carefully
invited world - are part and parcel of the creation of new worlds. Free
and fair elections can offer a moment of freedom on a long road towards
self-determination going far beyond a 'sovereignty' that collapses dissent
with puppetry and international solidarity with imperialism.
We stand by our comments in
the hopes that they will contribute to larger truths shorn of rhetorical
sleight of hand. We hope, too, that they will keep us far away from the
sort of state to which we are accused of aspiring (McFadden claims we,
or those we support in this instance, are 'squealing about the lack of
democracy [because we] have not yet been able to reach the state and accumulate.')!
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