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Crisis of ideology haunting Zanu PF
Itai Masotsha Zimunya
July 05, 2005
The multi faceted crisis that besets Zimbabwe has been explained
in many terms. The ruling Zanu PF party attributes poverty and hunger
to international sanctions and drought whilst the civil society
attribute this partly to the chaotic land reform exercise. Other
scholars and economists link this socio-economic collapse to Zanu
PFs policy incongruences and its disrespect for the rule of law.
In an historical context, the crisis in Zimbabwe can best be matched
with an acute deficiency of ideology by the ruling Zanu PF party.
After the first
decade of scientific socialism, the government dived into the dark
pool of capitalist structural adjustment programmes. Having excelled
in the provision of social services like education, health and housing
provision in the first decade of power, the Zanu PF government would
have done best by maintaining a people centered policy system. The
abrupt change from a humanist to a cost recovery economic system
was the era of reversing the gains of the liberation struggle. In
this context, evils such as "Operation Murambatsvina"
and nationalization non-Zanu PF business empires are manifestations
of years of ideological bankruptcy.
Present day
Zimbabwe is under siege from militarism. Like father Zimbabwe noted
in 1985, that " the people of Zimbabwe are defenseless and
live in fear, not of enemies but of their own government".
In its history of ruling after 1980, the party has resorted to a
dangerous system of pseudo nationalism, violence and chauvinism.
The Matabele massacre of the 1980s, the violent retribution to student
activism since the early
90s, the land reform exercise and the current anti-MDC campaigns
confirm this assertion of Zanu PF's belief in violence.
Mugabe explains
his power more because of his history of the liberation struggle
than being a people's choice through elections. Thus after independence,
the Zanu PF elite converted themselves into the bourgeoisie class,
and this explains the ideology currently reigning supreme in Zanu
PF. This explains why land, allowances and Chiefs salaries are rewarding
war veterans and chiefs, the merchants of Mugabe's power.
Social pessimism
and disbelief in dialogue has engulfed Zanu PF, and contributes
to it resorting to war to solve any problem whether within Zanu
PF or with external entities. The callousness and evil plans of
evicting millions of poor workers is a clear example that Zanu PF
has long forgotten that the liberation struggle was fought by these
very poor. The black government in Zimbabwe has adopted vary apartheid
and racist slogans, sidelining Black people in favour of the Chinese.
The delicate trick here is the dilemma that racism is the oppression
of a few by the majority or only occurs between blacks and whites.
The Zimbabwean
economy is suffering from asset stripping and primitive accumulation
of capital by the ruling elite. The land grabbing exercise by Zanu
PF chefs and the so-called war veterans is part of the accumulation
project. The taking of corporation's accused of expropriating foreign
currency is part of this capital project. Gideon Gono, the Reserve
Bank Governor is an accomplice in this project. His call for the
extermination of corruption is sterile as he searches west whilst
the real looters surround him.
The peasants
were used as ponies in the land reform exercise. They were asked
to occupy peripheral lands and warned not to construct permanent
structures whilst the elite were commandeering government trucks
into fertile green lands. In the urban areas, workers face the most
savage form of exploitation when the authorities make a monetary
statement that freezes (without consultation) wages on the background
of an above 120% inflation rate and acute shortages of basic commodities.
Fraud, plunder and propaganda make the day for the ruling Zanu PF
elite.
Professor Jonathan
Moyo, despite being a political mercenary, best describes Zanu PF's
bankruptcy of ideology when he says- they just make slogans and
declare them policies. "Operation Murambatsvina" is one
such slogan that was converted into policy overnight at the Police
General Head Quarters. Before the March 2005 elections Morgan Tsvangirai
(the leader of the MDC) once described the numerous and haphazard
constructions in the farms with a remarkable simile: "settlements
sprouting like mushroom". He was taken to town by the state
media accused of cursing the descendants of Mbuya Nehanda and Mzilikazi.
In agreement
with Marx's theory of primitive accumulation of capital, Gideon
Gono, the untrained economist prescribed the destruction of flea
markets and informal business merchants in the towns and cities
of Zimbabwe with many shallow aims.
Firstly, he
argues that flea market traders waste foreign currency by buying
non-essentials from South Africa, Zambia and Botswana. Therefore
closing them will lower the demand of forex in Zimbabwe and scuttle
the parallel market. This has a tendency to lower the inflationary
pressure and divert most forex in informal hands to the productive
sector.
Operation Murambatsvina
is a well-calculated political project. The agrarian revolution
can not be a success without labour. It has emerged that there is
a critical shortage of labour on the farms to an extend that all
agrarian targets remain a mirage until the issue is addressed. The
plot therefore, is that displacing people from the urban areas and
banning urban agriculture will force people to work as farm workers
in the commercial farms. It is a shame for Zimbabwe that, 25 years
into independence, the government which ought to have been working
for the people, chooses to implement a 16th century and failed plan
to force people into their labour traps. Operation Murambatsvina
likens, according to Marx, the 16th century bloody laws of France,
Britain and Holland, which targeted at vagabond peasants who were
driven into capitalist factories and habituated to wage slavery
by the threat of flogging and hanging.
The answer to
this madness is simple and just. The current political leadership
must go and pave way for new beginnings. It has to be a calculated
people's reclaim of their independence from opportunists that want
to build empires on the blood of sons and daughters of Zimbabwe.
The colonial constitution has to be archived whilst a new people
written constitution, one that separate powers between the executive,
the legislature and parliament comes to effect. The f leadership
code has to be built around sound corporate governance systems.
All prospective members of senior government positions must declare
their worth before assuming duty so that the current white-collar
crime is checked. It will not, however, be sustainable not to revisit
the injustices of the current government on the people of Zimbabwe
on the political and economic fronts. Another Zimbabwe is possible
and nothing is constant but change.
*Itai Masotsha
Zimunya Human rights activist and former student leader. Currently
with the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition. Contact email: Itaizim@yahoo.com
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