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Can
Zimbabwe Become Africa's Cuba?
Mukoma
Wa Ngugi
Part 1 of 2
November
04, 2005
Read
part 2
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=2&ItemID=9055
Introduction:
The Three Zimbabwes
On
stage, there are two young men discussing the merits and de-merits
of Zimbabwe’s Look East Policy. "These Chinese products, it
is all in the packaging otherwise they are the same things we have
always had" one says. And the discussion goes on to Chinese
beauty products, wigs and cosmetics petrol queues, inflation, foreign
currency etc. The two comedians in a downtown club in Harare were
satirizing the influx of Chinese goods in Zimbabwean stores since
ZANU-PF’s Look East Policy, an attempt to minimize dependence on
the West, took effect. This was in July of 2005, when I was in Zimbabwe
for the Zimbabwe International Book Fair where I had been invited
to present a paper on Pan-Africanism and Nationalism.
A few weeks
after I returned from Zimbabwe, I was invited by Allen Ruff of Madison’s
WORT for a radio interview on my first book, an Africa Awareness
Rally that I was helping organize, and my trip to Zimbabwe. In spite
of it being made abundantly clear several times by Ruff that I am
a Kenyan, one caller hoped "that it was safe for me to speak".
She was under the impression that Mugabe has secret agents in Madison,
Wisconsin who are willing to assassinate a Kenyan national for speaking
about Zimbabwe or at the very least monitoring the radio waves and
would face the music if I was ever back in Zimbabwe. She was worried
for my ability to speak freely thousands of miles from Zimbabwe.
Most of the other callers asked questions that were along this vein
and the other things that I had talked about such as the need for
thinking about Africa not as a humanitarian case but as a continent
whose resources are plundered were overshadowed by Zimbabwe.
I begin this
article by giving the above seemingly inconsequential details to
hint at a discrepancy between a Zimbabwe that is not doing too well,
has its own share of fatal and even tragic flaws and the Zimbabwe
of the Western imagination of pure murder and mayhem arbitrated
by black skin. There is the Zimbabwe of land redistribution, Look
East, petrol queues, Operation Clean Up, the Congo War, of ZANU-PF,
the MDC, Third Way etc. Depending on race, nationality, class, gender,
sexual orientation, political affiliation, ideology etc, this Zimbabwe
will have different meanings. This is the Zimbabwe with its own
sets of contradictions that I would like to term the Zimbabwe on
the Ground.
Then the Zimbabwe
of the Western imagination, equally multi-layered and rife with
contradictions. Within it we find the racist view of the machete
armed African hacking away at civilization again, a historical guilt
over slavery and colonialism, a paternalism that excuses unjust
practices under cultural relativism, a fear of black liberation
and a naturalized Western dominance over Africa as point of reference
and source of comfort. This view cannot and does not desire to distinguish
between a white dead body in the streets of Somalia, Iraq or Zimbabwe.
No matter its point in this scale, it remains a Western imagination
that sees the world through both a racialized and nationalist lens.
But as if that
is not enough, there is another Zimbabwe with its own sets of facts
and myths. This is the Zimbabwe that carries the hopes and frustrations
of Africa – Zimbabwe the symbol or more aptly the metaphor. This
is the Zimbabwe that symbolizes for the African that the dreams
of independence have not been fulfilled, can be fulfilled or can
never be fulfilled. This is the Zimbabwe that African leaders will
not condemn for fear of calling attention to betrayed dreams within
their own national borders. This is the Zimbabwe that those in the
Diaspora who are black nationalists, progressives and radicals applaud
or condemn for fulfilling liberation, betraying liberation or not
doing enough to see a true liberation through. But the one constant
of the Zimbabwe of Africa, Diaspora and Friends is that Zimbabwe,
and therefore Africa must not be returned to the round tables of
another Berlin Conference.
Before jumping
into the article- a quick note. Since my return from Zimbabwe, I
have found that amongst my colleagues, I am expected to either applaud
or denounce Mugabe’s Zimbabwe upon their asking what I found. Any
sign of hesitation has been dooming and fatal. No matter who is
asking the question, my hesitation seems to affirm the position
he or she brought to the table. Since for the most part no one has
let me tell them what it is I think I found, I offer them this essay
as an elaboration of that hesitation with the hope that we can re-open
up a dialogue that does right by Zimbabwe.
Land Redistribution,
Politics of Race and the Zimbabwe of Western Imagination
I
would like to suggest that to get to the Zimbabwe on the ground
and that of Africa and Diaspora, we have to first go through the
Zimbabwe of the Western imagination for it is only then that we
can genuinely have a dialogue over what is happening in Zimbabwe
and the role Africa and Diaspora, the international community, and
political activists can play. It is only then that we can be left
with the a Zimbabwe that is not distorted by a view that from the
very beginning de-legitimizes Africa’s search for a democracy that
talks back to colonial legacies and a democracy that seeks content.
In Zimbabwe,
during the land seizures ten white farmers were killed [1]. By contrast
in South Africa, where even after the fall of apartheid whites still
own 80% of arable lands [2], over 1,500 white farmers have been
killed since 1994 according to the BBC [3]. The South African government
blames criminal elements but given this high number, it is hard
not to imagine that the murders are tied to the history of apartheid.
While the acts are certainly criminal, the numbers are too high
not to suggest that a history of apartheid and a lack of redress
have colluded. In Zimbabwe government policy created the conditions
in which ten white farmers were killed. In South Africa lack of
government policy has led to the conditions in which 1,500 whites
farmers have been killed. It is in a sense part of the same movement.
But in Zimbabwe,
the infinitely much smaller number of white farmer deaths has created
uproar whereas the South African murders are not common knowledge;
international media does not report them and Western politicians
have turned their gaze elsewhere. A petition aptly titled "Help
Save South African Farmers" gathered 495 signatures [4]. It
is safe to speculate that had the petition been for the Zimbabwean
farmer, the signatures gathered would have been in the thousands
if not millions. While acknowledging that there is no evidence that
suggests the A.N.C government has sanctioned white farmer murders,
it is still worthwhile to look at the reason why there is such a
discrepancy in how the two situations have been received in the
West.
The reason why
the West has latched on 10 white murders in Zimbabwe and has skated
over South African 1,500 murders is complex – there is an intersection
of racial mythology, natural rights and entitlement, colonial history
and legacies, politics of reparation and redistribution and ideology
of private property. In South Africa, the contradiction of a country
with a black leadership that protects a large body of white interests
(who became apartheid’s upper-class because they are white) and
a growing black elite (whose role in the words of Kwame Ture is
to give individual success the illusion of collective success) have
yet to come home to roost. True there are murmurs to be found in
the COSATU led strikes and the growing radicalization of those calling
for land reform [6] in South Africa but they have as yet to rise
to an extent where they force the A.N.C. into taking radical measures
that end neo-apartheid.
Therefore in
South Africa, the myth of white skin, of a naturalized racial hierarchy,
where class and power find expression through race has not been
violated. And even though the murders are atrociously high, because
the A.N.C. government has not made it a matter of conscious policy
to violate this socio-economic order, the murders can be ignored.
It is a paradox of sorts. To put it badly and perhaps crudely, in
South Africa, white lives are being taken, but white property is
not. The ideology of private property, inheritance, an unspoken
but understood natural order of things and the ideologies of capitalism
remain intact in spite of the murders.
Zimbabwe on
the other hand has violated the myth that naturalizes racial hierarchy.
Blacks are not supposed to kick out whites from their farms and
their homes. They are a mass of faceless laborers who each morning
file to the factories and the farms looking for work. This black
mass is not supposed to do tribal chants at the same gates wielding
machetes, making fun of whites and showing such audacity by "forgetting
their place". They are not supposed to raise their hand and
strike the white man in his home and essentially treat him and his
family the same way he has for years treated the black man and his
family. (As always, women remain a conversation between men. In
the rapes and counter-rapes – the actors are men in a masculine
affair). It seems to me therefore that Zimbabwe’s original sin is
indicating to a world full of blacks and whites that there is nothing
inviolable in the myth. More than threaten the whites in their very
own homes, in Zimbabwe white natural right to vast land and property
is being threatened as a matter of governmental policy.
It is important
to briefly note that Zimbabwe while threatening white property and
life has not violated the basic principles of capitalism. There
are no demands for state ownership of land or taking redistribution
to the factories and mines – rather, redistribution of land is attempting
to restore balance between races without disturbing the very principles
of capitalism. What has happened is simply a redistribution that
targets white people who accumulated the largest farms under colonialism.
Capitalism in general is well and alive ideologically. What has
been threatened is white monopoly but monopoly over the production
of wealth remains alive and kicking.
Here it is also
important to add farms were taken from farmers who had several or
had farms over 500 acres. There are still about two thousand farmers
left. The ones who left are those who refused to have smaller farms.
There are also some who left but now are now coming back after accepting
the new conditions. A recent US visitor to Zimbabwe told me that
she has was surprised to find whole sections of Harare town and
suburbs that are predominantly white. There is a way in which we
are speaking about Zimbabwe as if racial genocide against whites
took place. But the reality on the ground speaks to the contrary.
The United
States and Standards of Democracy
Certainly,
Western media and politicians have drummed up the racial-nationalism
that has been unleashed on Zimbabwe. President Bush, Prime Minister
Blair, the BBC and the New York Times are at the forefront of the
save Zimbabwe agenda. But a cursory glance reveals that neither
President Bush nor Blair have developed a sudden sense of fair play
when it comes to the African. As a result of war in the Congo, the
Guardian in December 2004 estimated the death toll to be at 3.8
million [7]. The United States supported both Rwanda and Uganda
in the Congo wars even as they were busy plundering the Congo. The
Washington Post reports that: In a recently published UN sponsored
report on the illegal exploitation of the DRC's natural resources
and other forms of wealth, it was estimated that up to 100 tons
a month of tantalum was exported by the Rwandan army. Likewise,
Ugandan exports of the mineral rose from 2.5 tons in 1997 just before
the war, to nearly 70 tons in 1999 [8]. Now, this is not to say
that other intervening countries like Angola, Zimbabwe, Chad etc.
were not also following the glitter of diamonds - perhaps all involved
in the Congo with an exception of the victims are implicated and
there should be calls for a United Nations investigation – but the
point is that if the U.S. cared about African lives, then it ought
to be slightly wary of Uganda. Instead, Uganda’s Monitor reports
that Uganda continues to receive "millions of dollars from
the United States [9]. But more telling is the question of Darfur
where an estimated 400 people are dying a day. The United States
has not as yet taken the same economic measures against Sudan that
it has taken against Zimbabwe.
Does the United
States meet the same democratic standards it sets for the rest of
the world? Political activist and poet Assata Shakur has been exiled
in Cuba since 1979. A bounty of 1,000, 000 dollars has been attached
to her head making her a walking scalp for bounty hunters. The United
States as we speak has political prisoners who were criminalized
and jailed in judicial processes so flawed that there is no other
term for them other than Kangaroo courts. Mumia Abu Jamal for agitating
for African American freedom and Leonard Peltier for agitating for
Native American freedom were imprisoned under circumstances that
those in ‘third world’ countries would consider suspicious at best
if not outright criminal. Even though, figures like Nelson Mandela
and organizations like Amnesty International have called for Mumia’s
retrial [9] and Peltier’s release [10] the American leadership has
not responded to these calls or the massive demonstrations that
take place through out the year.
With the Patriot
Act, President Bush has detained people without trial. Those detained
for justice can be turned over to military tribunals and Guatanamo
Bay has become an island of injustice away from a mainland of injustice.
President Bush has power that most dictators would eye jealously.
Internationally the United States recently conducted an illegal
war and is now occupying what was a sovereign country and was recognized
as such by international law. And the catalogue continues… The United
States has not declared Sanctions against Zimbabwe in order to save
poor African lives (New Orleans should point us to this if nothing
else) or to restore democracy.
The United States
needs to apply the same standards at home and restore democracy.
This is not say that an injustice by the US validates an injustice
by Zimbabwe, but it does suggest that the United States cannot be
the best protector and enforcer of justice in Zimbabwe – it has
no moral legitimacy. Civilizing missions never worked for the native
in colonial times, democratizing missions will not work in this
age of globalization while serving the same mercenary principle
of conquest and domination.
Zimbabwe
on the Ground
Operation
Clean Up
With
the above in mind, we can now turn our attention to the Zimbabwe
on the ground. Without a doubt, even amongst ZANU-PF supporters
that I spoke to, there was a general agreement that Operation Clean-Up
was problematic at best and tragic at worst. I heard numerous justifications
for the project from different people. The first was that the Central
Information Organization (CIO) got wind of British attempts to create
a mass Ukraine-type uprising. Britain I was informed was giving
money to the lumpen-proletariat around the cities of Harare and
Bulawayo with the hope that they would begin mass protests which
in turn would grow to such a level that ZANU-PF could only stay
in power by committing mass murders. But some of the people in Zimbabwe
I spoke to asked, "Why disperse whole communities? Why not
identify those who are guilty and bring them to justice?" Also,
even if we take it to be true and given all sorts of machinations
that have taken place in Africa it is possible, the predictable
international out-cry should have given the government enough pause
to find another solution. Internationally, the image of homelessness
being created further eroded already low support amongst natural
allies in Africa and Diaspora and for others only confirmed the
worst and recommitted them to the defeat of Mugabe.
Another theory
was that there was a rift in ZANU-PF. On one side, there was a group
that wanted to discredit Mugabe and hasten his downfall and on the
other a group that wanted to keep him at the helm. This argument
suggested that Operation Clean Up was instigated by the Mugabe detractors
and done without his approval. However it seems to me that an anti-Mugabe
arm would have had to be powerful enough to instigate a government
policy that undermines the President and his supporters and at the
same time make it impossible for him to retaliate. In any case,
Mugabe did come out in full favor of the operation. And more to
the point, this argument takes the responsibility away from the
hands of the government.
Then there was
the argument that the clean-up targeted MDC supporters. Most MDC
supporters are in the urban areas but a good number of those whose
homes were demolished were ZANU-PF supporters from what I gathered.
If this was the case, I think the government would have been more
careful and disperse the MDC supporters while at the same preserving
its own power pockets. The elections in which ZANU-PF was declared
the winner had just taken place and therefore, given the national
and international fall-out from the clean-up, the gains were outweighed
by the losses. It seems to me more logical to argue that in terms
of illegal structures, the middle class suburbs were spared while
those most vulnerable were targeted. This position of targeting
MDC supporters also struck me as flawed.
The official
government line was in its election, it had pledged to clean up
the city and that it while it targeted illegal structures it also
targeted the black market. But if this is the case it would have
been more prudent and first build the required number of houses
as a way of protecting innocent citizens. No matter the reasons
for the clean-up one thing is clear: it was a costly move in terms
of legitimacy and I think history will eventually judge it as heavy
handed if not all together without justification.
Outside the
possible reasons that either wanted to exonerate or blame the government,
what was alarming to me was the ease with which the government destroyed
places people called home. In an Africa where our collective memory
includes constantly being up-rooted and forced into Bantustans such
careless action recalls this painful history. It recalls forced
colonial migration and dispersal. By forcefully moving an African
people, collective memory and the legacies of colonialism make it
such that only an injustice can come out of it.
But with the
above said, there are still questions to be asked of our response
to the house demolitions in Zimbabwe. In a world where we have become
used to turning our backs on the dead and the dying, why were Zimbabwe’s
actions greeted with a response that bordered on the hysterical?
Are Zimbabwe’s actions any worse than let’s say Nigeria’s? The Vanguard
writes that: …More than 1 million people have been forcibly evicted
in Nigeria since 2000. In April 2005 some 3,000 residents were forcibly
evicted from their houses in the Makoko area of Lagos, on the basis
of a court order, issued in 2000, granting ownership of the land
to a private family. Houses, churches, and medical clinics were
demolished as part of the forced evictions and the officials involved
kicked and beat residents, including five young children[11].
The article
goes on to give other eviction numbers: in Zimbabwe, 700,000, in
Kenya, 50,000, in Ghana, 30,000 etc. In Botswana, in an ongoing
attempt to clear land for diamond mining by DeBeers Company, the
government is forcefully evicting the Baswara people from their
land. On this, CNN on October 4th reports that, "An estimated
2,000 people have been relocated to camps[12]". The contending
figures are between Zimbabwe and Nigeria and even though forced
removal and dispersal in one place do not justify them in another
place, the question remains why our attention solely remains focused
on Zimbabwe.
Operation Stay
Well In my two weeks in Zimbabwe I went to several of the sites
where houses had been demolished and to some of the by-then empty
holding camps where people were herded together before being shipped
to other destinations. Luckily they were moved from the holding
camps before the unsanitary conditions bred diseases like cholera
and my understanding of it was that it was purely a matter of luck
that no such outbreaks occurred.
The government
has embarked on an ambitious project dubbed Operation Stay Well
for those it rendered homeless. Construction had begun at multiple
sites I visited around Harare and Bulawayo and some units were close
to completion by Mid-August. But there has been very little international
media coverage of the reconstruction. In fact, had I not been an
eyewitness to the houses being built, spoken with architects and
workers in about five of the sites that I visited, living outside
of Zimbabwe I would not be aware of such efforts. It seems to me
that there is such a concerted effort by the international media
to completely vilify Zimbabwe, that even an acceptable journalistic
standard like weighing the reconstruction on its merits and demerits
are not being met.
However, as
some government officials conceded the progress was being hampered
by a lack of petrol and building materials whose prices were steadily
climbing as the demand increased. Lack of petrol of course touches
all sectors but this is only a symptom of the larger problem - lack
of foreign currency. Without foreign currency the government cannot
trade in the international market and therefore cannot buy petrol
and cannot import goods from the international market. U.S. led
sanctions have had the consequence of scaring off potential investors
and lenders. And by all but declaring Zimbabwe a death-trap, tourism,
formerly a major foreign exchange earner is now down to a trickle.
In addition to a four year drought, land redistribution can only
be one of the factors adversely affecting Zimbabwe’s economy. The
world’s reaction to the redistribution itself is as much of a factor.
It still remains to be seen whether the declared and undeclared
sanctions will cripple the rebuilding effort.
Zimbabwe and
Contradictions Some of the farms that I visited were so huge and
demanded such a large labor force that in addition to a school,
some of them had a dispensary, a small shopping center and a bar
– all for the black workers courtesy of the owner. It is this fact
that shocked me the most. That one could have a farm so large and
indenture so many people that a primary school, a dispensary and
a small shopping center become a matter of course. The farm owners
in essence are running their own economy with one goal in mind –
profit. First the farm is far away from any town so that for the
black family whatever lacks in store literally lacks in their lives.
The store mediates between them and their needs and how much it
will cost to meet them. The store is eager to give credit to the
black workers to keep them ensnared in a vicious cycle of credit
and debt. Each month’s paycheck goes to clearing the debt accumulated
at the store which means that the worker had to borrow more in order
to survive till the next pay check. The dispensary patched up injured
farmers just well enough to see them working the following day.
The primary school ensures that the black child learns just enough
maths to count chickens coming home to roost and enough English
to take instruction from the owner. In short, it is slavery.
One of the redistributed
farms that I visited was about an hour’s drive from Harare. This
farm, or rather region, was formerly named Avoca after the owner.
The part of it that I visited has been renamed Mazikhana Farm which
translates to ladies/women’s farm. It was redistributed to a woman.
Mrs. Mutumbwa, the owner, in a tone that carried pride and accomplishment,
said that she "worked for an international NGO for seventeen
years and could not even afford a car" but "Now I can".
She pointed to her old BMW. She has children who are studying abroad
and has been able to visit them, something that was unthinkable
a few years ago. The farm has yielded tangible benefits and she
can point to them. But there are also intangible benefits. Able
to feed and clothe her family – she has the pride that comes with
controlling and deciding her life. Her choices at the very least
are not hampered by deprivation.
Mrs. Mutumbwa’s
farm was without a doubt a success and there were a lot more farms
like hers that saw. But I did hear of some instances where the new
owners instead of working on the land sold off equipment or simply
let the farm go to waste. In such cases the government has repossessed
the land. There have also been incidences of corruption involving
government officials whereby land was allocated to them or their
friends illegally and the government has confiscated such land from
them. There is, as a general rule, more to be learned and the government
did at some point declare a moratorium on land seizures.
There are questions
to be asked however. For example, Mrs. Mutumbwa "inherited" her
workers from Mr. Avoca: but is the point not to eradicate land classes
and instead have a more egalitarian society? For the workers themselves,
does it matter whether the boss is black or white if they are still
living in poverty? And more than any other, the latter question
is more pertinent for in some ways the process of land redistribution
might mean more to new black farmers and less to underpaid black
farm and industrial workers. And overall, land redistribution should
become a symbol and metaphor of what is possible with other sectors
of the economy. Land redistribution should be pointing to what is
possible for all of society.
And there are
other ways in which Zimbabwe remains a country mired in neocolonial
contradictions. In spite of how it might seem, a quick glance at
who really controls the Zimbabwean economy will reveal this: its
economy, much like the rest of Africa, remains dependent on the
West. The dependence on foreign currency and the need for IMF and
the World Bank loans (in spite of the rhetoric on both sides) attest
to this. I visited some of the rich neighborhoods and the opulence
on display was as bad as I have seen it in Kenya or in the United
States. One massive house, right in a suburb in Harare, resembles
a yacht. I was shown another mansion owned by a man who on making
it rich bought the mansion where his mother used to work for the
whites as a maid. He had it demolished and built another in place
for her. And others who imported marble, competed in buying expensive
cars, taking expensive holidays etc. This aspect of Zimbabwe recalled
Fanon’s caricature who on taking over the master’s house can only
imitate and who in the end serves as the gate-keeper for Western
interests.
And then the
little big things – Lake Victoria is still named Lake Victoria and
on visiting, a distressingly large statue of Dr. Livingstone welcomes
you and along the trails there are plaques that celebrate the likes
of Cecil Rhodes. Certainly a country on a revolutionary march or
an anti-western binge depending on the on-lookers political stand
would have demolished these emblems of colonialism. Unless of course
they are still doing imperial work. But not to worry. Lake Victoria
is the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe. The half on the Zambian
side is named Lake Livingstone. And on crossing to Zambia, you cannot
buy anything using a Zimbabwean dollar and vice versa, you need
a U.S. dollar, pound, euro or yen. The two currencies cannot talk
to each other – they have to be mediated by Western currencies-
thereby becoming the perfect metaphor of Africa’s relationship to
Africa and to the West.
But the difference
between Zambia and Zimbabwe, (and it is a big difference) is that
in Zimbabwe the questions of inequality, who owns and doesn’t own
land and how historical imbalances and injustices can be redressed
are being asked. The answers given can be debated but the questions
are being asked. As a consequence perhaps, tourism on the Zambian
side is flourishing.
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