|
Back to Index
My
friends are being tortured in Zimbabwe
Bill
Fletcher, The Black Commentator
November 16, 2006
http://www.blackcommentator.com/206/206_friends_tortured_zimbabwe_fletcher_ed_bd.html
Several years ago, I
and a number of other African American individuals came under attack
for our public criticism of Zimbabwe-s President Robert Mugabe
and his repressive regime. Some African American activists who have
been outstanding champions of the struggle for national liberation
thought that it was, at best, inappropriate and at worst treasonous,
for people such as Africa Action-s Salih Booker, the Coalition
of Black Trade Unionists- Bill Lucy and me (at that time,
President of TransAfrica Forum), to challenge the practices of an
allegedly anti-imperialist individual and government. At the same
time, we received considerable support—quiet support I should
add—from other African Americans who were pleased that we
had spoken out, though they themselves were uncomfortable being
public in their support.
Since that time,
in part because of the manner in which our criticism was so successfully
caricaturized by our opponents, I have been cautious in my comments.
Today I have to throw caution to the wind. Very
recently leaders of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, (ZCTU), individuals who in many cases
have long and distinguished histories going back to the national
liberation war (1966-1979), individuals I have come to know and
respect, were arrested by the Mugabe government. Some of them have
been tortured while in captivity. This cannot go on. We cannot remain
silent.
President Mugabe was
a hero for many of us as one of the chief leaders of the Zimbabwe
freedom struggle. He put his country on the line, upon its liberation,
in supporting the anti-apartheid liberation struggle in South Africa.
Yet, over the years something has gone terribly wrong. Instead of
proceeding forward on a revolutionary transformation of Zimbabwe
that would increase the power of the workers and farmers, something
else slowly unfolded. Those closest to President Mugabe came to
be the principal recipients of the benefits of liberation.
For many of us in Black
America, Zimbabwe dropped off the 'radar screen- until
the land seizures that took place a few years back. These seizures
of land from many white farmers were heralded by a considerable
number of African Americans as a step toward full liberation. Yet
few of us stopped to ask, who was getting the land? and what was
happening to the African farmworkers who had worked the land? Such
questions seemed inconvenient at best. So, two equations began to
emerge as a way of silencing any questions. The first went like
this:
President Mugabe
is seizing the land of white farmers; this helps to rectify the
situation that has existed since the land was stolen in the 19th
century; therefore, anyone who criticizes President Mugabe is actually
a supporter of the white farmers.
The second equation that
emerged, particularly after President Bush and British Prime Minister
Blair got into the fray with their criticisms of President Mugabe
looked like this:
President Bush
is a maniac attempting to dominate the world; President Mugabe criticizes
President Bush for his global aggression; therefore, President Mugabe
must be on the side of justice and anyone criticizing President
Mugabe must be an ally of President Bush.
I wish that politics
were that simple. When I briefly visited Zimbabwe in late 2004 and
spoke with leaders of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions—a
room full of Black faces from the working class—it was clear
that politics is never that easy. They do not want Bush and Blair
to intervene in Zimbabwe any more than I do, but they do want justice.
The ZCTU has led a struggle
against both the increasing immiserization of the Zimbabwe workers
brought on, initially at least, by the faulty economic policies
of President Mugabe-s government. In addition, the ZCTU has
been central to the struggle for democracy. They have dared to raise
criticisms, only to be painted as allies of imperialism by those
who in the past had no difficulty sitting in the comfortable rooms
of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund developing
economic policies that do not benefit the Zimbabwean people. The
ZCTU-s continued struggle against harsh economic conditions
has now landed their leaders in jail and subject to—what does
the Bush administration call it in Guantanamo?—extreme pressure.
* BC Editorial
Board Member Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a long-time labor and international
activist and writer. He is the immediate past president of TransAfrica
Forum.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|