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Zimbabwe's
lonely fight for justice
Stephen Gowans
March 30, 2007
http://gowans.wordpress.com/2007/03/30/zimbabwe%E2%80%99s-lonely-fight-for-justice/
Ever since veterans
of the guerrilla war against apartheid Rhodesia violently seized
white-owned farms in Zimbabwe, the country-s president, Robert
Mugabe, has been demonized by politicians, human rights organizations
and the media in the West. His crimes, according to right-wing sources,
are numerous: human rights abuses, election rigging, repression
of political opponents, corruption, and mismanagement of the economy.
Leftist detractors say Mugabe talks left and walks right, and that
his anti-imperialist rhetoric is pure demagogy.
I-m going
to argue that the basis for Mugabe-s demonization is the desire
of Western powers to change the economic and land redistribution
policies Mugabe-s government has pursued; that his lapses
from liberal democratic rectitude are, in themselves, of little
moment to decision makers in Washington and London; and that the
ultimate aim of regime change is to replace Mugabe with someone
who can be counted on to reliably look after Western interests,
and particularly British investments, in Zimbabwe.
I am also going
to argue that the Zanu-PF government-s abridgment of formal
liberties (including freedom of assembly and freedom to travel outside
the country) are warranted restraints, justified by the need to
protect the political program of the elected government from hostile
outside interference. In making this argument I am challenging a
widely held, and often unexamined, view that civil and political
liberties are senior to all other liberties, including rights related
to economic sovereignty and freedom from oppression and exploitation.
Before 1980
Zimbabwe was a white-supremacist British colony named after the
British financier Cecil Rhodes, whose company, the British South
Africa Company, stole the land from the indigenous Matabele and
Mashona people in the 1890s. British soldiers, who laid claim to
the land by force of arms on behalf of Rhodes, were each rewarded
with nine square miles of territory. The Matabele and Mashona —
those who weren-t killed in the British land grab —
were rewarded with dispossession, grinding poverty, misery and subjugation.
By the turn of this century, in a country of 13 million, almost
70 percent of the country-s arable agricultural land was owned
by some 4,500 mostly white farmers, many descendant from the original
British settlers.
After a long
campaign for national liberation, independence talks were held in
1979. Talks almost broke down over the land question, but Washington
and London, eager for a settlement, agreed to ante up and provide
financial support for a comprehensive land reform program. This,
however, was to be short-lived. Britain found a way to wriggle out
of its commitment, blocking the march toward the national liberation
struggle-s principal goal.
George Shire-s grandfather Mhepo Mavakire used to farm land
in Zimbabwe, before it was handed to a white man after the Second
World War. Shire argues that "The unequal distribution of
land in Zimbabwe was one of the major factors that inspired the
rural-based liberation war against white rule and has been a source
of continual popular agitation ever since." (1)
"The government,"
says Shire, "struggled to find a consensual way to transfer
land," but with inadequate funds and insufficient assistance
from London, land reform made little headway. (2) Frustrated, and
under pressure from war veterans who had grown tired of waiting
for the land reform they-d fought for, Mugabe embarked on
a course that would lead him headlong into collision with Western
governments. He passed legislation enabling the government to seize
nearly 1,500 farms owned by white Zimbabweans, without compensation.
As Zimbabwe-s Foreign Affairs Minister from 1995 to 2005,
Stan Mudenge put it, at that point "all hell broke loose."
(3) Having held free and fair elections on time, and having won
them, Mugabe now became an international pariah. Overnight, he was
transformed into a dictator, a stealer of elections and a thug.
Displeased with
Mugabe-s fast track land reform program and irritated by other
economic policies the Mugabe government was pursuing, the EU concluded
that Mugabe would have to go, and that he would have to be forced
out by civil society, the union movement or NGO-s, uprisings
in the street, or a military coup. On 24 January, 1999, a meeting
was convened at the Royal Institute of International Affairs to
discuss the EU-s conclusion. The theme of the meeting, led
by Richard Dowden, now the executive director of the pro-imperialist
Royal African Society, was "Zimbabwe - Time for Mugabe to
Go?" Mugabe-s "confiscating" of white-held
land compelled an unequivocal yes to the conference-s rhetorical
question. Dowden presented four options:
1) a military
coup;
2) buying
the opposition;
3) insurrection;
4) subverting
Mugabe-s ZANU-PF party.
A few months
later, Washington weighed in. The US State Department held a seminar
to discuss a strategy for dealing with the "Zimbabwe crisis."
Civil society and the opposition would be strengthened to foment
discontent and dissent. The opposition would be brought together
under a single banner to enhance its chances of success at the polls
and funding would be funnelled to the opposition through Western
backed NGO-s. Dissident groups could be strengthened and encouraged
to take to the streets. (4)
The
Milosevic Treatment
The program
the US State Department prescribed to rid Zimbabwe of Mugabe and
his land reform politics had been used successfully to oust Yugoslavia-s
president Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. The basis of the program is
to pressure the civilian population through a program of bombing,
sanctions or military threat, in order to galvanize the population
to rise up against its government, the proximal cause of its discomfort.
(In Zimbabwe, the hoped for response is: If only Mugabe hadn-t
antagonized the West, we wouldn-t be under this pressure.)
This was illustrated by US Air Force General, Michael Short, who
explained the purpose of the NATO-s 1999 bombing campaign
against Yugoslavia was to create disaffection with Milosevic. "If
you wake up in the morning," explained Short, "and you
have no power to your house and no gas to your stove and the bridge
you take to work is down and will be lying in the Danube for the
next 20 years, I think you begin to ask, 'Hey, Slobo, what-s
this all about? How much more of this do we have to withstand?-"
(5)
Paired with
outside pressure is the enlistment of a political opposition and
grassroots movement to discipline and organize the population-s
disaffection so that it-s channelled in the direction of forcing
the government to step down. Western powers create the pain, and
inject a fifth column of "democracy" activists and a
"democratic" opposition to offer the removal of the
current government as the cure. In the end, the people administer
the cure themselves. Because the Milosevic treatment is typically
deployed against the leaders of revolutionary societies (though
the revolution may have happened some time ago), the opposition
can be thought of as a counter-revolutionary vanguard. The vanguard
has two components: a formal political opposition, whose job it
is to contest elections and cry foul when it doesn-t win,
and an underground grassroots movement, mandated to carry out extra-parliamentary
agitation and to take to the streets in planned "spontaneous"
uprisings, using allegations of electoral fraud as a pretext for
pursuing insurrectionary politics.
In Yugoslavia,
the underground movement, known as Otpor, was established, funded,
trained and organized by the US State Department, USAID, the US
Congress-funded National Endowment for Democracy (which is said
to do overtly what the CIA used to do covertly) and through various
NGO-s like Freedom House, whose board of directors has included
a rogues- gallery of US ruling class activists: Donald Rumsfeld,
Paul Wolfowitz, Otto Reich, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Zbigniew Brzezinski
and Steve Forbes.
Otpor has been
the inspiration for similar groups elsewhere: Zubr in Belarus, Khmara
in Georgia, Pora in the Ukraine. Otpor-s Zimbabwean progeny
include Zvakwana, "an underground movement that aims to . . . .
undermine" the Mugabe government and Sokwanele, whose "members
specialize in anonymous acts of civil disobedience." (6) Both
groups receive generous financing from Western sources. (7) While
the original, Otpor, was largely a youth-oriented anarchist-leaning
movement, at least one member of Sokwanele is "A conservative
white businessman expressing a passion for freedom, tradition, polite
manners and the British Royals." (8)
Members of Zvakwana
say their movement is homegrown and free of foreign control. (9)
It may be homegrown, and its operatives may sincerely believe they
chart their own course, but the group is almost certainly not free
of foreign funding. The US Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery
Act, signed into law by US President George W. Bush in December
2001, empowers the president under the US Foreign Assistance Act
of 1961 to "support democratic institutions, the free press
and independent media" in Zimbabwe. It-s doubtful Zvakwana
has not been showered with Washington-s largesse.
Zvakwana-s
denial that it-s under foreign control doesn-t amount
to a denial of foreign funding. Movements, political parties and
media elsewhere have knowingly accepted funding from Western governments,
their agencies and pro-imperialist foundations, while proclaiming
their complete independence. (10) Members of these groups may genuinely
believe they remain aloof from their backer-s aims (and in
the West it is often the very groups that claim not to take sides
that are the favored recipients of this lucre), but self-deception
is an insidious thing - and the promise of oodles of cash
is hard to resist.
There-s
no doubt Zvakwana is well-financed. It distributes flashy stickers,
condoms bearing the movement-s Z logo, phone cards, audiotapes
and packages of seeds bearing anti-Mugabe messages, en masse. These
things don-t come cheap. What-s more, its operatives
study "videotapes on resistance movements in Poland, Chile,
India and Serbia, as well as studying civil rights tactics used
in Nashville." (11) This betrays a level of funding and organization
that goes well beyond what the meager self-financing of true grassroots
movements — even in the far more affluent West - are
able to scrape together.
If Zvakwana
denies its links to the US, other elements of the Western-backed
anti-Mugabe apparatus are less secretive. Studio 7, an anti-ZANU-PF
radio program carries programming by the Voice of America, an agency
whose existence can hardly be said to be independent of promoting
the aims of US capital around the world. The radio station SW Radio
Africa, the self-styled "independent voice of Zimbabwe,"
broadcasts from the UK by short-wave radio. It may call itself independent,
but the broadcaster is as independent as the British Foreign Office
is, which, one suspects, is one of the principal backers of the
"international pro-democracy groups" that fill the station-s
coffers with the cash that allow it to operate. (12) The radio station-s
website evinces a fondness for British Prime Minister Tony Blair-s
take on Zimbabwe, which happens to be more or less equivalent to
that of the formal political opposition in Zimbabwe, which also
happens to be more or less equivalent to that of foreign investors,
banks, and shareholders. That the station operates out of studios
in London — and it seems, if it had its druthers, would not
only put an end to Harare-s crackdown on foreign meddling
in Zimbabwe-s internal affairs, but see to it that policies
friendly to the rent, profits and interest of foreign owners and
investors were allowed to flourish — should leave little doubt
as to who-s behind the "international pro-democracy
groups" that have put SW Radio Africa on the air.
In late March
2007, Richard from SW Radio Africa contacted me by e-mail to find
out if I had been hired by the Mugabe government to write an article
that appeared on the Counterpunch website, titled What-s Really
Going On in Zimbabwe? (13)
Stephen,
Do you promise
(cross your heart) that you received no money from Zimbabwe-s
Ministry of Information (or any group acting on their behalf) to
write this piece?
The rhetoric
does sound awfully familiar.
Richard
Richard,
From your e-mail
address I take it you work for UK-based SW Radio Africa, which broadcasts
Studio 7, the Zimbabwe program of the Voice of America, funded by
the US government.
I don-t
receive money, support, assistance — not even foot massages
— from anyone in Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwean government or any
of its agents or representatives.
Now, do you
promise (cross your heart) that you receive no money from the US
or British governments or from the US Ministry of Truth, viz., the
Voice of America, (or any group acting on their behalf)?
Your rhetoric
sounds awfully familiar.
Steve
Richard replied
with assurances that "We are, in truth, totally independent,
sponsored by a variety of groups that support democracy and freedom
of expression," but didn-t explain how Radio SW Africa
could be "totally independent" and at the same time
dependent on its sponsors. When I asked who the station-s
sponsors were, he declined to tell me.
An equally important
component of the counter-revolutionary vanguard is the formal political
opposition. This to be comprised of a single party which unites
all the opposition parties under a single banner, to maximize the
strength of the formal political forces arrayed against the government,
and therefore to increase the probability of the anti-government
forces making a respectable showing at the polls. The united opposition
is to have one goal: deposing the government. In order that it is
invested with moral gravitas, its name must emphasize the word "democracy."
In Serbia, the anti-Milosevic opposition united under the banner,
the Democratic Opposition of Serbia. In Zimbabwe, the opposition
calls itself the Movement for Democratic Change. This serves the
additional function of calling the government-s commitment
to democracy into question. If the opposition is "the democratic
opposition" then what must the government be? The answer,
of course, is undemocratic.
Integral to
the Milosevic treatment is accusing the government of electoral
fraud to justify a transition from electoral to insurrectionary
politics. The accusations build and build as the day of the vote
approaches, until, by sheer repetition, they are accepted as a matter
of indisputable truth. This has a heads I win, tails you lose character.
If the opposition loses the election, the vote is confirmed to be
illegitimate, as all the pre-election warnings predicted it would
be, unleashing a torrent of people onto the streets to demand the
government step down. If the opposition wins the election, the accusations
are forgotten.
The US, the
European Union and international human rights organizations denounced
the last election in Zimbabwe as tilted in favour of the governing
party. The evidence for this was that the state controls the state-owned
media, the military, the police and the electoral mechanisms. Since
the state of every country controls the military, the police and
the electoral mechanisms, and the state-owned media if it has one,
this implies elections in all countries are titled in favour of
the governing party, a manifestly absurd point of view.
So far the Milosevic
treatment has failed to achieve its desired end in Zimbabwe. One
of the reasons why is that the formal political opposition has failed
to execute the plan to a tee. The lapse centers around what is know
as Plan B. The Los Angeles Times describes Plan B this way: "Insiders
are asking what happened to the opposition-s 'Plan B-
that they had designed to put into operation the day after the March
(2005) elections. The plan called for (the MDC leader, Morgan) Tsvangirai
to claim a confident victory, with masses of his jubilant supporters
flooding the streets for a spontaneous victory party — banking
on the idea that with observers from neighbouring African countries
and the international media present, Mugabe-s security forces
would hesitate to unleash violence." (14) (Note the reference
to the planned "spontaneous" victory party.) That Plan
B wasn-t executed may be the reason Tsvangirai is no longer
in control of a unified MDC, and is vying with Arthur Mutambara,
an Oxford educated robotics engineer who worked as a management
consultant, to lead the opposition.
Countering
the Milosevic Treatment
The problem,
from the perspective of the US State Department planners who formulated
the Milosevic treatment, is that if you do it too often, the next
victim becomes wise to what you-re up to, and can manoeuvre
to stop it. With successes in Yugoslavia, Georgia and Ukraine, but
failure so far in Belarus, the element of surprise is lost, and
the blatancy of what the US government is up to becomes counter-productive.
So obvious has the Milosevic treatment become, US government officials
now express surprise when the leaders they-ve targeted for
regime change put up with it. (15)
Mugabe, however,
hasn-t put up with it, and has imposed a number of restrictions
on civil liberties to thwart destabilization efforts. One measure
is to ban NGOs that act as instruments of US or British foreign
policy. NGOs that want to operate in Zimbabwe cannot receive foreign
funding and must disclose their sources of financial support. This
stops Washington and Britain from working within the country, through
proxy, to meddle in the country-s internal affairs. For the
same reason, legislation was put forward in Russia in 2005 to require
the 450,000 NGOs operating there to re-register with the state,
to prevent foreign-funded political activity. The legislation-s
sponsors characterized "internationally financed NGOs as a
'fifth column- doing the bidding of foreigners."
(16)
In a similar
vein, foreign journalists whose reporting appears to be motivated
by the goal of promoting the foreign policy objectives of hostile
nations, like the US and UK, are banned. CNN reporters are prohibited
from reporting from Zimbabwe because the government regards them,
with justification, as a tool of US foreign policy. What reasonable
person of an unprejudiced mind would dispute CNN-s chauvinism?
Given that one of the objects of US foreign policy is to intervene
in Zimbabwe-s affairs to change the government, the ban is
a warranted restraint on press freedom.
Limitations
on press freedom are not unique to Zimbabwe, although those imposed
by Mugabe are a good deal more justifiable than those imposed by
the West. In the wake of the March 2006 re-election of Belarus president
Aleksandr Lukashenko, the US planned to sanction 14 Belarus journalists
it labelled "key figures in the propaganda, distortion of
facts and attacks on the democracies (i.e., the US and Britain)
and their representatives in Belarus." (17) In 1999, NATO
bombed the Serb Radio-TV building, because it said Serb Radio-TV
was broadcasting propaganda.
Laws "sharply
curbing freedoms of the press and public assembly, citing national
security" were enacted during the 2002 elections. (18) Mugabe
justified the restrictions as necessary to counter Western plans
to re-impose domination of Zimbabwe. "They want our gold,
our platinum, our land," he argues. "These are ours
forever. I will stand and fight for our rights of sovereignty. We
fought for our country to be free. These resources will remain ours
forever. Let this be understood to those in London." (19)
Mugabe-s
warning about the danger of re-colonization "underpins the
crackdown on the nation-s most formidable independent forces,
pro-democracy groups and the Movement for Democratic Change, both
of which have broad Western support, and, often, financing,"
as the New York Times put it. (20) (Note the reference to the opposition
being independent even though it-s dependent on broad Western
support and financing.)
This "fortress-Zimbabwe
strategy has been strikingly effective. According to a poll of 1,200
Zimbabweans published in August (2004) by South African and American
researchers, the level of public trust in Mr. Mugabe-s leadership
has more than doubled since 1999, to 46 percent - even as
the economy has fallen into ruin . . . and anger over economic and
living conditions is pervasive." (21)
Mugabe, his
detractors allege, secures his support by focusing the public-s
anger on outside forces to keep the public from focusing its anger
on him (the same argument the US government and anti-Castro forces
have been making about Castro for years.) If this is true, the groundswell
of opposition to Mugabe-s government that we-re led
to believe threatens to topple Mugabe from power any moment, doesn-t
exist; it-s directed at outside forces. Consistent with this
is the reality that the US-based Save Zimbabwe Campaign "does
not . . . have widespread grassroots support." (22)
Implicit in
the argument that Mugabe uses anti-imperialist rhetoric to stay
in power is the view that (a) outside forces aren-t responsible
for the country-s deep economic crisis and that (b) Mugabe
is. This is the view of US ambassador to Zimbabwe Christopher Dell,
and many of Mugabe-s leftist detractors. "Neither drought
nor sanctions are at the root of Zimbabwe-s decline. The Zimbabwe
government-s own gross mismanagement of the economy and corrupt
rule has brought on the crisis." (23)
Yet, in a country
whose economy is mainly based on agriculture, the idea that drought
hasn-t caused serious economic trouble, is absurd. Drought
is a regional phenomenon, whittling away at populations in Mali,
Ethiopia, Malawi, Mauritania, Eritrea, southern Sudan and Zimbabwe.
Land redistribution hasn-t destroyed agriculture in Zimbabwe;
it has destroyed white commercial, cash-crop farming, which is centred
on the production of tobacco for export.
Equally absurd
is the notion that sanctions are economically neutral. Sanctions
imposed by the US, EU and other countries deny Zimbabwe international
economic and humanitarian assistance and disrupt trade and investment
flows. Surgical or targeted sanctions are like surgical or targeted
bombing: not as surgical as their champions allege and the cause
of a good deal of collateral damage and suffering.
Left critics
of Mugabe ape the argument of the US ambassador, adding that Mugabe-s
anti-imperialist and leftist rhetoric is, in truth, insincere. He
is actually right-wing and reactionary — a master at talking
left while walking right. (24) But if Mugabe is really the crypto-reactionary,
secret pro-imperialist some people say he is, why are the openly
reactionary, pro-imperialists in Washington and London so agitated?
Finally, if
Mugabe uses outside interference as an excuse to keep tight control,
why not stop interfering and deny him the excuse?
Mugabe-s
government also denies passports to any person believed to be travelling
abroad to campaign for sanctions against Zimbabwe, or military intervention
in Zimbabwe. The justification for this is the opposition-s
fondness for inviting its backers in Washington and London to ratchet
up punitive measures against the country.
No country has
ever provided unqualified public advocacy rights, rights of association,
and freedom of travel, for all people, at all times. Always there
has been the idea of warranted restraint. And the conditions under
which warranted restraint have been imposed are conditions in which
the state is threatened. There-s no question the ZANU-PF government,
and the movement for national liberation it champions, is under
threat.
Archbishop Pius
Ncube tells a gathering that "we must be ready to stand, even
in front of blazing guns, that "this dictatorship must be
brought down right now, and that "if we can get 30,000 people
together Mugabe will just come down. I am ready to lead it."
(25) Arthur Mutambara boasts that he is "going to remove Robert
Mugabe, I promise you, with every tool at my disposal" and
that he-s not "going to rule out or in anything -
the sky-s the limit." (26) If I declared an intention
to remove Tony Blair with every tool at my disposal, that no tool
was ruled out, and I did so with the backing of hostile foreign
powers, it wouldn-t be long before the police paid me a visit.
Why
the West wants Mugabe gone
It-s not
Mugabe per se that Washington and London and white commercial farmers
in Zimbabwe want to overthrow. It-s his policies they want
to be rid of, and they want to replace his policies with their own,
very different, policies. There are at least five reasons why Washington
and London want to oust Mugabe, none of which have anything to do
with human rights.
The first reason
to chase Mugabe from power is that in the late 90-s his government
abandoned IMF-mandated structural adjustment programs - programs
of bleeding people dry to pay interest on international debt. These
are policies of currency devaluation, severe social program cuts
- anything to free up money to pay down debt, no matter what
the human consequences.
The second is
that Mugabe sent troops to the Democratic Republic of Congo to bolster
the Kabila government. This interfered with Western designs in the
region.
The third is
that many of Mugabe-s economic policies are not congenial
to the current neo-liberal orthodoxy. For example, Mugabe recently
announced the nationalization of a diamond mine, which seems to
be, in the current climate, an anachronism. If you nationalize anything
these days, you-re called radical and out of date. The MDC
- which promotes the neo-liberal tyranny — wants to
privatize everything. It is for this reason that Mugabe talks about
the opposition wanting to sell off Zimbabwe-s resources. The
state continues to operate state-owned enterprises. And the government
imposes performance requirements on foreign investors. For example,
you may be required to invest part of your profits in government
bonds. Or you may be required to take on a local partner. Foreign
investors, or governments that represent them, bristle at these
conditions.
The fourth is
that British companies dominate the Zimbabwean economy and the British
government would like to protect the investments of British banks,
investors and corporations. If you read the British press you-ll
find a fixation on Zimbabwe, one you won-t find elsewhere.
Why does Britain take such a keen interest in the internal affairs
of Zimbabwe? The usual answer is that Britain has an especial interest
in Zimbabwe because it is the country-s former colonial master,
but why should Britain-s former colonial domination of Zimbabwe
heighten its interest in the country? The answer is that colonization
paved the way for an economic domination of the country by British
corporations, investors and banks - and the domination carries
on as a legacy of Britain-s former colonial rule. If you-re
part of the British ruling class or one of its representatives,
what you want in a country in which you have enormous investments
is a trustworthy local ruler who will look after them. Mutambara,
who was educated in Britain and lived there, and has absorbed the
imperialist point of view, is, from the perspective of the British
ruling class, far more attractive than Mugabe as a steward of its
interests.
Finally, Western
powers would like to see Mugabe replaced by a trustworthy steward
who will abandon the fast track land reform program, which apart
from violating sacrosanct principles of the capitalist church, if
allowed to thrive, becomes a model to inspire the indigenous rural
populations of neighbouring countries. Governments in Canada, Australia,
and New Zealand also look askance at Mugabe-s land reform
policy, and wish to see it overturned, for fear it will inspire
their own aboriginal populations.
Mugabe-s
government accelerated its land redistribution program in the late
90s, breaking with the completely unworkable, willing buyer, willing
seller policy that only allowed the government to redistribute the
country-s arable land after the descendants of the former
colonial settlers, absentee landlords and some members of the British
House of Lords were done using it, and therefore willing to sell.
Britain, which had pledged financial assistance to its former colony
to help buy the land, reneged, leaving Harare without the means
to expropriate with compensation the vast farms dominated by the
tiny minority of white descendants of British colonists.
"Zimbabwe
finally abandoned the 'willing buyer, willing seller-
formula in 1997. The formula was crippled from the start by parsimonious
British funding, and it was a clear that the program-s modest
goals were more than Great Britain was willing to countenance. In
a letter to the Zimbabwean Minister of Agriculture in November of
that year, British Secretary of State for International Development
Clare Short wrote, 'I should make it clear that we do not
accept that Britain has a special responsibility to meet the costs
of land purchase in Zimbabwe.- Referring to earlier British
assistance funding, Short curtly stated, 'I am told that there
were discussions in 1989 and 1996 to explore the possibility of
further assistance. However that is all in the past.- Short
complained of 'unresolved- issues, such as 'the
way in which land would be acquired and compensation paid -
clearly it would not help the poor of Zimbabwe if it was done in
a way which undermined investor confidence.- Short was concerned
about the interests of corporate investors, then. In closing, Short
wrote that 'a program of rapid land acquisition as you now
seem to envisage would be impossible for us to support,- as
it would damage the 'prospects for attracting investment-"
(27)
It was only
after Mugabe embarked on this accelerated land reform program that
Washington and London initiated their campaign of regime change,
pressuring Mugabe-s government with sanctions, expulsion from
the Commonwealth, assistance to the opposition, and the usual Manichean
demonization of the target government and angelization of the Western
backed opposition.
The MDC, by
comparison, favours a return to the unworkable willing seller, willing
buyer regimen. The policy is unworkable because Harare hasn-t
the money to buy the farms, Britain is no longer willing to finance
the program, and even if the money were available, the owners have
to agree to sell their farms before the land can be redistributed.
Land reform under this program will necessarily proceed at a snail-s
pace. The national liberation movement always balked at the idea
of having to buy land that had been stolen from the indigenous population.
It-s like someone stealing your car, and when you demand it
back, being told you-re going to have to buy it back, and
only when the thief is willing to sell.
Conclusion
One thing opponents
and supporters of Mugabe-s government agree on is that the
opposition is trying to oust the president (illegally and unconstitutionally
if you acknowledge the plan isn-t limited to victory at the
polls.) So which came first? Attempts to overthrow Zimbabwe-s
ZANU-PF government, or the government-s harsh crackdown on
opposition?
According to
the Western media spin, the answer is the government-s harsh
crackdown on opposition. Mugabe-s government is accused of
being inherently authoritarian, greedy for power for power-s
sake, and willing do anything - from stealing elections to
cracking skulls — to hang on to its privileged position. This
is the typical slander levelled at the heads of governments the
US and UK have trouble with, from Milosevic in his day, to Kim Jong
Il, to Castro.
Another view
is that the government-s authoritarianism is an inevitable
reaction to circumstances that are unfavorable to the attainment
of its political (not its leaders- personal) goals. Mugabe-s
government came to power at the head of a movement that not only
sought political independence, but aspired to reverse the historical
theft of land by white settlers. That the opposition would be fierce
and merciless - has been so - was inevitable. Reaction
to the opposition, if the government and its anti-colonial agenda
were to survive, would need to be equally fierce and merciless.
At the core
of the conflict is a clash of right against right: the right of
white settlers to enjoy whatever benefits stolen land yields in
profits and rent against the right of the original owners to reclaim
their land. Allied to this is a broader struggle for economic independence,
which sets the rights of investors and corporations abroad to profit
from untrammelled access to Zimbabwe-s labor, land and resources
and the right of Zimbabweans to restrict access on their own terms
to facilitate their own economic development.
The dichotomy
of personal versus political motivation as the basis for the actions
of maligned governments recurs in debates over whether this or that
leader or movement ought to be supported or reviled. The personal
view says that all leaders are corrupt, chase after personal glory,
power and wealth, and dishonestly manipulate the people they profess
to champion. The political view doesn-t deny the personal
view as a possibility, but holds that the behavior of leaders is
constrained by political goals.
"Even
George Bush who rigs elections and manipulates news in order to
stay in office and who clearly enjoys being 'the War President,-
wants the presidency in order to carry out a particular program
with messianic fervor," points out Richard Levins. "He
would never protect the environment, provide healthcare, guarantee
universal free education, or separate church and state, just to
stay in office." (28)
Mugabe is sometimes
criticized for being pushed into accelerating land reform by a restive
population impatient with the glacial pace of redistribution allowed
under the Lancaster House agreement. His detractors allege, implausibly,
that he has no real commitment to land reforms. This intersects
with Patrick Bond-s view. According to Bond, "Mugabe
talks radical — especially nationalist and anti-imperialist—(to
hang on to power) but acts reactionary." He only does what-s
necessary to preserve his rule.
If we accept
this as true, then we-re saying that the behavior of the government
is constrained by one of the original goals of the liberation movement
(land reform) and that the personal view is irrelevant. No matter
what the motivations of the government-s leaders, the course
the government follows is conditioned by the goals of the larger
movement of national liberation.
There-s
no question Mugabe reacted harshly to recent provocations by factions
of the MDC, or that his government was deliberately provoked. But
the germane question isn-t whether beating Morgan Tsvangirai
over the head was too much, but whether the ban on political rallies
in Harare, which the opposition deliberately violated, is justified.
That depends on whose side you-re on, and whether you think
Tsvangirai and his associates are earnest citizens trying to freely
express their views or are proxies for imperialist governments bent
on establishing (restoring in Britain-s case) hegemony over
Zimbabwe.
There-s
no question either that Mugabe-s government is in a precarious
position. The economy is in a shambles, due in part to drought,
to the disruptions caused by land reform, and to sanctions. White
farmers want Mugabe gone (to slow land redistribution, or to stop
it altogether), London and Washington want him gone (to ensure neo-liberal
"reforms" are implemented), and it-s likely that
some members of his own party also want him to step down.
On top of acting
to sabotage Zimbabwe economically through sanctions, London and
Washington have been funnelling financial, diplomatic and organizational
assistance to groups and individuals who are committed to bringing
about a color revolution (i.e., extra-constitutional regime change)
in Zimbabwe. That includes Tsvangirai and the MDC factions, among
others.
For the Mugabe
government, the options are two-fold: Capitulate (and surrender
any chance of maintaining what independence Zimbabwe has managed
to secure at considerable cost) or fight back. Some people might
deplore the methods used, but considering the actions and objectives
of the opposition - and what-s at stake - the
crackdown has been both measured and necessary.
1. The Guardian
(January 24, 2002)
2. Ibid.
3. Zimbabwe-s Land Reform Programme (The Reversal of Colonial
Land Occupation and Domination): Its Impact on the country-s
regional and international relations. Paper presented by Dr I.S.G.
Mudenge, Zimbabwe Minister of Foreign Affairs, to the Conference
'The Struggle Continues-, held in Harare, 18-22 April
2004.
4. http://www.zimfa.gov.zw/speeches/minister/min014.htm
5. Globe and Mail (May 26, 1999)
6. "Grass-Roots Effort Aims to Upend Mugabe in Zimbabwe,"
The New York Times, (March 28, 2005)
7. Los Angeles Times (July 8, 2005)
8. Ibid.
9. New York Times (March 27, 2005)
10. See Frances Stonor Saunders, "The Cultural Cold War: The
CIA and the World of Arts and Letters," New Press, April 2000;
and "The Economics and Politics or the World Social Forum,"
Aspects of India-s Economy, No. 35, September 2003, http://www.rupe-india.org/35/contents.html
11. New York Times (March 27, 2005)
12. Globe and Mail (March 26, 2005)
13. "What-s Really Going on in Zimbabwe? Mugabe Gets
the Milosevic Treatment," Counterpunch.com. March 23, 2007,
http://www.counterpunch.org/gowans03232007.html
14. Los Angeles Times (July 8, 2005)
15. New York Times, (December 4, 2005)
16. Washington Post (November 18, 2005)
17. New York Times (March 29, 2006)
18. New York Times (December 24, 2004)
19. Globe and Mail (March 23, 2007)
20. New York Times (December 24, 2004)
21. Ibid.
22. Globe and Mail (March 22, 2007)
23. The Herald (November 7, 2005)
24. Patrick Bond, "Mugabe: Talks Radical, Acts Like a Reactionary:
Zimbabwe-s Descent," Counterpunch.com, March 27, 2007,
http://www.counterpunch.org/bond03272007.html
25. Globe and Mail (March 23, 2007)
26. Times Online (March 5, 2006)
27. Gregory Elich, "Zimbabwe-s Fight for Justice,"
Center for Research on Globalisation, May 6, 2005, globalresearch.ca/articles/ELI505A.html
28. "Progressive Cuba Bashing," Socialism and Democracy,
Vol. 19, No. 1, March 2005.
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