| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Whither
Zimbabwe: Social crisis and resistance?
Peter Jacobs, International Socialist Group
March 01, 2008
http://www.isg-fi.org.uk/spip.php?article624
The ongoing
political and socio-economic crisis in Zimbabwe is considerably
worsening as the country prepares for its 2008 parliamentary and
presidential elections. Rival political parties, ZANU-PF and the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), competing for control
over the political space, are internally divided by fractional strife
based on petit bourgeois opportunism. Tensions within and between
the dominant political forces, mobilized around parties and social
movements, regularly erupt in violent clashes between the army and
protesters. Other countries in the region have felt the impact of
this crisis as manifested in the priority they have given to the
Zimbabwe situation at summits of the regional trade bloc, the Southern
Africa Development Community (SADC). This fourteen-country body,
promoting an enhanced neo-liberal integration of economies in the
region, has appointed South Africa-s President Thabo Mbeki
as the chief mediator to resolve the standoff between ZANU-PF and
the MDC. Blocking the crisis from spilling into neighbouring countries
is crucial if they are to gain better 'good governance-
ratings from imperialist investors. However, imperialism is infuriated
by their hands-off approach to 'Zimbabwe-s elder statesman-.
Imperialism wants them to practice the 'doctrine of regime
change by an external force-, but also to turn a blind eye
to the disaster this doctrine has brought to Iraq and Afghanistan.
To date, however, Mbeki has not succumbed to imperialist pressures
but has instead practiced so-called 'quiet diplomacy-.
Yet even Mbeki-s 'neutral power broker role- is
facing resistance from the fractured political parties and he has
been unable to get these protagonists to agree to a set of constitutional
and other political reforms.
Winning independence
in 1979-80 was a milestone in the history of Zimbabwe. In the view
of prominent intellectuals like Ibbo Mandaza, national independence
cleared the way for, 'an onward movement towards socialist
construction-. To make this seamless transition between a
victorious national liberation struggle and socialism, it was vital
to mobilize, organize and sharpen the political consciousness of
the working class and peasants. These labouring classes have nothing
to lose and everything to gain through joining a national revolution
and steering it uninterruptedly towards socialism. More than two
decades later some assert that the country-s 'revolution-
is still incomplete but continuing under the old leadership. In
a recent article leftist intellectuals Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros
argued that from 1997 until today, the period in which Zimbabwe
ostensibly suspended its economic structural adjusted programme
(ESAP), the country has been in a revolutionary situation headed
by a radicalized state. While the state may have 'petty bourgeois
shortcomings-, its commitment to radical nationalism and agrarian
reforms, its rejection of neo-liberal economics and 'Look
East policy- bear testimony to its progressive credentials.
In the view
of other left commentators, like Raftopoulous and Phimister, this
complex and fluid situation flows from the country-s more
recent history. They contend: 'By the end of the 1990s, the
problems of economic neo-liberalism as well as the serious democratic
deficit of Zanu PF, created conditions for a general crisis of legitimacy,
and to the jettisoning of the structural adjustment programme.-
For them ZANU-PF is an authoritarian force bent on destroying, 'democracy
and human rights- to cling on to power. Indeed, the stakes
are high for the ruling party because it has been unable to quell
civil dissent and grassroots demonstrations through the use of nationalist
slogans dating back to the glory days of the liberation struggle.
Economic instability, exacerbated through its past and present pro-capitalist
trajectory, is inflicting egregious suffering on the peasantry,
working class and middle class.
So is there
a pre-revolutionary crisis lead by a 'radicalized state-
searching for a simultaneous solution to the national and agrarian
questions? Or is the situation the consequence of a degenerating
nationalist elite led by President Robert Mugabe and the ZANU-PF
governing clique?
Fighting for National Liberation
Zimbabwe
went through a militant and protracted struggle to free itself from
colonial and white minority rule. Blacks have been resisting British
invasion, occupation and settlement of Zimbabwe from the late 19th
century onwards. Who took up the struggle against colonialism and
white minority rule, what forms this resistance assumed and, more
importantly, the strategic goals of this movement were inseparable
from the restructuring of Zimbabwe-s political economy. In
the earlier period, given the agrarian nature of the country, resistance
was based primarily in rural areas. It was natural for the peasantry
to defend itself against large-scale land expropriation. Despite
the militancy and heroism of theses struggles, a beacon of inspiration
to Zimbabwe-s future freedom fighters, this resistance movement
could not match the superior weaponry of the colonial settlers.
These rural rebellions, by and large based on tribalism and superstition,
were drowned in blood.
As the mineral
revolution was fastening its tentacles around the economies of the
subcontinent, industry developed apace, giving birth to a black
proletariat and a petty bourgeoisie. But this was a small proletariat,
retaining strong ties with the peasantry as they circulated between
the mines, urban and rural locations. Around the late 1970s and
early 1980s, for example, industrial employment stood at approximately
4% of the labour force compared to 6% in mining, which was still
a marginal sector despite heavy investment by the UDI regime to
diversify the country-s economic base.
In the early
1960s, the emergence of ZAPU and ZANU shifted the approach in the
fight for freedom in Zimbabwe. Before that time, the black middle-class,
craving the political liberties of their white counterparts, either
joined white liberal parties (like the United Federal Party) or
formed their own nationalist organizations. But they invariably
looked and appealed to Britain to put pressure on the governing
party to institutionalize political reforms. Pre- and post-1960s
nationalist formations united the peasants and workers under the
leadership of the black middle class. ZAPU and ZANU, both products
of ongoing splits within the national liberation movement, nevertheless
boldly articulated a programme for national independence. While
both had embraced radical anti-imperialist slogans and guerilla
war, Mandaza lamented the fact that, 'armed struggle was just
to place pressure on Britain to bring about a conference that could
lead to an African government in Zimbabwe-, a 'normal
rather than exceptional road- to independence across Africa.
A number of
other weaknesses within the national liberation movement placed
limits on the 'kind of freedom- eventually achieved
in 1979-1980 and subsequent developments. Firstly, the nationalist
movement lacked a genuine and consistent orientation towards revolutionary
socialism. Before the country would embrace the structural adjustment
programme of the Bretton Woods institutions in 1989, President Mugabe
would frequently decorate his speeches with socialist slogans. But
even this lip-service to socialism seems to have been predicated
on whether support would be forthcoming from Moscow or Beijing,
the camps associated with 'really existing socialism-.
Secondly, divisions,
internecine strife and splits plagued and crippled the movement
before and after 1979-80. Balancing divergent class interests under
the leadership of the petty bourgeoisie proved to be impossible.
And the forced unification (when ZANU and ZAPU eventually became
ZANU-Patriotic Front) in 1987 did not overcome the movement-s
inherited contradictions and fragmentation. Factions of ZANU-PF
would periodically break away, setting up rival 'electoral
formations-. Support for the governing party also dwindled
in the urban areas. This party-s defeat in the 2000 referendum
on Constitutional reform strikingly exposed its lack of popularity.
It marked a formidable mass-based political challenge to ZANU-PF.
Devastation under Lancaster House
Although
the guerilla war in Zimbabwe had intensified around the mid-1970s,
its overarching goal was to get British imperialism to arrange a
negotiated settlement between the nationalist movement and the repressive
Smith regime. At that time, Britain and America judged and responded
to the radicalization in Zimbabwean on the basis of dramatic changes
elsewhere in the third world. Following the victory of the liberation
movements in Angola, Mozambique and Vietnam, British and American
imperialism stepped up their efforts to stage such a settlement.
Another compelling reason for them to act was the remarkable resistance
of the oppressed and exploited masses in South Africa. Together,
the 1973 Durban strikes and 1976 Soweto student revolt were the
beginnings of another cycle of resistance that would bring to an
end apartheid rule in 1994.
Zimbabwe did not gain
its liberation by toppling the racist and repressive state through
a relentless war and armed insurrection. Instead, national independence
was the product of a negotiated settlement. Throughout the 1970s,
Britain and America hosted several conferences to strike a compromise
between the 'minority settler regime and the representatives
of the nationalist movements-. The Lancaster House conference
in September 1979 would produce a 'new- Constitution
and transitional proposals broadly in line with imperialist designs.
This formed the basis for the March 1980 elections. With private
property firmly entrenched, and agrarian reform subjected to the
'willing seller and willing buyer- principle, the land
question was left unresolved. With Britain effectively reneging
on its responsibility to financially support socio-economic development,
the state had to turn to creditors to assist with the delivery of
healthcare education, social welfare and land to the population.
When the Lancaster
House Agreement came to an end in 1987, the cash-strapped and indebted
state adopted a bailout agreement with the IMF and World Bank. In
exchange for more loans from these institutions, the government
adopted the Economic Structural Adjustment Programme (ESAP), putting
in place a series of neo-liberal counter-reforms in 1989-1991. Developmental
social policies of the 1980s were reversed. In addition to the social
service cutbacks, real wages collapsed while job losses expanded.
With socialist rhetoric now abandoned, ESAP also served to justify
the private wealth accumulation among the black elite, especially
those with ties to the ruling party according to Raftopoulos and
Phimister.
Radical or petit bourgeois nationalist state
The radical
nature of the Zimbabwe state today, according to Moyo and Yeros,
stems from its radical nationalism (anti-colonial populism) and
interventionist policies. State intervention on multiple fronts
- the most progressive being the agrarian reforms, price controls
and the 'Look East- policy- are cited as critical departures
from the dominant neo-liberal orthodoxy. Yet the critical test is
if and how much the poor and labouring classes are benefiting from
current state policies. If each so-called radical intervention is
evaluated against this fundamental question, the petit bourgeois
nationalist and internal contradictions of the state are clearly
evident.
Historically,
the agrarian question formed a central axis in the programme of
the national liberation movement. This was so because almost all
the most fertile land was concentrated in the hands of about 6,000
white farmers while over a million black peasants were forced to
subsist on 45% of marginal farmland. More broadly, the country remained
an underdeveloped and peripheral capitalist country, in which at
least 60% of population remained locked in rural areas alongside
a tiny and weak industrial base. To satisfy its land hunger, the
landless peasantry joined the liberation movement and the guerilla
army. Today they form a mass base for the liberation war veteran-s
association (ZNLWVA).
But during 1980-1997
agrarian reform had to be pursued within the limits imposed by the
Lancaster House compromise and the structural adjustment programme.
Resources were woefully inadequate to tackle fundamental agrarian
inequalities through land and agricultural markets. By 1997, the
state had achieved less than half of its resettlement target set
in 1980- resettling 71,000 rather than 167,000 peasant families.
And most of this had taken place during the first 5 years after
independence, yet poorer peasants rarely gained access to productive
farmland that largely remained in the hands of large-scale agricultural
capitalists.
Under the pressure of
large-scale land occupations, the state launched its fast track
land reform campaign in 1997. It identified 1,417 large commercial
farms for expropriation and redistribution to smaller farmers. According
to Moyo and Yeros, the state-led expropriated process involved 80%
of the targeted farms, whereas on the rest of these farms more or
less uncoordinated occupations continued.
In May-July
2005 the ZANU-PF government launched its ill-conceived and brutal
'Operation
Restore Order/ Murambatsvina- across all urban informal
areas. This militarist eviction of 'irregular urban settlements-
caused large scale homelessness and forced displacement to rural
areas that eventually triggered a United Nations investigation.
In Harare alone, Murambatsvina rendered at least 35,000 families
homeless and two years after destroying these fragile urban livelihoods,
at least 10% of families are still encamped on a farm outside Harare.
On the one hand this campaign forms part of longstanding state coercion
to assert control over urban municipalities, which have been strongholds
of opposition politics (including the MDC). Moreover, and at a more
profound level, this 'so-called urban disorder and informal
settlements- flows dynamically from the unresolved agrarian
question. For rural misery, rooted in ongoing land hunger, is forcing
more families to migrate to depressed urban locations in the hope
of building a decent life in the cities. The proliferation of urban
slums is a consequence of subjugating rural and urban land allocations
to capitalist economic logic.
The cost of
living in the country keeps escalating at a breathtaking pace and
it is predicted that by year-end the annual inflation rate will
be in the order of 15,000%! Wages have not kept pace with this skyrocketing
cost of living. As hyperinflation devours the purchasing power of
the labouring classes, growing numbers of people have been pushed
to eke out a living far below the conservative poverty line. The
Zimbabwean dollar is constantly sliding in value, with 'black
market traders- profiteering big time from dealing in goods
and currencies. Some regions of the country, especially tourist
hotspots, have become 'dollarised- zones. In rural areas,
where peasants rely on remittances from relatives working in neighbouring
countries, the South African Rand (ZAR) has become a preferred currency.
The state has
been using typical social democratic measures - price controls and
printing higher denominated paper money and rationing - hoping that
these will stabilize prices and drag the economy out of depression.
But these knee-jerk responses have not stopped the socio-economic
meltdown and the devastation this has brought to bear. Retailers
in the same locality still charge hugely different prices for the
same commodities whilst landlords profit from unscrupulously hiking
rental rates. Selective subsidies of essential items, such as maize,
seem to have helped very little in a context where 80% of the labour
force is jobless.
Many factors,
ranging from anti-patriotic foreign companies and natural disasters
(drought, etc), are blamed for the hyperinflation and economic slump.
But in the final analysis, it remains the private accumulation of
wealth that is driving this crisis. Speculative capital inflows
and the consumerism of the elite are key drivers of hyperinflation.
The leading South African business daily recently reported that,
'Zimbabwe is in its ninth year of recession but in the past
18 months its stock exchange has made some heady returns. The industrial
index has gained more than 5500% this year.- In the meanwhile
a South African agricultural corporation, Tongaat-Hullet, is vigorously
buying shares in large sugar estates in Zimbabwe. These capital
inflows for hit-and-run profits exert upward pressures on prices
by artificially expanding the money circulating in the economy.
Imported inflation, derived from the luxurious consumption of the
elite, is also fanning hyperinflation because it is paid for by
printing money and a growing public sector indebtedness. The state
has just spent several million American dollars to buy a new fleet
of vehicles for the ministers, who, in turn, bought their 'old
vehicles- for a tiny fraction of their market value.
The state has
now drafted and parliament is debating the National
Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Bill as part of, 'completing
the national democratic revolution-. This bill, coupled with
the amendments to the Mines and Minerals Act and price freeze campaign,
aims to transfer 51% of economic assets to 'indigenous-
ownership. [20] The state will buy minority shares in mines currently
under the full control of foreign corporations. But in the context
of the state-s overarching commitment to, 'nurturing
black business people-, and powerful lobbies such as the Indigenous
Business Development Center, the Affirmative Action Group and Zimbabwe
Indigenous Empowerment Organization, these minority shares could
end up in the hands of black economic empowerment candidates. But
this indigenous bourgeoisie, a key base of the governing party,
can only enrich itself according to the laws of exploitation and
profit - wholesale theft. In reality, this class will be compelled
to cast aside all patriotic pretention and behave like other capitalists.
It is common
to trace the current wave of social struggles back to the latter
part of the 1990s. For it was in that era that a variety of movements
for political and socio-economic reforms arose. The socio-economic
devastation and widespread misery inflicted by ESAP had by 1995
given rise to angry and bitter protests. This wave of strikes and
mass demonstrations culminated in a general strike of December 1997
and a mass stay away in March 1998. A broad coalition, called the
National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA), was instrumental in uniting these
mobilizations that included the ZCTU.
What started out as typical anti-neo-liberal protests became transformed
into a political movement with its central demand for meaningful
and genuine Constitutional reform. It is in this milieu that the
MDC was born in September 1999. Although the ZCTU spearheaded the
formation of the MDC, this movement has attracted an array of anti-ruling
party elements, most notably supporters of the Ian Smith regime
backed by imperialism.
*Peter Jacobs
is a member of the African Peoples Democratic Union.
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
|