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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
and the new cowardly colonialism
Brendan O'Neill, Spiked Online
April 03, 2008
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/4942/
'We-ve
beaten Mugabe-, said a frontpage headline in the London Evening
Standard yesterday. Only there were no quote marks around the words
'We-ve beaten Mugabe-, which made it difficult
to tell if the paper was reporting the thoughts of Morgan Tsvangirai-s
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) upon its electoral victory
over Robert Mugabe-s Zanu-PF Party, or its own back-slapping
relish at the thought that its journalism may have played a part
in toppling Mugabe. Indeed, 'We-ve beaten Mugabe-
could be the slogan of political and media operators in Britain
and elsewhere in the West, who like to fantasise that Mugabe is
'Africa-s Hitler-, that his Zimbabwe was 'more
evil than, for example, China and Saudi Arabia-, and that
it is up to the West to 'put pressure on Zimbabwe to change1-.
The media reports
about Zimbabwe-s elections present them as a clash between
the 'evil- Mugabe and the 'heroic- Tsvangirai,
an electoral battle for Zimbabwe-s soul. Mugabe is depicted
as having brought Zimbabwe to its knees, causing widespread poverty
and enforcing terror and repression, and Tsvangirai is discussed
as the harbinger of a dignified 'revolution- against
Mugabeism2. This is a fantasy. It ignores the key role
played by Western governments and financial institutions in using
sanctions, tough diplomacy and the proxy interventionists of the
South Africa government and the African Union to isolate and harry
Zimbabwe over the past decade. Such self-serving external meddling
has contributed to Zimbabwe-s economic crisis - and it has
dangerously distorted the political dynamics inside Zimbabwe and
elsewhere in the south of Africa.
Over the past
10 years, American and European governments cynically transformed
Mugabe-s Zimbabwe into the West-s whipping boy in Africa,
the state they love to hate, a country against which they can enforce
tough sanctions to demonstrate their seriousness about standing
up to 'evil-. The West has imposed economic sanctions
on Zimbabwe, warned off foreign investors, denied Zimbabwean officials
the right to travel freely around the world, demonised Mugabe as
an 'evil dictator-, discussed the idea of military action
against Zimbabwe, and used moral and financial blackmail to cajole
South Africa-s president Thabo Mbeki to 'deal with-
Mugabe3.
Objectively,
this singling out of Mugabe-s regime as the 'worst government
on Earth, the most brutal, destructive, lawless government-
made little sense4. No doubt Mugabe is a nasty piece
of work, but then so are some of the government heads that the West
is more than happy to work with. Indeed, one could argue that, over
the past decade, there was more choice and openness in Mugabe-s
Zimbabwe than there was in Rwanda and Uganda, both close political
allies of America and Britain. No, Zimbabwe was labelled the demon
of Africa, not in response to events on the ground in Zimbabwe itself,
but in response to the needs and desires of governments in the West
looking for a purposeful mission in international affairs.
Western meddling
pushed Zimbabwe to the precipice. Yet listening to the discussion
of the elections, you could be forgiven for thinking that the country
had suffered from a sudden, inexplicable case of Spontaneous National
Combustion. The economic crisis is depicted as a peculiar phenomenon
on a continent where there has mostly been economic growth in recent
years. Where most of Africa-s economies have been growing
at a rate of between five and six per cent recently, Zimbabwe is
the only African country that had a negative GDP in 2007/2008. It
is reported that the Zimbabwean economy has shrunk by more than
a third since 1999, a 'decline worse than in major African
civil wars-, says one newspaper5. Apparently there-s
an unemployment rate of around 80 per cent, and inflation is running
at 100,586 per cent6. Yet the only explanation given
for this economic nosedive is Mugabe-s seizure of colonial-era,
white-owned commercial farms eight years ago. As the UK Guardian
says: 'The economic crisis is largely blamed on the seizure
of white-owned farms that began in 2000, disrupting the agriculture-based
economy.-7 It is true that foreign exchange earnings
from these former white-owned farms have plummeted, causing major
economic problems; but there is more to Zimbabwe than tobacco and
the other cash crops once produced by the white farmers.
A key driver
of Zimbabwe-s economic crisis has been the West-s attempts
to bring down Mugabe by turning the financial levers. Relentlessly,
the American and British governments, and the European Union, economically
punished Mugabe-s Zimbabwe for what they considered to be
its political disobedience. In November 1998, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) implemented undeclared sanctions against Zimbabwe,
by warning off potential investors, freezing loans and refusing
to negotiate with Zimbabwean officials on the issue of debt. In
September 1999, the IMF suspended its support for economic adjustment
and reform in Zimbabwe. In October 1999, the International Development
Association, a multilateral development bank, suspended all structural
adjustment loans and credits to Zimbabwe; in May 2000 it suspended
all other forms of new lending8.
In December
2001, the US passed the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery
Act, which decreed that Mugabe could restore relations with international
financial institutions only if he agreed to conditions on Zimbabwe-s
rule of law, the presence of its troops in the Congo, and the conduct
of its internal elections. The American law also instructed all
US members of international financial institutions to oppose and
vote against any extension of loans, credits or guarantees to Zimbabwe.
In 2002, then British foreign secretary Jack Straw declared that
Britain would 'oppose any access by Zimbabwe to international
financial institutions-. Also in 2002, British officials threatened
to withdraw financial assistance to other countries in southern
Africa unless they, too, imposed sanctions against Zimbabwe. This
led Benjamin Mkapa, then president of Tanzania, to complain that
African members of the British Commonwealth were enduring 'a
bombardment for an alliance against Mugabe-9. The
European Union imposed 'smart- sanctions against Zimbabwe,
refusing to allocate visas for travel in EU countries to Mugabe
and his officials and freezing all of their economic assets in Europe10.
In the early and mid-2000s, both the World Bank and the IMF tried
to dissuade states and institutions from extending financial credit
to Zimbabwe. A Zimbabwean official claimed that: 'Our contacts
in various countries have indicated that these institutions are
using all sorts of tactics to cow all those who are keen to assist
Zimbabwe.-11
The economic
punishment of 'evil Mugabe- by powerful Western forces
had a massive impact on Zimbabwe. According to one critical observer,
Gregory Elich, author of Strange Liberators: Militarism, Mayhem
and the Pursuit of Profit, 'Western financial restrictions
made it nearly impossible for Zimbabwe to engage in normal international
trade-. And 'for a nation that had to import 100 per
cent of its oil, 40 per cent of its electricity and most of its
spare parts, Zimbabwe was highly vulnerable to being cut off from
access to foreign exchange-. Elich argues that the impact
of Western restrictions on trading and crediting with Zimbabwe was
'immediate and dire-: 'The supply of oil fell
sharply, and periodically ran out entirely. It became increasingly
difficult to muster the foreign currency to maintain an adequate
level of imported electricity, and the nation was frequently beset
by blackouts. The shortage of oil and electricity in turn severely
hobbled industrial production, as did the inability to import raw
materials and spare parts. Business after business closed down and
the unemployment rate soared...-12
Alongside turning
the screws on Zimbabwe-s economy, the West interfered politically
in an attempt to undermine Mugabe-s government. America-s
Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 authorised
President George W Bush to fund 'opposition media- as
well as 'democracy and governance programmes- inside
Zimbabwe. In April last year, the US State Department confirmed
for the first time that the US had sponsored 'events-
in Zimbabwe aimed at 'discrediting- Mugabe13.
It is reported that the opposition party MDC also received financial
backing and political direction from Britain, Germany, Holland,
Denmark and the US.
A small number
of political observers in the West have questioned the wisdom of
Western interference in Zimbabwe-s internal affairs. When
America passed its Zimbabwe Act, US congresswoman Cynthia McKinney
asked during a debate in the House of Representatives why US officials
were enforcing politically-motivated sanctions against a mostly
democratic country: 'Zimbabwe is Africa-s second-longest
stable democracy. It is multi-party. It had elections last year
[in 2001] where the opposition [the MDC] won over 50 seats in parliament.
It has an opposition press which vigorously criticises the government
and governing party. It has an independent judiciary which issues
decisions contrary to the wishes of the governing party.-14
Indeed, one of the ostensible reasons why America passed the Act
was to protest against the presence of Zimbabwean troops in the
Congo. Yet, in 2001, both Uganda and Rwanda also had troops in the
Congo; and neither Uganda nor Rwanda allowed opposition political
parties or a free press. Yet both were allies of America, and received
considerable economic backing from the US.
Mugabe was no
doubt a rotten ruler; his party certainly used pressure and even
force in order to secure victory in general elections in the late
1990s and the 2000s. Yet that is not why he was singled out as a
'tyrant- and an 'African Hitler-. It was
political considerations in the West that elevated Mugabe to that
position and transformed Zimbabwe into a pariah state. Western governments
despised what they considered to be Mugabe-s cheek, in particular
his temerity in daring to seize white farms, to interfere in the
Congo without a green light from the US, and his frequent denunciations
of Western colonialism. Indeed, since the defeat of the white rulers
of Rhodesia in 1980, Mugabe lived off his reputation as a brave
warrior against Western arrogance in Africa. It was colonialism
and imperialist intervention that gave him his base of support,
which has always been a substantial one, despite, or perhaps because
of, international hostility against Zimbabwe. As the African commentator
Barrie Collins has argued: 'Since the end of the Cold War,
the USA and the UK have got used to a high degree of compliance
on the part of African governments - and they are no longer prepared
to tolerate those, like Zimbabwe, that insist on doing things their
own way.-15
Bashing Zimbabwe played
a dual role for Western officials and commentators. It allowed those
of a conservative stripe to defend the historic reputation of colonialism
by comparing it favourably with the rule of individuals like Mugabe.
Eton-educated British observers loathed Mugabe because they considered
him a symbol of African cockiness, who had humiliated Ian Smith
(the white minority ruler of a self-declared 'independent-
Rhodesia from 1965 to 1979) before the eyes of the world. Attacking
Mugabe-s rule became a way of rehabilitating the image of
old-fashioned, British-tinged colonialism. At the same time, one-time
anti-colonialist radicals - including most notably the gay rights
activist Peter Tatchell in the UK - focused their political energies
on opposing Mugabe, describing him as intolerant and not sufficiently
respectful of minority rights. At a time when political radicalism
is on the wane in the West, some activists sought to recover their
old campaigning spirit by taking potshots at the easy target of
a beleaguered African state. Indeed, radicals often led the charge
for tougher economic and political punishment of Zimbabwe - and
frequently, they got what they asked for.
From the late
1990s to today, Zimbabwe became the West-s favoured punchbag
in the 'Dark Continent-. Yet Western governments have
chosen striking forms of intervention. Instead of militarily and
directly intervening in Zimbabwean affairs - despite loud demands
from the colonialist/radical alliance that they should do so - governments
in the West pursued a more hands-off form of meddling in Mugabe-s
regime. They used sanctions and economic blackmail; they funded
opposition parties and 'events-; and most revealingly
they put pressure on South Africa, Tanzania and other nearby states
to use their muscle to try to push Mugabe from power. This was effectively
'blacked-up imperialism-, an attempt by Western powers
nervous about being seen smashing their way into Africa to use local
proxies to do their dirty work for them. To their credit, many African
officials refused to play the game. The African Union turned down
Western suggestions to send forces to Zimbabwe in 2005, arguing
that 'it is not proper for the AU commission to start running
the internal affairs of members- states-. Though South
Africa-s Mbeki has become involved in Zimbabwean politics,
he has also, to the irritation of Western observers, insisted that
the future of Zimbabwe 'has never been a South African responsibility-16.
Zimbabwe captures
both the West-s sense of caution in international affairs
and also its inexorable drive to interfere wherever and however
it can. As the former British foreign secretary Margaret Beckett
argued, Britain cannot be seen explicitly interfering in Zimbabwe
because we are 'the old colonial power- - yet at the
same time Britain apparently has a 'responsibility-
to spread democracy around the world17. The end result
of this schizophrenic approach to African affairs and international
affairs more broadly - a political defensiveness combined with a
desire to do something seemingly purposeful and proper - is an unpredictable,
ravenous, behind-the-scenes form of meddling in other countries-
affairs, a kind of 'cowardly colonialism-. And it can
have dire consequences for people in the third world.
On the basis
of little more than the fact that they needed a focus for their
international pretensions, Western governments have put Zimbabwe
into an economic straitjacket and warped its internal political
process. If the sanctions, blackmail and withdrawal of trade have
helped to push Zimbabwe-s economy into freefall, then the
relentless backdoor political interventions have disempowered the
people of Zimbabwe. The dynamic of Western intervention caused Mugabe
to become more entrenched and paranoid about outsiders - and it
encouraged the MDC to look to Western officials and radicals for
their favour and flattery rather than to build a meaningful grassroots
movement inside Zimbabwe. Indeed, for all the talk of a 'revolution-
in Zimbabwe, both during minor street protests last year and during
the elections this week, many people actually seem quite resigned
about Zimbabwe-s fate. As one report recently said: '[T]he
opposition hasn-t been able to mobilise tens of thousands
of people . . . -18 Lots of the current news coverage
continually shows Zimbabweans queuing up for hours to buy a newspaper
for a few thousand dollars so that they can read about the elections.
This footage is supposed to show how bad inflation has become in
Zimbabwe, but it also reveals something else: that the West-s
attempted strangulation of Mugabe-s regime reduced the people
of Zimbabwe to observers rather than masters of their fate, who
look to the front pages of newspapers to find out what might happen
next in their country.
Brendan O-Neill
is editor of spiked. Visit his website
Notes
(1) End of
days for 'Africa-s Hitler-, National Post, 1 April
2008
(2) Heroic return for
Zimbabwe-s opposition leader, Independent.ie, 28 March 2008
(3) Mugabe hoping to
side-step Mbeki and Annan , ioL, 24 July 2005
(4) Abroad at Home; A
Regime Of Thugs, New York Times, 5 May 2001
(5) Britain prepares
£1bn-a-year package to aid Zimbabwe, Guardian, 3 April 2008
(6) Britain prepares
£1bn-a-year package to aid Zimbabwe, Guardian, 3 April 2008
(7) Britain prepares
£1bn-a-year package to aid Zimbabwe, Guardian, 3 April 2008
(8) The Battle over Zimbabwe-s
Future, Global Research, 13 April 2007
(9) The Battle over Zimbabwe-s
Future, Global Research, 13 April 2007
(10) 'This time,
Bob, it-s personal-, by Barrie Collins, 22 February
2002
(11) The Battle over
Zimbabwe-s Future, Global Research, 13 April 2007
(12) The Battle over
Zimbabwe-s Future, Global Research, 13 April 2007
(13) US reveals its efforts
to topple Mugabe regime, Guardian, 6 April 2007
(14) Sanctions, which
sanctions?, New African, May 2007
(15) 'This time,
Bob, it-s personal-, by Barrie Collins, 22 February
2002
(16) Trashing Mugabe,
by Josie Appleton, 25 July 2005
(17) See Foreign Secretary
Margaret Beckett Condemns Mugabe Goverment
(18) Zimbabwe: talking
up a revolution, by David Chandler, 22 April 2007
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