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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
History
lessons for Zimbabwe's opposition
David Moore and David Sanders,The Globe and Mail
April 17, 2008
View article on the Globe and Mail website
Only Robert Mugabe and
his cronies benefit if Zimbabwe's deepening, desperate impasse remains.
The concatenation of vote rigging, international intervention and
talk of governments-in-exile merely buy time for the dictatorship.
As the regime's sell-by
date lingers, Zimbabwe rots. Its whirling decline and rocketing
repression bring more brutality, nastiness and pestilence to all
but the parasitic elite. Any government of "national unity"
- the South African and international community's mutual mirage
- will fail unless it encompasses the popular will demonstrated
by the Movement for Democratic Change's fourth victory since real
electoral races began in 2000.
A unity government will
only consolidate Zimbabwe's exchange-rate-rich bourgeoisie. Progressive
elements of the MDC and civil society can either accept this blight
or halt Mugabeism by other means. Some historical lessons might
enable the means and ends to a better prospect.
Zimbabwe's political
past tells us that Mr. Mugabe has answered challenges with repression
for 32 years now. Back then, he was opposed by constellations resembling
today's democratic impulses and radical projects. There were elements
of civil society, younger generations, party-building efforts, radical
democracy, pushes to national unity - even factions of the
military. If the democrats against him now forget this history,
they're myopic. If they remember its ideological and political elements
but ignore the military, they are utopian. Coercion, consent and
negotiation were wrapped up in the war of liberation. The Zimbabwean
state's current heavy securitization means the military role still
cannot be ignored.
In 1975, efforts by South
Africa and Zambia to create a government-in-waiting of national
unity among factions of Zimbabwe's national liberation movement
(for which Mr. Mugabe was released from Rhodesia's prisons) failed.
Zimbabwean African National Union national chairman Herbert Chitepo
was assassinated and the party disintegrated.
A group of young Marxists
filled the vacuum, restarting the liberation war. Resembling some
of today's civil-society activists, they tried to unify liberation
armies, establish innovative educational structures and work with
progressive regional power-brokers. However, in 1976, Mr. Mugabe
travelled to Mozambique to join the eastern flank of the liberation
struggle. His move to the top culminated in his alliance with British
and U.S. foreign policy makers who sought to stem the rise of Zimbabwean
radicalism. By early 1977, those attempting to unify the armies
of ZANU and ZAPU - the Zimbabwean African People's Union,
led by Joshua Nkomo - were dumped in Mozambique's prisons
at Mr. Mugabe's instigation. Hundreds of young supporters were brutally
incarcerated in ZANU training camps.
Although these militarily
and ideologically savvy young Turks trained thousands of recruits
in the Tanzanian and Mozambican camps, they failed to make strong
alliances with the core of their army's security forces. Mr. Mugabe
brought the leaders of the military's old guard to his side after
their release from Zambia's prisons, where they were held under
suspicion of having murdered Mr. Chitepo. This was the undoing of
the new united army, ZIPA. In 1978, more "dissident"
cadres were tortured and imprisoned in Mozambique. After independence,
an assault on ZAPU in Matabeleland by ZANU's notorious 5th Brigade
logically followed. As many as 20,000 were killed between 1982 and
1986.
In 2000, ZIPA's
core reappeared in the Zimbabwe Liberators' Platform, genuine war
veterans countering the many posers enrolled in ZANU-PF's land-invasion
strategy against the MDC. The veterans' initial activist inclinations
were resurrected as they joined the Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition, which was temporarily paralyzed by secret
police infiltrators.
Now back in action, it
urged last week that parliament be immediately sworn in to oversee
the electoral process's next stage. It called for genuine liberation
war fighters and security commanders to "uphold their constitutional
duty to respect the outcome of the election as the genuine sovereign
expression of the popular will of Zimbabweans. To act otherwise
would be a treasonable offence for which they will stand accountable
and answerable jointly and severally."
This statement echoes
ZIPA's recognition of the importance of the fusion of military,
civil and political fronts. Now, civil society and party activists
must look to the soldiers and police, most of whom are from the
working and middle classes. They suffer along with their families,
and most do not support Mr. Mugabe - the forces meting out
the current repression are paramilitary and ragged "war vets,"
not regular troops.
It may be that peace-loving
people, including intellectuals, will find it necessary to resist
by force the violence of the Mugabe thugs. In any event, the task
at hand is to persuade the fusion of progressive fronts to take
forward the process begun in 1975.
Progressive Zimbabweans
must make strategic alliances and maintain the mobilization. The
next stage is just over the horizon.
*David Moore
teaches politics and development studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal
and has been researching and writing on Zimbabwean politics since
1984.
*David Sanders, a Zimbabwean, heads the School of Public Health
University of the Western Cape
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