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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Using
Mugabe as a stick to beat Africa
Christopher Bickerton, Spiked Online
April 22, 2008
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/5012/
The blame game around
Robert Mugabe-s staying power has reached absurd proportions.
Virtually everyone outside of Zimbabwe has been blamed for inaction,
yet silence reigns over the role of the Zimbabwean people themselves.
This reflects an inability to conceive of Zimbabweans as authors
of their own fate, and it belies an ignorance concerning the necessity
of domestic foundations for meaningful and long-lasting political
change.
The blame game began
early on, with calls for the United States and Britain to pressurise
Mugabe into publishing the results of the 29 March poll and to stand
down if he lost the vote. Some have since claimed that Britain-s
responsibility stems from its inaction over Ian Smith-s regime
in Rhodesia. Harold Wilson said at the time that Britain could not
act 'against kith and kin1-.
This was quickly
extended to a call for the United Nations to act collectively. Among
the first to do so was the Zimbabwean opposition - the Movement
for Democratic Change, who claimed to have won the election - who
warned that international intervention was necessary in order to
stabilise a potentially violent transition to a post-Mugabe Zimbabwe2.
David Miliband, the British foreign secretary, argued that any electoral
run-off should be supervised by an international presence.
In recent days,
as Mugabe has continued to hold on to power and as his party, the
Zanu-PF, has prevented the electoral commission from publishing
all the results, the blame has shifted. One prime target has been
China and its shipment of small arms which arrived in a South African
port a few days ago, destined for Zimbabwe3. Analysts
have suggested that the timing was coincidental: the shipment would
have been ordered before the close poll result that indicated Mugabe-s
time was potentially up4. China has defended itself by
saying that it doesn-t interfere in the affairs of other countries.
Nevertheless, this incident was cited by Western observers as further
proof that China seeks to undermine the basic tenets of international
order, fuelling conflict in Africa, undermining international alliances,
and generally pursuing its interest regardless of the consequences.
South African dockworkers were fêted as heroes for refusing
to unload the arms shipment and promising to fight any scab labour
smuggled in by the port authorities.
Alongside China-bashing,
which has become a favoured pastime in the West in recent weeks5,
we now have Africa-bashing. South African president Thabo Mbeki-s
recent comment that there is no crisis in Zimbabwe was merely taken
as further proof of his political autism. Zimbabwean opposition
leader, Morgan Tvsangirai, called for Mbeki to be 'relieved
from his duty-6. Mbeki has never been forgiven
for daring to challenge the West-s moral authority regarding
the AIDS pandemic in Africa. The Economist commented that if Mbeki
believes there is no crisis in Zimbabwe, then there must be a moral
crisis at the heart of the South African government7.
His successor as leader of the African National Congress party,
and possibly as leader of South Africa, Jacob Zuma, has seemed more
willing to pressurise Mugabe. This has earned him favourable commentary
in the West.
The Economist
goes further and blames African leaders in general for their complicity
in Mugabe-s electoral trickery. It asks rhetorically, 'why
should Africa as a whole be taken seriously when its leaders . . .
refuse to cooperate to remove such a cancer from their midst?-8
It concludes that African governments are morally corrupt and cannot
gather the political will to confront Mugabe, and so it is no wonder
the continent is in a bad state. It seems that the Mugabe affair
is only a metaphor for the ills and malaise of Africa. The Economist
damns all of black Africa: 'It is not surprising that Western
taxpayers should feel loath to be generous when African leaders
en masse refuse to boot out one of their more wicked colleagues.-9
From those who think
Britain should do more for its former colony to those who think
responsibility lies at the door of South Africa, the blame game
around Mugabe has not stopped since the results of the election
began to trickle in. Yet the truth is that it is only the Zimbabwean
people who should be responsible for who governs them, whether this
turns out to be Mugabe or not.
The difficulty has been
that the opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
has been as complicit in this blame game as anyone else. The MDC
has blamed everyone but itself for Mugabe-s staying power.
MDC party members were among the first to call for international
intervention. They have consistently refused to take the matter
into their own hands, preferring to operate through legal channels.
Ultimately, their strategy seems to be to rely on the court of international
public opinion. Listening to their spokesmen and supporters is frustrating:
they seem to be waiting for someone else - whether it-s
the South African Development Community (SADC), the UN or a coalition
of Western states - to push Mugabe out of power. Yet only the Zimbabwean
population, in the form of the MDC or in some other form, can depose
Mugabe. The MDC-s biggest weakness appears to be that it doesn-t
trust itself or its own supporters to take power.
There are countless
examples to draw on of what happens when a leader is deposed with
the helping hand of outside actors. Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected
to office in Haiti in 1990 after securing massive support across
the country-s impoverished population. His party was called
Lavalas, the flood, and was a popular bottom-up political movement10.
Yet soon after, Aristide was ousted in a coup d-état
by the country-s military and forced into exile. Instead of
relying on the force of his own people to return to power, Aristide
turned to the United Nations and to the United States. He returned
to power in 1994 with the help of Bill Clinton and US troops. Though
he remained incredibly popular, his power now passed through the
goodwill of his international patrons. When the United States turned
against him, Aristide-s days in office were numbered. In 2006
he was removed from office in a UN-authorised American-French campaign.
Haiti now has 7,000 foreign troops on its soil, along with 1,000
foreign police officers, and Aristide languishes in exile.
When asked to
reflect upon his role in Haiti-s recent past, Aristide-s
justification for his reliance upon the US in 1994 is telling. He
defended himself by saying that 'the Haitian people are not
armed . . . You-re kidding yourself if you think that the
people can wage an armed struggle . . . the people have no weapons
and they will never have as many weapons as their enemies. It-s
pointless to wage a struggle on your enemies- terrain, or
to play by their rules. You will lose.-11 Yet people
have armed themselves and fought their masters and their governments
in the past. Aristide-s defeatism is particularly out of sync
with his own national history: Haitian slaves armed themselves against
their French masters and overthrew them.
International
assistance doesn-t bring democracy; it only erects weak political
institutions that are not grounded in popular will. Ukraine-s
much-fêted 'orange revolution- in 2004 was a media-fuelled
affair bankrolled by Western backers. They included George Soros-
Open Society foundation and the US National Endowment for Democracy,
whose director used to head the CIA12. The country-s
ongoing political crises since the 'revolution- suggest
how limited and fragile political change can be when it passes through
outside-orchestrated acts of 'People Power-.
The current crisis in
Zimbabwe is overwhelmingly understood as the responsibility of everyone
apart from the Zimbabwean people themselves. But only if they depose
Mugabe can a properly democratic transition take place. Anything
else will only put Zimbabweans in the hands of outside forces whose
concerns are far removed from their own.
Christopher
Bickerton is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford. He
is co-editor of Politics
without Sovereignty: A Critique of Contemporary International Relations
(UCL Press: 2007).
Notes
(1) There are many villains
to blame for Zimbabwe-s decade of horror, Observer, 13 April
2008
(2) Zimbabwe opposition
calls for UN intervention, Daily Telegraph, 1 April 2008
(3) Zimbabwe arms ship
quits South Africa, BBC News, 19 April 2008
(4) South African security
analyst interviewed on BBC Radio 4-s World at One, 18 April
2008
(5) See spiked's
Beijing 2008: Challenging China-Bashing campaign
(6) Tsvangirai on Mugabe
and Mbeki, Guardian, 18 April 2008
(7) 'Africa-s
shame-, Economist, April 19th 2008, p13
(8) 'Africa-s
shame-, Economist, April 19th 2008, p14
(9) 'Africa-s
shame-, Economist, April 19th 2008, p14
(10) Lavalas also means
'mass of people- and 'everyone together-.
See Damming the Flood: Haiti, Aristide, and the politics of containment,
Peter Hallward, Verso (London), 2007: p317
(11) Damming the Flood:
Haiti, Aristide, and the politics of containment, Peter Hallward,
Verso (London), 2007: p323
(12) For details on the
reality behind 'People Power-, see The Price of People
Power, Guardian, 7 December 2004
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