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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
in context
Grace Kwinjeh, Pambazuka News
May 19, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/48212
Arguing that
Mugabe has been "talking left" while "walking right",
Grace Kwinjeh analyzes Zimbabwe through regional, African and global
capitalism.
The post election crisis
in Zimbabwe and the SADC region is a manifestation of much deeper,
complex issues to do with global capitalism and its vampire-like
tendencies.
At the root of the problems
is the failure of our nationalist governments to deal with these
dimensions of the global crisis: food shortages and price hikes;
oil speculation; financial meltdowns and higher interest rates.
These manifest themselves as rising inequality and unemployment
and competition between very poor people in places like Alexandra,
Tembisa, Diepkloof and the Johannesburg inner city for scarce resources.
It is only by addressing
these issues that we can meet the aspirations of the masses for
freedom and decent lives.
Forces both local and
global may seem to be worlds apart in the definition and context
of the Zimbabwean struggle but we African citizens are all in an
awkward position.
Global
capitalism
While
we are fighting the Robert Mugabe dictatorship, we Zimbabweans have
not been spared from the negative impact of global capitalism on
our livelihoods especially in poor communities - as we are currently
witnessing, in the current xenophobic attacks against us in South
Africa.
The xenophobia
exposes not only working-class people's fears of lower wages, higher
crime and new cultural influences, as is the explanation at first
blush. In addition, we can see in the attacks
on non-nationals the duplicitous role our national elites play in
pushing us further to the mercy of capitalist forces while they
label us in the opposition - puppets of the West.
The attacks are being
condemned by progressive forces in SA, including COSATU Secretary
General, Zwelinzima Vavi, who said: "I want to send out this
message: It is not the Zimbabweans (exiles) that cause the problems
(of the poor)".
He cited the capitalist
system as the problem and argued that South Africa should focus
on building an economic system that could: "seriously eradicate
poverty".
The same position reiterated
by the Anti-Privatisation Forum:"Let us not forget that it
is South African corporate capital - through the framework
of NEPAD - that has, over the last decade, moved into other
African countries, most often causing many local, smaller businesses
to close down and thus contributing to a situation in which many
poor people have lost their jobs."
Three
million exiles
There
are over three million of us eking out a living outside Zimbabwe's
borders, a result of the failure of our national leaders to deliver
both politically and economically for us at home. The situation
gets more ridiculous when looked at within the context of the aspirations
spelt out in the reformed African Union, in the New Partnership
for Africa's Development, and its dream of an African Renaissance.
These programmes are
again full of empty rhetoric framed, more to attract international
donor funds and less to deliver dignity to African citizens, negating
our 'ubuntuness', which espouses values to do with compassion, value
for human life, respect for each other and harmonious existence.
Even as Frantz Fanon
prophesied back then on the dilemma of African Unity in post-colonial
Africa: "Now the nationalist bourgeois, who in region after
region hasten to make their own fortunes and to set up a national
system of exploitation, do their utmost to put obstacles in the
path of this 'Utopia'. The national bourgeoisies, who are quite
clear as to what their objectives are, have decided to bar the way
to that unity, to that coordinated effort on the part of two hundred
and fifty million men to triumph over stupidity, hunger and inhumanity
at one and the same time."
Fanon-s insight
helps us understand the failures of Mugabe and his allies beyond
their "leftist" rhetoric. They are forever trapped in
the awkward "talk left - walk right" jive as they
remain arguably the best custodians of capitalist/imperialist forces,
in our countries.
Mugabe flirted with the
US military for many years, and until 1998 was considered amongst
the highest-performing of World Bank and International Monetary
Fund puppets, earning a "highly satisfactory" rating from
the Bretton Woods Institutions in 1995. Did he not use $205 million
in hard currency in 2006 to repay the IMF for failed loans?
In Zimbabwe today those
suffering under the yoke of Mugabe's oppression are us black citizens.
We are the homeless, the jobless, the battered and the bruised.
Majority
not repected
We are
in the majority of those whose vote is not respected, in a negation
of that very national liberation struggle aspirations of 'one man
one vote.'
At the moment, Zimbabweans
are just as good as people who did not go out to vote. We remain
at the mercy of the dictatorship, as Mugabe is determined at each
turn to reverse our hard-earned victories.
The elections did not
deliver change. Instead, the moment of triumph against Mugabe and
his cohort soon turned into a nightmare. The opposition won against
one of the most entrenched liberation movements on the African continent.
We romped to victory with a narrow parliamentary majority, equal
seats as Zanu PF in the Senate and a majority votes in the Presidential
election count. It was a great achievement given the odds placed
against any possible opposition electoral victory.
Devastating
retribution
"One
group grabbed a 79-year-old widow, yanked up her skirt, then lashed
her bare buttocks with barbed-wire whips as two dozen terrified
relatives looked on. The woman, Martha Mucheto, said she cried in
pain and shame. 'If none of you confesses, we will hit this
granny until she's dead,- Mucheto, a great-grandmother and
former nurse's aide, recalled hearing. She spoke from a hospital
bed in Harare."
The story of Mugabe's
retribution against innocent civilians gets more devastating each
day - from abductions, torture to cold blooded gruesome murders.
Old grannies such as
gogo Mucheto are not spared in this brutality. Young men are killed
in cold blood. The latest case is of Better Chokururama who was
shot once and stabbed four times around the chest area by Mugabe's
thugs. Chokururama was buried on 17 May 2008, one of at least two
dozen MDC members killed for their beliefs in recent weeks, and
one of several hundred since 2000.
Most affected are the
already-struggling and impoverished rural folks. Scores are being
displaced our national leaders to deliver both politically and economically
for us at home. The situation gets more ridiculous when looked at
within the context of the aspirations spelt out in the reformed
African Union, in the New Partnership for Africa's Development,
and its dream of an African Renaissance.
These programmes
are again full of empty rhetoric framed, more to attract international
donor funds and less to deliver dignity to African citizens, negating
our 'ubuntuness', which espouses values to do with compassion, value
for human life, respect for each other and harmonious existence.
Zanu PF, the liberation
movement that defeated the colonialists in a protracted struggle,
somehow concluded that they should hold state power in perpetuity.
The era of democratization has not yet arrived. The elites in Zimbabwe,
like their despotic friends elsewhere in the world, disdain the
notion that elections are the process through which people elect
leaders of their choice.
Elections remain a privilege
that is denied to the masses. As Zimbabwe prepares for a run-off
on the 27th of June, we expect once again to be fed nauseating fascist
propaganda on good citizenry and patriotism. Mugabe has declared
war against the people of the world.
We have an obligation
to organize ourselves and fight back. As Fanon advised: " . . . we
must understand that African Unity can only be achieved through
the upward thrust of the people, and under the leadership of the
people, and that is to say, in defiance of the interests of the
bourgeoisie."
The marches
on 17 May 2008, led by COSATU, helped to strengthen people-to-people
solidarity. The way our SATAWU comrades exposed
and fought against the 'ship of shame' and stopped it from offloading
its cargo of arms in Durban, is a show of solidarity that the people
of Zimbabwe will forever remember.
Zimbabwe does not need
arms. We are not at war. We want decent jobs, homes, schools and
food.
*Grace Kwinjeh
is an NEC member of the MDC and the Chairperson of the Global Zimbabwe
Forum.
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