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The
silent war on Africa
John
Pilger, Mail & Guardian (SA)
July 07, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-07-07-the-silent-war-on-africa
'Zimbabwe shows Africa
is still in the despots' grip", said the headline in the London
Observer over an article by Keith Richburg.
"Thank God that
I am an American," writes this former foreign editor of the
Washington Post: An African-American, Richburg says he is very pleased
he is not an African.
He reminds me of middle-class
black Americans I met when I first travelled in Africa. They were
usually tourists looking for their roots and in their behavior,
reactions and ignorance, they demonstrated how quintessentially
American they were. For them, Africa was another planet.
A decade ago writes Richburg,
Zimbabwe was "a humming economy" with "impressive
growth".
No, it was not. In 1998
Zimbabwe was a profoundly unequal society up to its ears in debt,
with the International Monetary Fund waging war on its economy,
waving off investors and freezing loans.
Moving his gaze north,
Richburg describes Somalia as a "failed state" -- a term
Western governments like to use -- while saying nothing about how
this oil-rich country was manipulated and abused by Washington during
the Cold War.
He mentions only in passing
the role of the US and the "international community" as
"enablers" in backing Ethiopia's current bloody invasion
of Somalia.
It is not surprising
he tells us his hero is Barack Obama who, far from defying "conventional
wisdom about race in America", as Richburg credits him, almost
every day falls in with conventional, white corporate wisdom.
Richburg's view of Africa
is from the same conventional, white corporate wisdom. That Mugabe
is an appalling tyrant is beyond all doubt; yet there is a subtext
to the overly enthusiastic condemnation of him by the "international
community", notably in Europe. "Unacceptable!" says
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, having personally distinguished
the campaign to morally rehabilitate the concept of empire.
"The days of Britain
having to apologise for the British Empire are over," said
Brown not long ago.
"We should celebrate."
And what better way to celebrate than with highly selective condemnation
of uppity despots like Mugabe while fawning before equally awful
despots such as the Saudi Royal family?
If nothing else, Mugabe
has provided retrospective justification for the glory days. And
perhaps his greatest crime is having slipped the leash. After all,
both despots and democrats in Africa provide an essential service,
or as Frantz Fanon put it in The Wretched of the Earth, "the
transmission line between the nation and a capitalism, rampant though
camouflaged. [They are] quite content with the role of the Western
bourgeoisie's business agent." Those who refuse the role of
business agent have often paid with their lives: from Patrice Lumumba
to Amilcar Cabral, Ken Saro-Wiwa to Chris Hani.
The wanton underdevelopment
of Africa hardly makes headlines, yet its victims outnumber those
of Mugabe many times over.
Once known as neo-colonialism,
it began more than half a century ago with the rise of European
federalism. "It can be argued," wrote Dan Kashagama of
the African Unification Front, "that the control of Africa
was central to the creation of the EU and its forerunners . . .
"The six founder
members of the EU could not maintain their economies without "association"
with the colonial territories . . . In other words, Africa would
never be allowed to have democratic economic choices . . . Europe
would decide what kind of economy Africans were to build. Africa
was to supply Europe's needs . . . "
I recommend a succinct
analysis by Africa's Roman Catholic bishops of why 300-million Africans
live on less than a dollar a day.
Their list is as follows:
"huge crippling debts" mostly to Europe; an "iniquitous"
and "atrociously immoral" system that keeps prices for
African raw materials artificially low while those for rich-world
exports continue to rise; the desecration of the African environment
by Western corporations; the withholding by European banks of wealth
looted by deposed and dead dictators; colonial interventions by
European powers on the side of armed factions; and a devastating
arms trade.
While the British government
claims it leads the world in the "fight against poverty"
it is the major arms merchant to 10 out of 14 conflict-racked African
countries.
In South Africa, the
Mbeki government has been suckered by British arms companies into
buying 24 Hawk fighter jets at £17-million each, "by
far the most expensive option", according to a House of Commons
report.
Brown, together with
his EU partners, is currently demanding free trade deals that will
destroy whole African industries, such as Ghana's once thriving
tomato canning industry. "Europe," says Gyekye Tanoh of
the Third World Network in Accra, "is gaining 80% of our markets
in exchange for what is effectively 2% of theirs."
None of this excuses
the outrages of Mugabe. But look beyond the West's whipping boy
and mark the enduring outrage of an imperial past that remains a
war against Africa that Africans must win.
A warning
from Mugabe to Mbeki
Why is Thabo Mbeki so soft on Mugabe? Is it simply loyalty to a
past of "joint struggle", as has been suggested? Here
is a clue.
In September 2005, a
study submitted to Parliament in Cape Town compared the treatment
of landless black farmers under apartheid and their treatment today.
During the final decade
of apartheid, 737 000 people were evicted from white-owned farmland.
In the first decade of democracy, 942 000 were evicted. About half
of those forcibly removed were children and about a third were women.
A law intended to protect
these people and put an end to peonage, the Security of Tenure Act
was enacted by the Mandela government in 1997. That year, Nelson
Mandela told me: "We have done something revolutionary, for
which we have received no credit at all.
There is no country where
labour tenants have been given the security we have given them . . .
where a farmer cannot just dismiss them."
The law proved a sham.
Most evictions never reached the courts and bitterness among black
farm workers has grown inexorably and so too has the whole question
of land, actual and symbolic. When the ANC came to power in 1994,
the "priority" of land restitution was allocated 0,3%
of the national budget. By 2005, it was still less than 1%.
When Robert Mugabe attended
the ceremony to mark Thabo Mbeki's second term as President of South
Africa, the black crowd gave Zimbabwe's dictator a standing ovation.
The embarrassment and message for Mbeki was like a presence. "This
was probably less an endorsement for Mugabe's despotism," noted
the writer Bryan Rostron, "than a symbolic expression of appreciation
for an African leader who, many poor blacks think, has given those
greedy whites a long-delayed and just come-uppance."
It was also a warning.
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