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"SA and Zimbabwe politicos join global financiers in self-destruction"
Patrick
Bond, Mrzine
September 21, 2008
http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/bond210908.html
The past week has been
a wild roller-coaster ride in and out of Southern African ruling-party
politics, down the troughs of world capitalism, and up the peaks
of radical social activism. Glancing around the region and world
from those peaks, we can see quite a way further than usual.
Looking first to South
Africa, Saturday-s dumping of president Thabo Mbeki by Jacob
Zuma — president of the party — and his temporary replacement
(until next April-s election) by ANC deputy president Kgalema
Motlanthe, was an excellent reflection of ruling elite fragility
in neoliberal regimes. Some of Mbeki-s main supporters —
including Mbhazima Shilowa, the former trade union leader and now
provincial government leader in the economic heartland of Johannesburg
— are apparently considering the launch of a competing party.
Likewise, the
inability to cement a working power-sharing deal
across the river in Zimbabwe confirms how hard elite factions will
fight over the crumbs of even a quick-shrinking state. These are
interconnected problems and should make world elites rather nervous.
Their favourite Zimbabwean,
Morgan Tsvangirai, may feel the need to follow their austerity instructions.
But to get the billions of dollars promised in coming months from
Western powers and Pretoria, Tsvangirai must tighten the belts of
his already starving compatriots, a task requiring far more control
of the Zimbabwe state than the patronage-addicted cronies of Robert
Mugabe will allow.
On Friday, negotiations
over the new cabinet-s composition broke down because Mugabe-s
Zanu (PF) colleagues were dissatisfied over getting only 15 of the
31 seats in a deal done the prior week with Mbeki acting as facilitator.
Mugabe-s men are, without question, the most exploitative,
parasitical force in Harare today, but imperialism (London mining
houses) and South African subimperialism (Johannesburg mining, banking,
retail, transport, tourism) look on greedily — in part for
platinum reserves as rich as any outside South Africa.
The outsiders have hoped
that Zimbabwe-s ongoing economic implosion — a 20 million+
percent inflation rate and persistent shortages of nearly all basics
(hence last week requiring permission for many shops to trade in
dollars and rands instead of the debased Zim currency) — compels
Mugabe to give up power, though Mbeki-s aim has all along
been to shoehorn Tsvangirai into a junior partnership, which he
agreed to in spite of widespread dissent that the concessions were
too great.
Unfortunately, against
this lot, Tsvangirai-s Movement for Democratic Change party
and its progressive allies in the trade unions and social movements
simply could not generate a 'Plan B- — popular
insurgency or active civil disobedience — in the face of Mugabe-s
repressive police, army and paramilitaries.
So all Tsvangirai has
left for countervailing power is his moral claim to a March electoral
victory (he withdrew from a June run-off when 100 supporters were
killed by Mugabe-s thugs) — worth nearly nothing in
Harare power politics — and the hope he can attract a vast
reconstruction fund from London, Washington and Brussels.
Such funds will be much
harder to mobilize now, after Monday-s stock market crash
in New York and the crashes of investment banks, mortgage guarantors,
insurance companies and in coming days, money market funds and commercial
banks, for whom bailouts will require upwards of a trillion US$
before all is said and done.
Fourteen years ago, these
same New York financiers put extreme pressure on Nelson Mandela-s
new African National Congress government, when I worked in his reconstruction
and development program ministry and saw firsthand the defeatist
philosophies of 'Freedom Next Time- and 'Shock
Doctrine- that John Pilger and Naomi Klein later described
so accurately in their books.
At the time, deputy president
Mbeki ordered state officials to 'Send the signals to the
markets-. Rising unemployment and inequality were the logical
result, as Mbeki-s team made SA much more vulnerable to international
finance than ever in its history. (The most aggressive neoliberal
amongst them, finance minister Trevor Manuel — whose first
job in 1996 was imposition of structural adjustment programme and
who in 2000 chaired board of the World Bank and IMF — was
asked to stay on for another term by Zuma and apparently has agreed.)
In the same spirit, just
under a year ago, Merrill Lynch held what amounted to a job interview
for Zuma, as Mbeki-s apparent successor gave a speech 'aimed
at reassuring them that there was no need for the market to be 'jittery"
according to a Zuma aide.
Mbeki was fired by the
ANC national executive committee in the wake of a high court judgment
a week earlier. That ruling temporarily threw out corruption charges
against Zuma, in part because the judge disapproved of Mbeki-s
conspiratorial handling of his competitor-s career, starting
in 2001. (Zuma was SA deputy president from 1999 until 2005, when
his financial manager Shabir Shaik-s bribe-taking attracted
a jail sentence — but Mbeki-s mistake was to hope Zuma
would fade away, especially after a rape accusation later that year.)
Inept procedure was the
technical problem that dislodged Mbeki and freed Zuma, although
the National Prosecuting Authority said it would appeal the corruption
case. More importantly, the coalition of forces — led by SA
trade unionists and the communist party — which have backed
the allegedly corrupt and sometimes feudal Zuma did so for explicitly
political reasons.
As a Machiavellian back-stabber,
Mbeki simply made too many enemies — including trade union
leader Zwelinzima Vavi, communist party secretary Blade Nzimande,
ANC youth league president Julius Malema, and businessmen Tokyo
Sexwale, Cyril Ramaphosa and Matthews Phosa. But as a hardcore neoliberal
economist, he was doomed in any case. Treatment Action Campaign
leader Zackie Achmat accused Mbeki of murderous AIDS policies and
also celebrated his departure.
And ironically, simultaneous
to Mbeki-s downfall, the economic alter on which so many South
Africans were sacrificed — appeasing the damn financial markets
— has also tumbled. Gambling in real estate, the arrogant
czars of Merrill Lynch lost 82% of the firm-s share value
since early 2007, before last week-s $50 billion desperation
rescue by the Bank of America.
Look north-west now to
Nigeria for more insights into world chaos. Thanks to US fossil
fuel addiction, the leading NGO Environmental Rights Action (ERA)
in Port Harcourt worries about the revival of a war harking back
more than 15 years, when Ken Saro-Wiwa-s Ogoni survival movement
intensified its non-violent efforts to rid the Niger Delta of the
super-exploitive Shell Oil.
Saro-Wiwa faced a repressive
state whose army was called in by Shell to execute him on a frame-up
charge in 1995, in spite of appeals by Mandela.
Last week, the powerful
guerrilla-based Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta
forced Shell to evacuate 100 employees from an installation and
demanded that all foreign firms leave the area.
Meanwhile, ERA director
Nimmo Bassey spent the week with dozens of African environmentalists
here in Durban. The OilWatch activists were hosted by the Pietermaritzburg
NGO groundWork, ERA-s partner in the Friends of the Earth
network.
Bassey-s strategy
is to 'keep the oil in the soil-. To pay for needed
development and environmental clean-up, ERA demands ecological debt
repayment by the north to the south, much as Accion Ecologica has
insisted on in Ecuador, even moving Rafael Correa-s government
to endorse the concept.
The OilWatch network
ventured on Durban-s famous Toxic Tour by the South Durban
Community and Environmental Alliance, which stops in on leaky refineries
and other pollution hot spots that give the area its world-leading
leukemia and asthma rates. That alliance will soon file an environmental
impact assessment complaint to halt the parastatal firm Transnet-s
proposed $7 billion pipeline, aimed to soon double petrol flows
to Johannesburg.
Aside from environmental
racism (the pipeline takes a 200km southerly detour to avoid white-dominated
areas), several other reasons have emerged to rethink the pipeline:
climate change, refining problems, Johannesburg auto congestion
and the lack so far of political will to build an alternative mass
public transport system.
Far better to blow up
the Johannesburg petrol pipeline before it is built, through legal,
nonviolent means, South Durban activists reckon, than to contend
with Niger Delta-type disasters such as the series of major tank
fires at installations in South Durban that began exactly a year
ago. Then and now, municipal officials failed south Durban residents,
by keeping secret the evacuation plan.
If we look a bit further
south, to the famous Wild Coast on the Transkei coast a few hours
drive from Durban, we find a similar confrontation between communities
and an unresponsive, crony-capitalist state. And again, bottom-up
struggle has generated a formidable backlash against Mbeki-s
minerals minister and the multinational corporation she has been
wooing.
After receiving a stern
lecture by community and indigenous leaders in the Xolobeni community
last Friday, minister Buyelwa Sonjica conceded that a multibillion-rand
titanium sands project suffered from flawed consultation. Activists
insisted she withdraw a licence to mine the sand dunes, which she
had secretly granted Australia-s Mineral Resource Commodities
a few weeks ago.
Sonjica confessed, 'I
am disappointed because most of the things said here today, I did
not know-. Like so many officials, she had not listened to
civil society, especially the Amadiba Crisis Committee and Wildlife
and Environment Society of South Africa. The community group-s
superb lawyer, Richard Spoor (ridiculed by Sonjica two weeks-
earlier), must now painstakingly undo the damage she has done.
To return where we began,
in wretched Zimbabwe, what can progressive forces do to regroup
in this context of national, regional and global chaos? Pretoria
power-brokers are vanishing, New York financiers are buckling, Washington/London
king-makers are scrambling for cash, mining houses are putting investment
plans on hold, and orthodox World Bank and United Nations Development
Program strategies are not going to satisfy the Zimbabwean masses.
The organizations that
best represent those masses had demanded a neutral transitional
authority and socio-economic interventions, which Mbeki ignored,
even though the National People-s Convention made these demands
clearly in February.
As Zimbabwean activist
Elinor Sisulu put it last week, 'If I was sitting in Mbeki-s
powerful position, I know that I would have conducted myself very
differently. I would never ever have pulled out all stops and used
my power and influence to keep a ruthless and ageing dictator in
power. I would never have turned a blind eye to the violence meted
out to citizens in Zimbabwe. I would never have sat on a report
by my own generals, not only failing to act on that report, but
doing everything in my power to stave off pressure on the perpetrators.-
Zimbabwean elites are
getting this advice from Johannesburg, specifically from Investec-s
Roelof Horne: 'austerity from within-. South Africa-s
powerful Independent newspaper group editorialized that Mugabe/Tsvangirai
government should 'introduce drastic policies, including slashing
government spending and freeing up price, currency and other controls-
as 'conditions for receiving foreign aid.-
Mbeki just canceled his
trip to the United Nations, but Mugabe will try to claim legitimacy
as Zimbabwe-s head of state. To counteract their nonsense,
a Zimbabwean-born South African who will also be there on Tuesday
night, at the Brecht Forum, performing 'Marx in Soweto-,
Howard Zinn-s masterpiece play. No one knows more than Dennis
Brutus, the 83 year-old poet and anti-apartheid activist, about
Southern African resistance to elite oppression. Go see Dennis if
you are in NYC.
In Brutus- footsteps,
Tinashe Chimedza, a great Zimbabwean student activist, last week
penned this about Zimbabwe, an appropriate note to close on when
thinking of world financial and regional political celebrations
gone sour:
pass me the cognac
the elites scramble for power and profit
the poor become footnotes
we write epitaphs 'rest in peace Cde Tonde-
the bubbly flows
pass me the Borboun
am tired of the imported Cognac
more drivers, another motorcade
four more motorcades
another charade
dish me my share of toil
'ndakadashurwa- - any questions?
the rubble will eat tomorrow
who wants to jump with them anyway,
the commoners, teach them culture first
am waiting for my OBE
they are fodder, my cdes remind me
lets dance ball room tonite
on the bellies of the filth
*Patrick Bond
is the director of the UKZN Centre for Civil Society: www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs.
A version of this originally appeared as a ZNet commentary.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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