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Lessons of Zimbabwe - Response to Mahmood Mamdani
Timothy
Scarnecchia, Jocelyn Alexander and 33 others, London Review of Books
January 01, 2009
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n01/letters.html
For a number of scholars, Mahmood Mamdani-s Lessons
of Zimbabwe requires a further response, given Mamdani-s
stature as a scholar and public intellectual (LRB, 4 December 2008).
Some aspects of his argument are uncontroversial: there was a real
demand for land redistribution - even the World Bank was calling
for it in the late 1990s as the best way forward in Zimbabwe -
and some of the Western powers- original pronouncements and
actions were hypocritical. There is a real danger, however, in simplifying
the lessons of Zimbabwe. It isn-t just a matter of stark ethnic
dichotomies, the urban-rural divide, or the part played by 'the
West-.
One of the more
difficult tasks for scholars working on Zimbabwe is to convince
peers working on other areas of Africa to look more deeply at the
crisis and not to be fooled by Mugabe-s rhetoric of imperialist
victimisation. Mamdani has, unfortunately, fallen in with this rhetoric
by characterising Zimbabwean history and politics as fundamentally
a battle between what he sees as an urban-based opposition, supported
by the West, and a peasant-based ruling party besieged by external
forces. This flight of fantasy portrays Mugabe and his Zanu-PF cronies
as heroes of a landless peasantry (which is how they see themselves)
and the state - backed up by the paramilitary violence of
war veterans and others - as the vanguard of a peasant revolution.
We suggest that Mamdani acquaint himself with the large body of
Zimbabwean scholarship, which is easily available, rather than selectively
using the arguments of scholars such as Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros
on land reform, and Gideon Gono, Mugabe-s Reserve Bank governor,
as his source on sanctions. Citing Gono is rather like using Milton
Obote-s writings as a source for conditions in Uganda in the
1960s and 1970s. A starting point for more informed scholarship
is the recent Bulletin
of the Association of Concerned Africa Scholars.
Mamdani-s
portrayal of Zimbabwe-s opposition politics is insulting to
those who continue to endure so much in their struggle to build
a better Zimbabwe. He argues that urban trade unions have always
been marginal to the nationalist movement because of their supposed
'Ndebele leadership-, and that the current opposition
follows in this 'weak- trade-union tradition as well
as being in thrall to Western interests. What he doesn-t mention
is the trade unions- hard-fought battle against repression
before and after 1980. There were many challenges to overcome, among
which ethnic politics was hardly the most prominent. That leaders
such as Morgan Tsvangirai managed to reshape the Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions (ZCTU) from what had been a pro-Zanu organisation
into a viable political opposition by the early 1990s reflects an
Africa-wide and Africa-based phenomenon that Mamdani apparently
missed. By accepting Zanu-PF-s argument that the MDC is primarily
limited to urban areas and is the product of the West, Mamdani-s
account loses credibility.
Mamdani has
also sugar-coated his portrayal of political violence in Zimbabwe.
He fails even to mention that many 'peasants- in Shona-speaking
Zanu-PF strongholds turned against Mugabe and major Zanu-PF leaders
in the March 2008 elections. It was this reversal that sparked a
new round of state-sponsored violence against the same Shona peasantry
that Mamdani cites as the beneficiaries of Mugabe-s benevolent
dictatorship. In addition, during the months preceding the run-off
election (April-June 2008), food relief was denied to rural areas,
leaving the World Food Programme and other groups to scramble to
re-establish supply to the Zimbabwean peasantry Mamdani suggests
are at the centre of Zanu-PF-s concern. Repressive legislation
and actions by Zanu-PF activists are magically transformed by Mamdani
into acts of generosity to outsiders. After noting discrimination
against farm workers in gaining access to land on the grounds they
or 'their elders- came from another country, Mamdani
adds that 'some were given citizenship.- Yet he omits
the fact that just before the 2002 presidential election the Zanu-PF
government removed citizenship from many farm workers and other
Zimbabweans whose parents or grandparents had non-Zimbabwean citizenship
rights. The disenfranchisement of tens of thousands of perceived
opposition supporters disappears in Mamdani-s analysis.
Mamdani-s
contention that the West, not Mugabe and the Zanu-PF government,
is responsible for the current crisis is as dangerous as it is wrong.
By selectively citing instances over the past eight years when the
West has cancelled donor funding, Mamdani gives the impression that
the West has not been involved in sustaining life in Zimbabwe. The
reality is that there are whole sections of the Zimbabwean population
that the Zanu-PF leadership would rather punish with starvation
than allow to support the opposition. 'We would be better
off with only six million people, with our own [ruling party] people
who supported the liberation struggle,- Didymus Mutasa, one
of the key insiders in Zanu-PF, said in 2002, when drought again
threatened to kill thousands of rural Zimbabweans. 'We don-t
want all these extra people.- Western food aid has been a
lifeline for 'these extra people- - when the state
has allowed access.
Sanctions cannot
excuse the callous disregard for human life Mugabe and his associates
have shown, dating back to the Gukurahundi between 1983 and 1986
(which Mamdani glosses over as a brief bout of violence following
from the tension between Zanu-PF and the 'Ndebele unions-
in 1986), or the repeated land seizures which have been going on
since the 1980s, the forced removals, violent reprisals, and the
withholding of food aid. Furthermore, Mamdani-s suggestion
that the fall in direct investment in Zimbabwe is the result of
sanctions is dishonest. There are no sanctions against direct investment
in Zimbabwe, as shown by Anglo American-s willingness to invest
$400 million in Zimbabwe during the summer of 2008 to protect access
to platinum mines. There have been large investments from South
Africa, India and China, as Mugabe has bartered away the nation-s
resources for short-term interests. It is the kleptocracy and violence
fostered by Mugabe and Co that has scared off other investors, not
sanctions.
At a time when
thousands of people in Zimbabwe are threatened by a cholera epidemic
- in part at least as a consequence of Zanu-PF-s decision
to replace MDC municipal officials with Zanu-PF 'urban governors-
- and international donors are scrambling to help deal with
the collapse of the health sector and widespread hunger, intellectuals
such as Mamdani should display more responsibility and less posturing
in their attempts to draw meaningful lessons from Zimbabwe.
Jocelyn Alexander,
Linacre College, Oxford
Andrea Arrington, University of Arkansas
Michael Bratton, Michigan State University
Bill Derman, Michigan State University
William J. Dewey, The University of Tennessee
Matthew Engelke, London School of Economics
Linda Freeman, Carleton University
Petina Gappah, Zimbabwean writer and lawyer
Kenneth Good, RMIT University Melbourne
David Gordon, Bowdoin College Amanda Hammar, Nordic Africa Institute
David McDermott Hughes, Rutgers University
Diana Jeater, University of the West of England
Tony King, University of the West of England
Bill Kinsey, University of Zimbabwe
Norma Kriger, Cornell University
Todd Leedy, University of Florida
JoAnn McGregor, University College London
Clapperton Chakanetsa Mavhunga, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Showers Mawowa, University of KwaZulu Natal
David Maxwell, Keele University
Donald Mead, Michigan State University
John Metzler, Michigan State University
David Moore, University of Johannesburg
Shylock Muyengwa, University of Florida
Blair Rutherford, Carleton University
John S. Saul, York University
Richard Saunders, York University
Timothy Scarnecchia, Kent State University, Ohio
Anne Schneller, Michigan State University
Marja Spierenburg, Vrije University of Amsterdam
Colin Stoneman, JSAS Editorial Coordinator
Blessing-Miles Tendi, Oxford University
Wendy Urban-Mead, Bard College
Elaine Windrich, Stanford University
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