|
Back to Index
When torture is dismissed
Bill Fletcher
Jr.*
June 30, 2009
http://www.blackcommentator.com/330/330_aw_when_torture_is_dismissed.html
Many people
on the Left have difficulty addressing the issue of torture. Certainly
when the torture is carried out by imperialists, there is no problem
condemning it. But what happens when torture is carried out by organizations
or governments that claim to be progressive, anti-imperialist, or
even on the Left? At that moment there is often silence, sort of
a freeze-frame.
Most recently
I have found myself badgered by emails from an insulting individual
who happens to be a fanatic supporter of Zimbabwean President Robert
Mugabe. On one level, this is par for the course. Despite my stand
on countless issues, there exists a small collection of individuals
who believe that the sun rises and sets based on one's stand on
President Mugabe. Thus, due to my criticisms of the Mugabe clique,
I have become el Diablo. So be it.
What was interesting,
however, was that in both this experience as well as several others,
when I have raised that I know people - not just know OF, but know
people - who have been tortured by the Mugabe regime, there is complete
silence. The statement is not even acknowledged. Then the silence
breaks and the polemics continue as if nothing was ever mentioned.
In general,
the Left has four main responses to allegations of torture carried
out by progressive organizations and/or governments. These include:
- Denial: It
is all a lie; never happened.
- Minimize:
It is an aberration, committed by rogue elements.
- Silence:
let's pretend that it will all go away.
- Relativism:
it may have happened, but it is not as bad as what the capitalists
do.
We on the Left
are so afraid that any acknowledgement of a crime committed by a
progressive or so-called progressive will give aid and comfort to
the enemy that we respond in such a way as to discredit ourselves
and our mission. I understand this. In the 1970s and early
1980s I could not believe allegations that were made against the
Khmer Rouge in Kampuchea/Cambodia. I simply could not believe that
a political movement that had carried out such a heroic struggle
against a US puppet regime (Lon Nol's) and united the country would
descend into such fanaticism. Yet they had and each time that criticisms
were raised and went unanswered by segments of the Left, our credibility
plummeted.
Today we have
the case of the Mugabe regime. At this very moment there is an attempt
at a unity government between the Mugabe group and the main opposition
(Movement for a Democratic Change). Such an effort should be supported,
including by the dropping of sanctions that have been instituted
by the USA and other countries. This, however, does not clean the
slate. Torture, including rape-as-repression, has been too widely
documented to dismiss. While the people of Zimbabwe will have to
settle their own accounts in a manner that they deem appropriate,
that does not mean that those of us on the outside can or should
remain agnostic, and it certainly should not mean that we live in
a world of denial.
If the Left
is to hold the moral high ground it must mean that it is prepared
to engage in criticism, including constructive criticism, when crimes
are uncovered. Certainly every action must be put in a context,
and there is no doubt that actions are at times carried out by or
in political movements and governments that are not sanctioned by
the leadership. Yet when there is a pattern, any and every attempt
to dismiss it weakens our ability to insist on a practice of consistent
democracy. If torture is wrong when carried out by pro-capitalists,
for example, both because it is unreliable as well as immoral, how
then can we on the Left tolerate it under any circumstances? How
can we so quickly dismiss as `fabricated stories' the reports of
rape-as-repression whether they emerge from Zimbabwe or from the
Sudan? The fact that these matters are reported by the mainstream
white, capitalist press does not mean that they can be rejected
out of hand. It should mean, instead, that we take investigation
seriously in order to uncover the truth and separate that from pro-imperialist
dis-information.
The case for
self-determination and sovereignty for Zimbabwe and against any
efforts by the USA, Britain or any other country to destabilize
the situation is not helped by denial of the often vicious repression
(including torture) that has been meted out against the opposition.
If anything, denial is met with an unanticipated consequence at
the mass level: democratic-minded people can often naively throw
their support for so-called "humanitarian interventions"
by the big powers.
*BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfrica
Forum and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized
Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice (University of California
Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor in the USA.
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.
TOP
|