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Zimbabwe:
Liberation nationalism, old and born again
Richard Saunders,
Africa Files
August 03, 2010
http://www.africafiles.org/article.asp?ID=24092
The historic defeat of
ZANU-PF in the February 2000 constitutional referendum by an alliance
of leading civil society organisations and the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC)1 marked a pivotal point in Zimbabwean politics (Bond
and Saunders, 2005). It was the first time the party had lost a
national poll since independence. After a decade of neoliberal reforms,
and rising economic dislocation and social protest that emerged
with the unwinding of the "liberation consensus" around
national development (Raftopoulos and Phimister, 2004), ZANU-PF
was faced with an unprecedented challenge on a political terrain
it had unilaterally dominated for more than a decade. With no coherent
policy compass in hand after the relegation of the 1980s redistributive
state and the jettisoning of structural adjustment in the late '90s,
declining economic indicators and fresh parliamentary elections
featuring a new party looming in early 2000s, ZANU-PF responded
by unleashing a series of violent interventions that announced its
abandonment of mass-democratic politics "business as usual".
A new self-styled "liberation politics" was born.
The
multiplying victims of party violence and state restructuring
In April 2000, the first
of an extended series of commercial farm invasions was launched
under the protection of, and often with the direct assistance and
orchestration of, the state and party structures. "Fast track"
land reform, as it became known, would take on wider significance
for ZANU-PF's economic programme and ideological repositioning in
the years ahead, and lead some (Moyo and Yeros, 2007) to portray
ZANU-PF as a paragon of militant African nationalism in the face
of globalisation in the post-Cold War epoch.2 For others, "jambanja"
marked the reintroduction of systematic political violence under
the patronage of the state, and more broadly, the subordination
of the state (particularly the realms of justice and law and order)
to the party's emerging new agenda. Soon after the land invasions
began, violence spilled from the rural areas onto the broader political
terrain. It would be regularised, institutionalised, "legalised"
- if not legitimated - in coming years by a wall of
repressive legislation that targeted rights to public association,
media and freedom of expression, citizenship and electoral participation,
among others.3
The primary
victims of these measures were the opposition MDC leadership, rank
and file members and supporters. But targets of repression also
included a range of civil society organisations - particularly
those which represented key constituencies in the popular sector
and had a sustained grounding in communities, like the national
labour movement, residents associations, human rights defenders
and professional cadres including teachers, doctors and nurses.
An enormous and incalculable cost in lives, health, security and
organisational resources was paid as ZANU-PF defaulted to violent
coercion as a means of confronting the spectre of electoral defeat
in 2000, 2002 and subsequent polls. One 2006 report documented more
than fifteen thousand politically-motivated gross human rights abuses
since 2000, with more than 90 percent of these perpetrated by ruling
party and state officials against perceived ZANU-PF opponents (Zimbabwe
NGO Human Rights Forum, 2006). Murder, torture, rape, beatings,
illegal detentions and property destruction, in oscillating waves
related to electoral cycles and campaigns, made state-enabled political
violence an established feature of the political landscape by mid-decade.
Operation
Murambatsvina (Clear Out the Rubbish), a 2005 post-election
security forces-led campaign directed primarily at MDC-supporting
poorer urban areas, signalled the commitment and ruthlessness with
which systematic violence was pursued. More than 200,000 homes were
bulldozed, large swathes of informal sector infrastructure was pulled
down, more than 20,000 people were summarily arrested and perhaps
more than one million in all were displaced and dumped (UN Special
Envoy on Human Settlements Issues in Zimbabwe, 2005).4 At the same
time, ZANU-PF officials suggested that informal sector permits,
licenses and rights to work would, in the future, be subject to
effective political approval. The economic misery visited on the
urban poor, particularly those displaced to the informal sector
by the crash of agriculture, industry and mining, helped fuel new
waves of underground migrancy to neighbouring South Africa.
Another important casualty
of ZANU-PF's new politics was the state itself. The party's coercive
strategy was underpinned by - indeed required - a corresponding
attack on the institutions of government built in the 1980s: the
judiciary and security forces, state bureaucracy, parliamentary
institutions, media and information structures. These public institutions
now threatened ZANU-PF's commandism by their grounding in the "rule
of law", established administrative procedures, accountability
and "professionalism". What was left of the welfarist
"development state" of the 1980s in the wake of 1990s'
neoliberal policies was selectively and effectively demolished in
the course of its subordination to ZANU-PF's instrumental interests
in the 2000s. Sections of the ruling party were also targeted. In
a selective house-cleaning led by the war vets, local party officials
were summarily thrown out of structures under force of violence
and with the backing of the national party leadership.
The clearing out of established
state development and party structures helped exacerbate an economic
crisis that had taken root in the 1990s, and spiralled out of control
in the 2000s. With the decline of commercial agriculture, deepening
shortages of foreign exchange and slumping domestic demand in the
early 2000s, Zimbabwe became the world's fastest-collapsing peacetime
economy, contracting by as much as 60 percent in the period 2000-06
(Ledriz, 2006).5 Inflation exploded past 700 percent in 2005 and
then went supersonic, as government printed more money and repeatedly
revalued and reissued currency in a failing bid to keep up with
crashing market confidence. Before it finally went out of effective
circulation in 2009, annual inflation had reached over 225 million
percent. Inflation and crashing production saw sharp falls in formal
employment, and rising poverty. By 2004 formal sector wages had
fallen from 95 percent of the 2001 Poverty Datum Line to less than
50 percent. By 2006 wages fell further, to pre-1980 levels. By then
perhaps 80 percent of Zimbabweans lived in profound poverty. Hundreds
of thousands more escaped poverty and violence by leaving the country,
to South Africa but also further afield. Some reports estimated
that as many as 3 million Zimbabweans were living in South Africa
by 2010 - certainly at least half that number would be a conservative
estimate.
Operation:
Political Survival
This sort of disastrous
performance might have spelled political death for many political
parties. But ZANU-PF survived by playing to its strengths: on the
one hand, its access to the instruments of organised violence and
the state electoral bureaucracy; on the other, its peerless liberation
credentials. Thus ZANU-PF's unique linked claims to institutionalised
violence and the mantle of restorative nationalist justice became
the hallmarks of its election campaigns throughout the decade. If
state and ruling party violence increasingly characterised the election
process, it was in defence of national interests and the gains of
the struggle; if the opposition was short-changed, it was in the
name of defeating the agenda of recolonisation; if electoral processes
were flawed by imposed international standards, they nonetheless
produced results that were favourable to Africanist aspirations;
and so forth. This recasting of electoral standards and legitimacy
was peddled with considerable success in southern Africa, and more
widely on the continent, even as it failed to find traction inside
the country.
Most independent observers
now concur that the MDC likely won the vote in every national election
since 2000. The MDC's main problem, however, was in winning recognition
of this reality, and the corresponding transfer of power . Here,
the enabling role of ZANU-PF's southern African neighbours and erstwhile
allies in tolerating the party's overt manipulation of electoral
processes emerged as a defining and perplexing element in Zimbabwe's
continuing political crisis. Despite the refrain frequently repeated
by SADC governments, that Zimbabweans must "solve their problems
by themselves", every attempt to do this through the ballot
box since 2000 has been frustrated by the interventions of regional
and continental powers - interventions skewed, almost without
exception, in favour of one political player.
Was this a sign of consolidation
of an old-boys club among ageing liberation movement ruling parties?
Of a cynical supportive stance for local nationalist-clad regimes,
no matter how soiled the cloth, against the insistent and often
condescending critiques of northern donors and rights activists?
Or worse: of a strategy of collective mutually-assured political
survival in the longer term?
Yes, partly. But while
regional responses to the Zimbabwe crisis often reflected such concerns,
there were other factors that spoke to the continuing fragility
of the wider terrain of mass-democratic politics in much of the
region. Distrust of, or lack of familiarity with, the MDC among
many regional ruling parties worked in ZANU-PF's favour. It seems
clear that the model of a labour movement-led alliance of civic
and popular forces is not one which nationalist regimes in the region
wish to nurture, lest it lead by example. ZANU-PF worked hard, with
the resources of the state behind it, at maintaining a diplomatic
foot in the door to key regional spaces, while seeking to jam the
MDC's fingers in it whenever possible.
At the same time, relatively
weak and ineffectual links among regional civil society organisations
helped to undermine their own capacity to lobby home governments
in the region. In key countries, notably South Africa, civic interventions
with government around the Zimbabwe issue were complicated by the
dynamics of relations among civil society organisations and national
ruling parties - which ZANU-PF was quick to exploit.
In important ways, then,
ZANU-PF enjoyed a relatively open space to play out its nationalist
hand in the region - an advantage that dovetailed powerfully
with its efforts to marginalise international initiatives against
ZANU-PF's electoral and human rights abuses, while appealing to
SADC to oversee "normalisation" of the political order
inside the country. The outcome was a fragile political equilibrium
that saw ZANU-PF come through a series of flawed elections still
in power, and dominating a thwarted, increasingly divided opposition
MDC - the party split into two entirely separate entities
in 2005 following deepening leadership and strategic wrangles -
and a similarly factionalised, weakened and wearied civil society.
Class
formation, revisited
This uneasy political
status quo , placed against the backdrop of a weakened state, low
transparency and pervasive influence of securocrats, facilitated
a significant restructuring of class interests in the ruling party
leadership in the 2000s. It saw the institutionalisation of elite-organised
violence at the centre of Zimbabwe's political economy. At critical
junctures of political challenge (like elections) and accumulation
opportunity (whether on the land, in diamond fields or in urban
vending markets), organised violent interventions would prove decisive
in sustaining the ZANU-PF ruling coalition. By 2010, this fact -
not the choices of Zimbabweans as expressed through their votes
- would come to weigh heavily on the terrain of national electoral
politics and economic policy-making.
The massive shift of
agrarian commercial assets in the first part of the decade -
a process which is still not fully understood and about which reliable
evidence remains thin - initiated a period of unprecedented
reallocation of public and private productive assets. Much of this
was hidden from view, the exact identities of the players and competing
political factions unannounced. But it is clear from glimpsed cases
of shifting ownership in commercial agriculture, parastatals, public
infrastructure, mining and services, among other sectors, that substantial
factors of accumulation agglomerated in political-security business
networks; that this happened through irregular means, beyond the
direct and transparent control of the state bureaucracy and legal
system; and that this unfolding of events had profoundly negative
implications for the resuscitation of a democratically-driven development
state.
Restructuring of the
political-business elite in the 2000s was not simply a matter of
including new "briefcase businessmen" in the circles of
state-dependent accumulation - a phenomenon seen earlier in
the 1980s when politically connected entrepreneurs used access to
import licenses, foreign currency and other rationed production
inputs, and in the '90s under the Economic Structural Adjustment
Programme, when soft loans, government contracts and pressures for
"indigenisation" fleetingly provided new points of business
entry for party loyalists. Those earlier forms of primitive accumulation
were relatively openly structured, and animated and sustained to
a large extent by the ZANU-PF government's policy. Rather, in the
2000s, elite accumulation increasingly went off-grid: out of reach
of transparent regulation by government; primarily benefiting a
small cadre without systematic "empowerment" redistributive
concerns; and frequently, overlapping with regional "parallel
markets" and criminal networks. If accumulation and new class
formation were driven in the first two decades of independence by
state-based policy-making, in the third it was often hidden behind
a veil of secrecy, operating on the edges of the state and fuelled
and protected by business-security networks patronised by competing
ZANU-PF factional blocs with links to the military and political
wings of the party. Indeed the prospect of a rehabilitated, professional
Zimbabwean state stood in the way of the new accumulation project
- whereas in the past it had been employed to nurture it.
The convergence
of political, security and business interests in opaque and powerful
networks was chillingly illustrated in the emergence of Zimbabwe's
own "blood
diamonds" in 2006 (Saunders, 2010).6 The discovery of alluvial
diamonds in the eastern district of Marange was soon followed by
the arrival of state security agencies, led by the police and army,
to "secure" the diamond fields against illegal miners
and smuggling networks. In short time, reports of extensive human
rights abuses started flowing from the area, along with indications
that security forces personnel were involved in illegal mining and
smuggling. In successive military-style and violent "operations",
hundreds of informal miners, traders and innocent locals died violently
at the hands of security forces; untold numbers suffered rape, assault,
illegal detention, forced labour, harassment and, for locals living
near the diamond fields, forced removals.
Opposition parties and
civil society, including the media, struggled to prevent the violence
and mounting corruption and criminality. So did the Kimberley Process
Certification Scheme (KP), the international organisation with a
mandate to certify "clean" rough diamonds for export.
The KP and its consensus-driven processes was repeatedly manipulated
by ZANU-PF to blunt its investigative and censuring powers. Meanwhile,
local civil society organisations and other investigators working
on Marange diamonds were prevented from freely accessing the region
to assist victims of rights abuses and compile evidence of who was
responsible for, and benefiting from, the chaos.
Marange starkly illustrated
a contradiction at the centre of ZANU-PF's nationalist project v.2000
: the entrenchment of narrowed elitist securitized power in the
state and economy, amid the deepening exclusion of constituencies
that previously had formed its bedrock support. The political outcome
was widespread desertion of the party by voters - a problem
that has been manageable through election manipulation and the tolerance
of SADC friends.
But it was the economic
repercussions of ZANU-PF's new tack, punctuated by continuing donor
and investor boycotts, hyperinflationary spending under Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Gideon Gono and the crash of the formal
sector economy, which undermined the sustainability of the ZANU-PF
accumulation project. "Legitimacy" therefore became a
key sought-after economic input, and ZANU-PF identified new elections
as the key means to achieve it while retaining overall control of
the transition to "normality".
An inconvenient
truth, and its aftermath
In this context,
the 2008
parliamentary and presidential elections were a hallmark of
the contradictory political and economic imperatives within the
restructured ZANU-PF status quo . The elections were held under
slightly improved rules of procedure negotiated by South African
mediators that temporarily closed loopholes which in the past had
been used to control the poll count if not the vote itself. ZANU-PF
had agreed to these changes, sufficiently confident of gaining a
plurality in the context of a divided opposition - part of
which had already expressed interest in a government of "national
unity". But the party had woefully misjudged the situation:
the depth of anger towards ZANU-PF, even in rural areas where it
had once ruled unchallenged; the opposition and civil society's
careful attention to vote counting procedures, which made it difficult
to cook the count; and the enduring popularity of the main bloc
of the MDC led by Morgan Tsvangirai, which made large gains in all
parts of the country, among all class and ethnic constituencies.
The surprise
results of the first round of voting on March 29, 2008 (the combined
opposition MDC won 109 seats to ZANU-PF's 97) suddenly threatened
to set in motion a transfer of power. There were days of ominous
silence from ZANU-PF and its sounding board state media -
reruns on television of FIFA World Cup Finals of years past, endless
American action movies, Swahili children's programming, anything
except the officially indeterminate state of Zimbabwean current
affairs - as the old guard debated how to extricate itself
from the mess of democracy. Its answer became clear as state security
forces, war vets and youth militias were deployed to viciously attack
MDC officials and supporters, but also, significantly, traditional
ZANU-PF areas that had turned against the party in March. With this
- an unprecedented and sustained attack on ZANU-PF's heartland
structures and constituents, unambiguously labelled "Operation
Makavhoterapapi?" ("Where did you put your vote?")
- the new ruling coalition of elitist securitized interests
in ZANU-PF announced the death of the old mass-based movement that
had prosecuted the liberation war. They also highlighted the central
challenge facing any transition in the near term: the security apparatus,
namely the ZANU-PF-aligned military, now openly claimed the role
of arbiter of power in any transfer of authority to a new political
order.7
Since 2008,
the threat of institutionalised violence by state security agencies
has been a key vector shaping the trajectory of political restructuring,
dragging the country away from the edge of democratic transition
and all of the uncertainties that holds for the ZANU-PF leadership.
For Tsvangirai's MDC, the perception of this military threat by
others - including most SADC governments, foreign donors and
diplomats - was a key obstacle to securing recognition of
its win in March 2008 (Kwinjeh,
2008). The power-sharing Global
Political Agreement (GPA) signed in September 2008 was effectively
imposed on the MDC through diplomatic and coercive pressure, and
had little to do with the fair and accurate representation of Zimbabweans'
political voice as expressed through their votes.
Compromised
Equilibrium?
With such problematic
origins it is unsurprising that the GPA has been ineffective in
meeting its key objectives: among them, demilitarizing the political
space, tackling rights abuses, preparing a new constitution, readying
the country for a new round of free and fair elections within two
years, and importantly, reintroducing a sense of order grounded
in economic recovery.
In contrast,
the GPA increasingly appears to have been most efficient in serving
the instrumental needs of the ZANU-PF elite. It has provided a flimsy
but sufficient veneer of legitimacy while facilitating ZANU-PF's
continued access to strategic levers of state power - including
the defence, security, police, foreign affairs and information portfolios,
as well as control over state prosecutions through the Attorney-General's
office, and responsibility for strategic resource extraction sectors
like mining and agriculture. These instruments have been turned
overwhelmingly to meet partisan ends (Research
and Advocacy Unit, 2010).8 And while incremental gains have
been made - for example, disastrous hyperinflation ended with
the dollarization of the economy, although continuing dollarization
is rife with hazards in the longer term - these are primarily
gains only in comparison to manifestly unacceptable and unsustainable
conditions of the recent past.
In the meantime, continuing
secretive and partisan exploitation of national resources, including
assets in the agrarian and mining sectors, stand the risk of fuelling
renewed capacity for ZANU-PF violence in the future as political-cum-security
business networks move to defend themselves on the terrain of the
state. Here, Marange is a sobering example of not only the depth
and extent of political-security-criminal linkages; but also the
efficiency with which they have made use of state power and illegal
violence; the relative weaknesses of regulatory bodies and oversight
institutions; and the comparatively high tolerance of governments
in the region - for whatever reason - for such overtly
shady behaviour.
Some of the worst human
rights abuses at Marange occurred after the GPA was signed in September
2008. In ways that would be symptomatic for the unity government
more broadly, the GPA state appeared to nurture the consolidation
of criminality at Marange under the direction of security and political
interests. Using its strategic ministerial powers, ZANU-PF severely
restricted access to Marange or information about developments there,
amid documented allegations of continuing rights abuses, revenue
diversion and illegal exports of diamonds by the state mining parastatal.
The MDC seemed helpless to alter the situation; as was KP, as ZANU-PF
skilfully lobbied regional and other allies within the KP to hold
off censure, while attacking and threatening local civil society
diamond researchers working in Marange.9 For some, the new government's
handling of Marange represented a "litmus test" of sorts:
if the grip of overtly criminal and politically partisan diamond
networks could not be dislodged by the new government, what hope
was there for the wider "normalisation" of the national
political economy?
Long
and difficult struggle, again
In mid 2010, the outcome
of the "litmus test" of diamonds remains unclear, and
stands as an example of the new and complex kinds of challenges
faced more broadly across southern and eastern Africa by democratic
movements calling for political and economic participation and equity.
Is it possible to establish viable transitional government structures
incorporating powerful constituencies with a vested interest in
preventing real transition and transformation of political-economic
systems? Can regional democracies and economies be counted on for
meaningful support for change, particularly when similar voices
of change become stronger across borders and threaten old orders
and tired, threadbare political rhetoric? Can entrenched security
and business interests, increasingly extended across regional borders,
be effectively disinterred by weakened states and vulnerable civil
society constituencies? Thirty years on from independence, the last
vestiges of Zimbabwe's popular development state project lie in
ruins, and civil society voices demanding a return to authentic
participatory politics remain under attack and divided.
Zimbabwe's lessons for
the region are not hopeful, and point to the residual creative survival
capacities of late-nationalist ruling elites and the corrupt and
sometimes criminalized networks of accumulation they helped establish.
A crucial remaining question is whether anyone or any institutions,
in southern Africa or beyond, has the willpower and the means to
challenge this situation. The regional proliferation of late-nationalist
regimes, each with their own networks of politically-brokered accumulation,
assembled behind veils of structured corruption and extensive concealment;
the fall-out of market excesses and ineffective supervisory regulation;
and the weakness and halting, mostly ineffective interventions of
international governments and organisations; suggest that the struggle
to recoup popular control over markets, states and democratic transitions
will be a long and difficult one.
Notes
1. The MDC,
a party formed in 1999, was established under the patronage of the
labour movement and other leading membership-based civil society
organisations. The bulk of its initial leadership and organisational
capacity came from the labour structures of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions and its affiliates, although it soon
grew substantially to include a broad range of social forces.
2. For a contrasting
view to Moyo and Yeros that considers ZANU-PF in the 2000s in the
context of fascism, see Timothy Scarnecchia (2006).
3. For example,
the "Public
Order and Security Act" , which replaced the draconian
Rhodesian "Law and Order (Maintenance ) Act", and the
"Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act", which targeted
media houses, journalists and the communication of information.
Both were rushed through parliament by ZANU-PF in advance of the
2002 presidential elections (as were other Acts amending and restricting
citizenship and voting rights, rights of monitoring agencies to
observe and report on voting, and so forth).
4. See also
reports by a range of local civil society and academic reasearchers
(Bracking, 2005; Solidarity
Peace Trust, 2005; Zimbabwe NGO Human Rights Forum, 2005).
5. All GDP, wage and
poverty figures in this section from Ledriz, 2006.
6. See also recent published
reports documenting the role of security forces and political interests
in Marange (Partnership Africa-Canada, 2010; Global Witness, 2010;
Human Rights Watch, 2009; Zimbabwe civil society coalition on blood
diamonds, 2009).
7. The orgy of violence
perpetrated in support of ZANU-PF between the March and June polls
saw more than 150 opposition supporters killed and thousands assaulted
and displaced from their home voting areas (Human Rights Watch,
2008; Solidarity Peace Trust, 2008). Coupled with extraordinary
post-vote interventions by the Mugabe-appointed electoral commission,
including its delay of more than a month in announcing the results
of the first round of presidential voting while ZANU-PF violence
raged, dispelled any notion that a second round of voting for President
in June could be legitimate. Tsvangirai, who had officially polled
47.9 percent to Mugabe's 43.2 percent in March, subsequently withdrew
from the second-round run-off, leaving Mugabe to "win"
with 86 percent of the vote. The June vote result was widely rejected
- also by official African observer teams, including the Pan-African
Parliament Election Observer Mission, African Union Observer Mission
and SADC's own team.
8. This paper includes
a critique of another position more supportive of sustaining the
GPA (Solidarity Peace Trust, 2010).
9. In June 2010,
Farai Maguwu, director of the Centre
for Research and Development, a key organisation investigating
Marange diamonds, was arrested and held for passing on information
critical of the Zimbabwe Government. This latest attack, designed
to silence a leading critic and his organisation in the midst of
a KP review of Marange's export-worthiness, reflected ZANU-PF's
extreme sensitivity on the issue of the lucrative illegal diamonds
sector - as well as the benefits of its hard-line approach.
At the KP Intercessional Meeting in late June 2010, where Zimbabwe
was the centre of debate, ZANU-PF's international friends and allies
again saved Marange's criminalised mining regime from suspension.
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