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Zimbabweans
cannot outsource their revolution
Jacob
Dhlamini
February 03, 2011
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=133219
The year is
only 34 days old and already it has seen the absolute demise of
one dictatorship (Tunisia), the near collapse of another (Egypt),
the rattling of a third (Jordan), the likely ruin of a fourth (Yemen)
and the possible failure of a fifth (Algeria). That, by any measure,
is a good start to what may be the most fundamental political change
in the Middle East since 1948, when the state of Israel was founded.
The drama of
the past 34 days was enhanced by the fact that two of the dictatorships
either to fall (Tunisia) or flirt with downfall (Egypt) were, until
recently, considered, especially by the US government, the most
stable and least likely to fall.
In fact, US
strategy in the Middle East has rested largely on an expensive peace
between Egypt and Israel bankrolled by the US. It is largely because
of this peace, brokered by former US president Jimmy Carter back
when he occupied the White House, that Egypt is one of the top three
recipients of military and other aid from the US, after Israel.
The peace rested on a firm understanding between the Americans,
Israelis and Egyptians, whose state is the largest and most politically
significant in the Middle East, that the other Arab-led dictatorships
in the Middle East posed little existential threat to Israel so
long as Egypt honoured its side of the Camp David agreement.
But Egypt now
looks likely to fall, meaning Egypt as we know it could change dramatically
as Egyptians, fed up with corruption, neglected by a statistically
impressive but empirically hopeless economy, and fed up with a leader,
Hosni Mubarak, who seemed to think he was fated by history to rule,
take to the streets to demand his ousting.
But it is not
only Mubarak-s Egypt that is likely to go into the proverbial
dustbin of history. The US policy of making nice with Mubarak while
ignoring his brutality against his political opponents and, occasionally,
using Mubarak-s apparatus of repression for the "rendition"
and torture of enemy combatants, will also have to change.
The last thing
the US wants is to, again, find itself backing the wrong side in
the wave of protests sweeping the Middle East. The US made that
mistake by backing a coup against a democratically elected government
in Iran in the 1950s, supporting Saddam Hussein and even plying
him with arms in the 1980s while he fought against the hated ayatollahs
of Iran, and abandoning, in Afghanistan, the mujahedeen, who had
helped the US give the hapless Soviets a taste of Vietnam. That
is why the US has been treading gingerly on this. That is why US
President Barack Obama has been frantically trying to sound allied
to both prodemocracy protesters and Mubarak at the same time. Obama
wants to be able to claim some credit should Egypt be delivered
finally from dictatorship.
But what is
the lesson of the recent events for southern Africa? In particular,
what lessons does the wave of protests sweeping the Middle East
have for Zimbabweans?
The most important
lesson to come out of Egypt and Tunisia, it seems to me, is that
revolutions cannot be outsourced. There has been something rather
obscene about the ways in which some human rights activists, Zimbabwean
and non-Zimbabwean, have presented the problems in Zimbabwe as if
they are entirely SA-s or, to be exact, Thabo Mbeki -s.
One got the impression sometimes that these activists wanted Mbeki
and South Africans in general to march on Harare. Some even suggested
SA invade Zimbabwe.
What these hysterical
calls did was absolve the prodemocracy movement in Zimbabwe of the
responsibility to take the lead in the fight against Robert Mugabe-s
dictatorship. Why is it, for example, that none of us who want to
see Mugabe out of office and on trial for all sorts of crimes have
bothered to ask why the Movement for Democratic Change, whose roots
are supposedly in Zimbabwe-s labour movement, has yet to organise
a successful strike, stayaway or other form of popular protest?
None of this
is to ignore the brave men and women, journalists, lawyers, farmers
and ordinary citizens who have protested against Mugabe-s
rule and paid with everything from their lives to their limbs and
property. The actions of these people must be recognised and honoured.
But they cannot and should not be the exception.
Zimbabweans
cannot outsource their revolution. They cannot leave the fight for
their freedom to others. Sure, they need support, solidarity and
the knowledge that the rest of the world is on their side. But they
cannot expect the fight to be led by outsiders. That, for me, is
what the Egyptians and the Tunisians have taught us.
Mubarak has
one of the most formidable repressive machineries in the world but
that has proved worthless in the face of popular protest. Voting
with their feet, as the millions of Zimbabweans have done by moving
to SA, Zambia, Botswana, Canada, Australia, the US and the UK, must
have been a difficult thing to do. But it is by no means courageous.
Courage is staring down a dictator, telling him to go and standing
your ground. That is what the North Africans have done. Let us hope
Zimbabweans learn from them.
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