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The
'mubaraking' of Gaddafi, Maliki, Mugabe and others
Patrick Bond,
Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal
February 27, 2011
http://links.org.au/node/2190
The late South
African anti-apartheid poet-activist Dennis Brutus occasionally
used "Seattle", the name of a city in the northwestern
United States, as a verb. We should "Seattle Copenhagen",
he said in late 2009, to prevent the global North from doing a climate
deal in their interests, against Africa-s.
The point was
to communicate his joy that in December 1999, the efforts of tens
of thousands of civil society protesters outside the Seattle convention
centre and a handful of patriotic African negotiators inside together
scuppered the Millennium Round meeting of a stubborn ruling crew:
the World Trade Organization. Their pro-corporate, free-trade agenda
never recovered.
Although a decade
later Brutus died, his verb-play signalling a democratic society
rising against tyranny lives on if we consider the shaken ruling
gangs of Libya, Iraq, Zimbabwe and Durban in South Africa, each
a product of scandal-ridden crony capitalism, and each impervious
to popular demands that they quit. After Tunisia and Egypt, where
Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak lost power in recent weeks, a growing
cohort of now fragile dictatorships are experiencing a dose of "mubaraking"
by hordes of non-violent democrats.
British
support for Gaddafi
Libya is the
ripest regime to fall, but London-s generous military aid
and support from politicians like former prime minister Tony Blair,
oil company BP, arms-deal facilitator Prince Andrew and London School
of Economics (LSE) intellectuals seem to have emboldened Muammar
Gaddafi and his family, leaving open the question of how many more
hundreds - or thousands - the lunatic will kill on his
way down.
Gaddafi may
try to hang on, with his small band of loyalists, allegedly bolstered
by sub-Saharan African mercenaries - potentially including
Zimbabweans, according to the Harare media - helping Gaddafi
for a $16,000 payoff each. After Gaddafi zigzagged to a pro-Western
stance in 2004 by demobilising weapons of mass destruction in exchange
for closure on the PanAm airline bombing and subsequent sanctions,
some millions of the family-s ill-gotten wealth were showered
on the academic crowd most favoured by Blair.
Blair-s
"Third Way" political advisor, former London School
of Economics director Lord Anthony Giddens, visited the Libyan dictator
in 2007, pronouncing: "As one-party states go, Libya is not
especially repressive. Gaddafi seems genuinely popular . . . Will
real progress be possible only when Gaddafi leaves the scene? I
tend to think the opposite. If he is sincere in wanting change,
as I think he is, he could play a role in muting conflict that might
otherwise arise as modernisation takes hold."
To help "mute
conflict", as Giddens might have it, British weaponry is mainly
being deployed against Libyans in the capital Tripoli, for Gaddafi-s
army seems to have defected nearly everywhere else. Muammar-s
second oldest son (and most likely successor) Saif al-Gaddafi -
who has vowed to "fight to the last minute, until the last
bullet" - was awarded a doctoral degree from the LSE
and his foundation then gave £1.5 million to its Centre for
Global Governance.
The centre-s
money-blinded director, Professor David Held, remarked at the time:
"It is a generous donation from an NGO committed to the promotion
of civil society and the development of democracy."
But to clear-sighted
LSE students, that funding "was not obtained through legitimate
enterprise but rather through 42 years of shameless exploitation
and brutal oppression of the Libyan people", as one put it,
and so a sit-in ensued last week to demand that Held transfer the
funding back to assist Gaddafi-s victims.
So far Held
has only agreed to halt the North African reform research underway
with the Gaddafi money, not return it, and last week his lame excuses
for the murderous Saif sickened former admirers (myself included).
In the same
spirit, several African civil society organisations and Archibishop
Emeritus Desmond Tutu insisted on February 25 that the African Union
(AU) act against Gaddafi, on grounds that "Article 3 of the
Constitutive Act of the AU lists the promotion of peace, security
and stability on the continent as one of its key objectives. Despite
this, the AU and African governments have been slow to react."
South
African arms to Gaddafi
Sorry, don-t
expect peace promotion from the African National Congress government
in South Africa. Late 2010, the chair of South Africa-s National
Conventional Arms Control Committee, justice minister Jeff Radebe,
approved the sale of 100 South African sniper rifles and more than
50,000 rounds of ammunition to Gaddafi. Any references to human
rights in the committee-s deliberations are already considered
a joke, but Radebe may now have some serious bloodstains on his
reputation.
The civil society/Tutu
statement continued: "The three African countries that sit
on the UN Security Council - South Africa, Nigeria and Gabon
- as representatives of the continent have a special responsibility
to ensure that the people of Libya are protected from grave human
rights violations constituting crimes against humanity."
But all three
also have substantial popular uprisings underway internally.
Iraq
Looking eastward
from Libya to Iraq, the US-installed government of Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki was protested by tens of thousands on February 25,
in a "Day of Rage".
According to
Washington Post reporters, state security forces opened fire, killing
29 and arresting "300 prominent journalists, artists and lawyers
who took part in nationwide demonstrations, in what some of them
described as an operation to intimidate Baghdad intellectuals who
hold sway over popular opinion".
The Iraqis were
"handcuffed, blindfolded, beaten and threatened with execution
by soldiers from an army intelligence unit".
Iraqi protester
demands "ranged from more electricity and jobs, to ending
corruption, reflecting a dissatisfaction with government that cuts
across sectarian and class lines", according to the Post.
The day was "organized, at least in part, by middle-class,
secular intellectuals" against whom Maliki-s troops
"fired water cannons, sound bombs and live bullets to disperse
crowds". Shades of Saddam.
Moving south
and west, other democracy protests were waged in recent days by
tens of thousands of activists in Gabon, Oman, Djibouti and Sudan,
where on January 30, "students held Egypt-inspired demonstrations
against proposed cuts to subsidies on petroleum products and sugar",
according to a Durban journalist serving Al Jazeera News-
courageous service, Azad Essa. In Ethiopia, Essa reports, police
"detained the well-known journalist Eskinder Nega for 'attempts
to incite- Egypt-style protests".
Zimbabwe
repression
Even harsher
treatment was meted out by Robert Mugabe-s police to 46
Zimbabweans led by former member of parliament Munyaradzi Gwisai.
The group was charged with "high treason" (punishable
by death) for showing news clips of Egyptian and Tunisian protests
at a February 19 meeting of the International
Socialist Organization-Zimbabwe.
As 10 of the
group were apparently tortured by Mugabe-s police and the
dozen women arrested were transferred to the notorious Chikurubi
maximum security prison, demands for their release grew louder,
with South Africans chiming in at a Hillbrow, Johannesburg picket
on February 26.
At home, brave
Zimbabweans- support will emerge more publicly on March 1
at noon, when democracy activists gather in Harare Gardens to demand
the prisoners- release, Mugabe-s resignation, freedom
of speech, freedom of assembly, press freedom, fair elections and
an end to the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF)
regime-s political violence, which is currently resurgent
in several hotspots, from Mutare in the east to Harare to Gwanda
in the west.
Diamonds
fund election irregularities
But Mugabe wants
to hasten the same kind of unfree, unfair elections he has been
"winning" over the last decade, and has apparently amassed
a war chest through illicit diamond sales to once again dominate
the campaign. On February 22, finance minister Tendai Biti from
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) confronted Mugabe
over the diversion of $300 million in revenues from the Marange
diamond field, site of hundreds of civilian deaths by the armed
forces a few years ago.
The Kimberley
Process to identify "blood diamonds" remains chaotic
and corrupt, as self-interested South Africans and Israelis support
diamond exports controlled by Mugabe-s generals. Reports Harare
journalist Dumisani Muleya, "There are fears that the $300
million has either been stolen or was being kept secretly somewhere
by Zanu-PF ministers as a war chest for anticipated elections."
Rebutting wildly,
Mugabe-s ally and chair of the Zimbabwe Mining Development
Corporation, Godwills Masimirembwa, claimed (without proof) that
Biti would not pay civil servants a promised pay rise in order to
prompt an "insurrection so that we have another Egypt or Tunisia
in Zimbabwe".
Amnesty International
representative Simeon Mawanza blames South African President Jacob
Zuma and other regional leaders: "Their silence might be interpreted
as being complicit in what we are seeing."
Hopewell Gumbo,
who contributed enormously to one of our Centre for Civil Society
political economy programs in Durban, was one of the activists tortured
after their arrest on February 19. He was recently quoted on the
radio: "I personally work for an organisation that has started
an initiative with the rural cotton farmers, in terms of pricing
of their commodities, that kind of strategy goes above political
differences because when ZANU-PF and MDC farmers meet they realise
their problems are common and political issues can only divide them
at the end of the day."
More international
solidarity for oppressed Zimbabweans is urgently needed, and from
12:30-2 pm on March 1 in Durban, refugees Shepherd Zvavanhu and
Percy Nhau lead a Centre for Civil Society public discussion on
the situation in the University of KwaZulu Natal-s (UKZN)
Memorial Tower Building, and at 5:30 pm in Washington DC, a pro-democracy
demonstration will be held at Zimbabwe-s embassy on New Hampshire
Avenue near DuPont Circle.
From
Durban to Wisconsin
Meanwhile, back
home in Durban, city manager Michael Sutcliffe-s regime appeared
terminally wounded when his protector, provincial African National
Congress chairperson John Mchunu, died late last year. The neoliberal-nationalist
municipal order is now in much greater danger because in recent
days, the figurehead mayor, Obed Mlaba, broke with Sutcliffe and
his officials over a $500 million fast-track spending scandal. The
ruling party seems to be backing Mlaba.
Sutcliffe has
repeatedly defended corrupt municipal deals with the Mpisane family
on ill-constructed black township housing and Remant Alton on the
failed privatisation of municipal buses. Sutcliffe is widely disliked
because of autocratic tendencies, including the repeated banning
of protest marches, a factor that community and environmental activists
are taking into consideration for the November-December 2011 UN
world climate summit.
The "mubaraking"
of Libya-s Gaddafi, Iraq-s Maliki, Zimbabwe-s
Mugabe and Durban-s Sutcliffe is long overdue. But revolt
is just as necessary in the country that long propped up so many
dictatorships, the United States.
On February
26, all 50 US state capitals witnessed demonstrations held in solidarity
with public sector workers in Wisconsin, who are under attack by
a hardline conservative governor. Even in the frigid weather and
snow of the Wisconsin capital, Madison, 70,000 people marched against
the Republican governor-s attempt to end collective bargaining,
in what is probably the most important US class struggle since the
1930s.
Revolution is
still in the air and throughout the most visionary television network
has been Al Jazeera. Its director general Wadah Khanfar had an easy
explanation for the network-s repeated scoops: "When
opinions crowd and confusion prevails, set your sight on the route
taken by the masses, for that is where the future lies."
*Patrick
Bond is co-editor of the new Africa World Press book Zuma-s
Own Goal.
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