By Stephen Gowans
June 25, 2008
This is a war between revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries; between nationalists and quislings; between Zimbabwean patriots and the US and Britain.
Should an election be carried out when a country is under sanctions and it has been made clear to the electorate that the sanctions will be lifted only if the opposition party is elected? Should a political party which is the creation of, and is funded by, hostile foreign forces, and whose program is to unlatch the door from within to provide free entry to foreign powers to establish a neo-colonial rule, be allowed to freely operate? Should the leaders of an opposition movement that takes money from hostile foreign powers and who have made plain their intention to unseat the government by any means available, be charged with treason? These are the questions that now face (have long faced) the embattled government of Zimbabwe, and which it has answered in its own way, and which other governments, at other times, have answered in theirs.
The American revolutionaries, Thomas Jefferson among them, answered similar questions through harsh repression of the monarchists who threatened to reverse the gains of the American Revolution. There were 600,000 to 700,000 Tories, loyal to the king and hostile to the revolutionaries, who stood as a threat to the revolution. To neutralize the threat, the new government denied the Tories any platform from which to organize a counter-revolution. They were forbidden to own a press, to teach, to mount a pulpit. The professions were closed to them. They were denied the right to vote and hold political office. The property of wealthy Tories was confiscated. Many loyalists were beaten, others jailed without trial. Some were summarily executed. And 100,000 were driven into exile. Hundreds of thousands of people were denied advocacy rights, rights to property, and suffrage rights, in order to enlarge the liberties of a larger number of people who had been oppressed. [1]
Zimbabwe, too, is a revolutionary society. Through armed struggle, Zimbabweans, like Americans before them, had thrown off the yoke of British colonialism. Rhodesian apartheid was smashed. Patterns of land ownership were democratized. Over 300,000 previously landless families were given land once owned by a mere 4,000 farmers, mainly of British stock, mostly descendents of settlers who had taken the land by force. In other African countries, land reform has been promised, but little has been achieved. In Namibia, the government began expropriating a handful of white owned farms in 2004 under pressure from landless peasants, but progress has been glacially slow. In South Africa, blacks own just four percent of the farmland. The ANC government promised that almost one-third of arable land would be redistributed by 2000, but the target has been pushed back to 2015, and no one believes it will be reached. The problem is, African countries, impoverished by colonialism, and held down by neo-colonialism, haven’t the money to buy the land needed for redistribution. And the European countries that once colonized Africa, are unwilling to help out, except on terms that will see democratization of land ownership pushed off into a misty future, and only on terms that will guarantee the continued domination of Africa by the West. Britain promised to fund Zimbabwe’s land redistribution program, if liberation fighters laid down their arms and accepted a political settlement. Britain, under Tony Blair, reneged, finding excuses to wriggle out of commitments made by the Thatcher government. And so Zimbabwe’s government acted to reverse the legacy of colonialism, expropriating land without compensation (but for improvements made by the former owner.) Compensation, Zimbabwe’s government declared with unassailable justification, would have to be paid by Britain.
In recent years, the government has taken steps to democratize the country further. Legislation has been formulated to mandate that majority ownership of the country’s mines and enterprises be placed in the hands of the indigenous black majority. The goal is to have Zimbabweans achieve real independence, not simply the independence of having their own flag, but of owning their land and resources. As a Canadian prime minister once said of his own country, once you lose control of the economic levers, you lose sovereignty. Zimbabwe isn’t trying to hang onto control of its economic levers, but to gain control of them for the first time. Jabulani Sibanda, the leader of the association of former guerrillas who fought for the country’s liberation, explains:
“Our country was taken away in 1890. We fought a protracted struggle to recover it and the process is still on. We gained political independence in 1980, got our land after 2000, but we have not yet reclaimed our minerals and natural resources. The fight for freedom is still on until everything is recovered for the people.” [2]
The revolutionary government’s program has met with fierce opposition – from the tiny elite of land owners who had monopolized the country’s best land; from former colonial oppressor Britain, whose capitalists largely controlled the economy; from the United States, whose demand that it be granted an open door everywhere has been defied by Zimbabwe’s tariff restrictions, investment performance requirements, government ownership of business enterprises and economic indigenization policies; and from countries that don’t want Zimbabwe’s land democratization serving as an inspiration to oppressed indigenous peoples under their control. The tiny former land-owning elite wants its former privileges restored; British capital wants its investments in Zimbabwe protected; US capital wants Zimbabwe’s doors flung open to investment and exports; and Germany seeks to torpedo Zimbabwe’s land reforms to guard against inspiring “other states in Southern Africa, including Namibia, where the heirs of German colonialists would be affected.” [3]
The Mugabe government’s rejecting the IMF’s program of neo-liberal restructuring in the late 1990s, after complying initially and discovering the economy was being ruined; its dispatch of troops to the Democratic Republic of Congo to help the young government of Laurent Kabila defend itself against a US and British-backed invasion by Uganda and Rwanda; and its refusal to safeguard property rights in its pursuit of land democratization and economic independence, have made it anathema to the former Rhodesian agrarian elite, and in the West, to the corporate lawyers, investment bankers and hereditary capitalist families who dominate the foreign policies of the US, Britain and their allies. Mugabe’s status as persona non grata in the West (and anti-imperialist hero in Africa) can be understood in an anecdote. When Mugabe became prime minister in 1980, former leader of the Rhodesian state, Ian Smith, offered to help the tyro leader. “Mugabe was delighted to accept his help and the two men worked happily together for some time, until one day Mugabe announced plans for sweeping nationalization.” From that point forward, Smith never talked to Mugabe. [4]
Overthrowing the Revolution
The British, the US and the former Rhodesians have used two instruments to try to overthrow Zimbabwe’s revolution: The opposition party Movement for Democratic Change, and civil society. The MDC was founded in September 1999 in response to Harare announcing it would expropriate Rhodesian farms for redistribution to landless black families. The party was initially bankrolled by the British government’s Westminster Foundation for Democracy and other European governments, including Germany, through the Social Democratic Party’s Friedrich Ebert Foundation (Ebert having been the party leader who conspired with German police officials to have Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht murdered, to smother an emerging socialist revolution in Germany in 1918.) Party leader Morgan Tsvangirai, who had been elevated from his position as secretary-general of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions to champion the West’s counter-revolutionary agenda within Zimbabwe, acknowledged in February 2002 that the MDC was financed by European governments and corporations, which funneled money through British political consultants, BSMG. [5] Today, the government of Zimbabwe charges NGOs with acting as conduits through which Western governments pass money to the opposition party.
The MDC’s orientation is decidedly toward people and forces of European origin. British journalist Peta Thornycroft, hardly a Mugabe supporter, lamented in an interview on Western government-sponsored short wave radio SW Africa that:
‘When the MDC started in 2000, what a pity that they were addressing people in Sandton, mostly white people in Sandton north of Johannesburg instead of being in Dar es Salaam or Ghana or Abuja. They failed to make contact with Africa for so long. They were in London, we’ve just seen it again, Morgan Tsvangirai’s just been in America. Why isn’t he in Cairo? Maybe he needs financial support and he can’t get it outside of America or the UK and the same would go for (leader of an alternative MDC faction, Arthur) Mutambara. They have not done enough in Africa. [6]
A look at the MDC’s program quickly reveals why the party’s leaders spend most of their time traipsing to Western capitals calling for sanctions and gathering advice on how to overthrow the Mugabe government. First, the MDC is opposed to Zimbabwe’s land democratization program. Defeating the government’s plans to expropriate the land of the former Rhodesian elite was one of the main impetuses for the party’s formation. Right through to the 2002 election campaign the party insisted on returning farms to the expropriated Rhodesian settlers. [7]
The MDC and Land Reform
These days Tsvangirai equivocates on land reform, recognizing that speaking too openly about reversing the land democratization program, or taxing black Zimbabweans to compensate expropriated Rhodesian settlers for land the Rhodesians and other British settlers took by force, is detrimental to his party’s success. But there’s no mistaking that the land redistribution program’s life would be cut short by a MDC victory. “The government of Zimbabwe,” wrote Tsvangirai, in a March 23, 2008 Wall Street Journal editorial, “must be committed to protecting persons and property rights.” This means “compensation for those who lost their possessions in an unjust way,” i.e., compensation for the expropriated Rhodesians. Zimbabwe’s program of expropriating land without compensation, he concluded, is just not on: it “scares away investors, domestic and international.” [8] This is the same reasoning the main backer of Tsvangirai’s party, the British government, used to justify backing out of its commitment to fund land redistribution. The British government was reneging on its earlier promise, said then secretary of state for international development Claire Short in a letter to Zimbabwe’s minister of agriculture and lands, Kumbirai Kangai, because of the damage Zimbabwe’s fast-track land reform proposals would do to investor confidence. Lurking none too deftly behind Tsvangirai’s and London’s solicitude over impaired investor confidence are the interests of foreign investors themselves. The Mugabe government’s program is to wrest control of the country’s land, resources and economy from the hands of foreign investors and Rhodesian settlers; the program of the MDC and its backers is to put it back. That’s no surprise, considering the MDC was founded by Europe, backed by the Rhodesians, and bankrolled by capitalist governments and enterprises that have an interest in protecting their existing investments in the country and opening up opportunities for new ones.
Civil Society
There is a countless number of Western NGOs that either operate in Zimbabwe or operate outside the country with a focus on Zimbabwe. While the Western media invariably refer to them as independent, they are anything but. Almost all are funded by Western governments, wealthy individuals, and corporations. Some NGOs say that while they take money from Western sources, they’re not influenced by them. This is probably true, to a point. Funders don’t dangle funding as a bribe, so much as select organizations that can be counted on to behave in useful ways of their own volition. Of course, it may be true that some organizations recognize that handsome grants are available for organizations with certain orientations, and adapt accordingly. But for the most part, civil society groups that advance the overseas agendas of Western governments and corporations, whether they know it or not, and not necessarily in a direct fashion, find that funding finds them.
Western governments fund dozens of NGOs to discredit the government in Harare, alienate it of popular support, and mobilize mass resistance under the guise of promoting democracy and human rights. Their real purpose is to bring down the government and its nationalist policies. The idea that Britain, which, as colonial oppressor, denied blacks suffrage and dispossessed them of their land, is promoting rights and democracy in Zimbabwe is laughable. The same can be said of Canada. The Canadian government doles out grants to NGOs through an organization called Rights and Democracy. Rights and Democracy is currently funding the anti-Zanu-PF Media Institute of Southern Africa, along with the US government and a CIA-linked right wing US think tank. While sanctimoniously parading about on the world stage as a champion of rights and democracy, Canada denied its own aboriginal people suffrage up to 1960. For a century, it enforced an assimilation policy that tore 150,000 aboriginal children from their homes and placed them in residential schools where their language and culture were banned. Canadian citizens like to think their own country is a model of moral rectitude, but are blind to the country’s deplorable record in the treatment of its own aboriginal people; it’s denial of the liberty and property rights of Canadian citizens of Japanese heritage during WWII; and in recent years, its complicity in overthrowing the Haitian government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide and participation in the occupation of Afghanistan. As for the United States, its violations of the rights of people throughout the world have become so frequent and far-reaching that only the deaf, dumb or insane would believe the US government has the slightest interest in promoting democracy and human rights anywhere.
Consider, then, the record of the West’s self-proclaimed promoters of democracy and human rights against this: the reason there’s universal suffrage in Zimbabwe and equality rights for blacks, is because the same forces (that are being routinely decried by Western governments and their NGO extensions) fought for, bled for, and died for the principle of universal suffrage. “We taught them the principle of one man, one vote which did not exist” under the British, Zimbabwe’s president points out. “Democracy,” he adds, “also means self-rule, not rule by outsiders.” [9]
Regime Change Agenda
The charge that the West is supporting civil society groups in Zimbabwe to bring down the government isn’t paranoid speculation or the demagogic raving of a government trying to cling to power by mobilizing anti-imperialist sentiment. It’s a matter of public record. The US government has admitted that “it wants to see President Robert Mugabe removed from power and that it is working with the Zimbabwean opposition…trade unions, pro-democracy groups and human rights organizations…to bring about a change of administration.” [10] Additionally, in an April 5, 2007 report, the US Department of State revealed that it had:
— “Sponsored public events that presented economic and social analyses discrediting the government’s excuse for its failed policies” (i.e, absolving US and EU sanctions for undermining the country’s economy);
— “Sponsored…and supported…several township newspapers” and worked to expand the listener base of Voice of America’s Studio 7 radio station. (The State Department had been distributing short-wave radios to Zimbabweans to facilitate the project of Zimbabwean public opinion being shaped from abroad by Washington’s propagandists).
Last year, the US State Department set aside US$30 million for these activities. [11] Earlier this year, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced that the UK had increased its funding for civil society organizations operating in Zimbabwe from US$5 million to US$6.5 million. [12] Dozens of other governments, corporations and capitalist foundations shower civil society groups with money, training and support to set up and run “independent” media to attack the government, “independent” election monitoring groups to discredit the outcome of elections Zanu-PF wins, and underground groups which seek to make the country ungovernable through civil disobedience campaigns. One such group is Zvakwana, “an underground movement that aims to resist – and eventually undermine” the Zanu-PF government. “With a second, closely related group called Sokwanele, Zvakwana’s members specialize in anonymous acts of civil disobedience.” [13] Both groups, along with Zubr in Belarus and Ukraine’s Pora, whose names, in English, mean ‘enough’, “take their inspiration from Otpor, the movement that played a major role in ousting Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia.” [14] One Sokwanele member is “a white conservative businessman expressing a passion for freedom, tradition, polite manners and the British royals,” [15] hardly a black-clad anarchist motivated by a philosophical opposition to “authoritarian rule,” but revealing of what lies beneath the thin veneer of radicalism that characterizes so many civil society opposition groups in Zimbabwe. In the aforementioned April 5, 2007 US State Department report, Washington revealed that it had “supported workshops to develop youth leadership skills necessary to confront social injustice through non-violent strategies,” the kinds of skills members of Zvakwana and Sokwanele are equipped with to destabilize Zimbabwe.
In addition to funding received from the US and Britain, Zimbabwe’s civil society groups also receive money from the German, Australian and Canadian governments, the Ford Foundation, Freedom House, the Albert Einstein Institution, the International Center for Nonviolent Conflict, Liberal International, the Mott Foundation, the Rockefeller Brothers, South African Breweries, and billionaire financier George Soros’ Open Society Institute. All of these funding sources, including the governments, are dominated by Western capitalist ruling classes. It would be truly naïve to believe, for example, that the International Center for Nonviolent Conflict and Freedom House, both headed by Peter Ackerman, member of the US ruling class Council on Foreign Relations, a New York investment banker and former right hand man to Michael Milken of junk bond fame, is lavishing money and training on civil society groups in Zimbabwe out of humanitarian concern. According to Noam Chomksy and Edward Herman, Freedom House has ties to the CIA, “and has long served as a virtual propaganda arm of the (US) government and international right wing.” [16]
Political lucre doesn’t come from Western sources alone. The Mo Ibrahim Foundation awards a prize yearly for “achievement in African leadership” to a sub-Saharan African leader who has left office in the previous three years. The prize is worth $500,000 per year for the first 10 years and $200,000 per year thereafter – in other words, cash for life. Ibrahim, a Sudanese billionaire who founded Celtel International, a cellphone service that operates in 15 African countries, established the award to “encourage African leaders to govern well,” something, apparently, Ibrahim believes African leaders don’t do now and need to be encouraged to do. What Ibrahim means by govern well is clear in who was selected as the first (and so far only) winner: Mozambique’s former president Joaquim Chissano. He received the prize for overseeing Mozambique’s “transition from Marxism to a free market economy.” [17] While there may seem to be nothing particularly amiss in this, imagine billionaire speculator George Soros establishing a foundation to bribe US and British politicians with cash for life to “govern well.” It wouldn’t elude many of us that Soros’ definition of “govern well” would almost certainly align to a tee with his own interests, and that any politician eager to live a comfortable life after politics would be keen to keep Soros’ interests in mind. Under these conditions there would be no question of democracy prevailing; we would be living in a plutocracy, in which those with great wealth could dangle the carrot of a cash award for life to get their way. As it happens, this kind of thing is happening now in Western democracies (that is, plutocracies.) Handsomely paid positions as corporate lobbyists, corporate executives and members of corporate boards await Western politicians who play their cards right. There are Mo Ibrahims all over, who go by the names Ford, GM, Exxon, General Electric, Lockheed-Martin, Microsoft, IBM and so on.
Threat to US Foreign policy
Why does the government of the US consider Zimbabwe to pose “an unusual and extraordinary threat to the foreign policy of the United States”? The answer says as much about the foreign policy of the United States as it does about Zimbabwe. The goal of US foreign policy is to provide profit-making opportunities to US investors and corporations. This is accomplished by pressuring, cajoling, bribing, blackmailing, threatening, subverting, destabilizing and where possible, using violence, to get foreign countries to lower or remove tariff barriers, lift restrictions on foreign investment, deny preferential treatment to domestic investors, allow repatriation of profits, and provide the US military access to the country. The right of the US military to operate on foreign soil is necessary to provide Washington with local muscle to protect US investments, ensure unimpeded access to strategic raw materials (oil, importantly), and to keep doors open to continued US economic penetration. It is also necessary to have forward operating bases from which to threaten countries whose governments aren’t open to US exports and investments.
The Zanu-PF government’s policies have run afoul of US foreign policy goals in a number of ways. In 1998, “Zimbabwe – along with Angola and Namibia – was mandated by the (Southern African Development Community, a regional grouping of countries) to intervene in Congo to save a fellow SADC member country from an invasion by Uganda and Rwanda,” which were acting as proxies of the United States and Britain. [18] Both countries wanted to bring down the young government of Laurent Kabila, fearing Kabila was turning into another Patrice Lumumba, the nationalist Congolese leader whose assassination the CIA had arranged in the 1960s. Zimbabwe’s intervention, as part of the SADC contingent, foiled the Anglo-American’s plans, and earned Mugabe the enmity of ruling circles in the West.
The Zanu-PF government’s record with the IMF also threatened US foreign policy goals. From 1991 to 1995, Mugabe’s government implemented a program of structural adjustment prescribed by the IMF as a condition of receiving balance of payment support and the restructuring of its international loans. The program required the government to cut its spending deeply, fire tens of thousands of civil servants, and slash social programs. Zimbabwe’s efforts to nurture infant industries were to be abandoned. Instead, the country’s doors were to be opened to foreign investment. Harare would radically reduce taxes and forbear from any measure designed to give domestic investors a leg up on foreign competitors. The US, Germany, Japan and South Korea had become capitalist powerhouses by adopting the protectionist and import substitution policies the IMF was forbidding. The effect of the IMF program was devastating. Manufacturing employment tumbled nine percent between 1991 and 1996, while wages dropped 26 percent. Public sector employment plunged 23 percent and public sector wages plummeted 40 percent. [19] In contrast to the frequent news stories today on Zimbabwe’s fragile economy, attributed disingenuously to “Mugabe’s disastrous land policies”, the Western press barely noticed the devastation the IMF’s disastrous economic policies brought to Zimbabwe in the 1990s. By 1996, the Mugabe government was starting to back away from the IMF prescriptions. By 1998, it was in open revolt, imposing new tariffs to protect infant industries and providing incentives to black Zimbabwean investors as part of an affirmative action program to encourage African ownership of the economy. These policies were diametrically opposed, not only to the IMF’s program of structural adjustment, but to the goals of US foreign policy. By 1999, the break was complete. The IMF refused to extend loans to Zimbabwe. By February, 2001, Zimbabwe was in arrears to the Bretton Woods institution. Ten months later, the US introduced the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery, a dagger through the heart of Zimbabwe’s economy. “Zimbabwe,” says Mugabe, “is not a friend of the IMF and is unlikely to be its friend in the future.” [20]
Zanu-PF’s willingness to ignore the hallowed status of private property by expropriating the land of the former Rhodesians to democratize the country’s pattern of land ownership also ran afoul of US foreign policy goals. Because US foreign policy seeks to protect US ownership abroad, any program that promotes expropriation as a means of advancing democratic goals must be considered hostile. Kenyan author Mukoma Wa Nguyi invites us to think of Zimbabwe “as Africa’s Cuba. Like Cuba, Zimbabwe is not a… military threat to the US and Britain. Like Cuba, in Latin America, Zimbabwe’s crime is leading by example to show that land can be redistributed – an independence with content. If Zimbabwe succeeds, it becomes an example to African people that indeed freedom and independence can have the content of national liberation. Like Cuba, Zimbabwe is to be isolated, and if possible, a new government that is friendly to the agenda of the West is to be installed.” [21]
The Comprador Party
If Zanu-PF is willing to offend Western corporate and Rhodesian settler interests to advance the welfare of the majority of Zimbabweans, the MDC is its perfect foil. Rather than offending Western interests, the MDC seeks to accommodate them, treating the interests of foreign investors and imperialist governments as synonymous with those of the Zimbabwean majority. A MDC government would never tolerate the pursuit in Zimbabwe of the protectionist and nationalist economic programs the US used to build its own industry. The MDC’s goals, in the words of its leader, are to “encourage foreign investment” and “bring (Zimbabwe’s) abundant farmland back into health.” [22] “It is up to each of us,” Tsvangirai told a gathering of newly elected MDC parliamentarians, “to say Zimbabwe is open for business.” [23]
Encouraging foreign investment means going along with Western demands for neo-liberal restructuring. “The key to turning around Zimbabwe’s economy…is the political will needed to implement the market reforms, the IMF and others, including the United States, have been recommending for the past few years,” lectured the former US ambassador to Zimbabwe, Christopher Dell. This means “a free-market economy and security of property to investment and economic growth.” [24]
Britain’s Prime Minister Gordon Brown has developed an economic program for Zimbabwe to be rolled out if Western regime change efforts succeed. Brown says his recovery package will include measures to:
(1) help Zimbabwe restart and stabilize its economy;
(2) restructure and reduce its debt;
(3) support fair land reform. [25]
What Brown is really saying is that:
(1) Sanctions will be lifted, and the resultant economic recovery will be attributed to the MDC’s neo-liberal policies.
(2) Zimbabwe will resume the structural adjustment program Mugabe’s government rejected in the late 90s.
(3) Either land reform will be reversed or black Zimbabweans will be forced to compensate white farmers whose land was expropriated.
The reality that Brown has developed an economic program for Zimbabwe speaks volumes about who will be in charge if the MDC comes to power – not Zimbabweans, not the MDC, and not Tsvangirai, but London and Washington.
Not surprisingly, MDC economic policy is perfectly simpatico with the prescriptions of its masters. Eddie Cross, formerly vice-chairman of the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries, who became a MDC spokesman, explained the party’s economic plans for Zimbabwe, in advance of 2000 elections.
“We are going to fast track privatization. All 50 government parastatals will be privatized within a two-year time-frame, but we are going to go beyond that. We are going to privatize many of the functions of government. We are going to privatize the central statistical office. We are going to privatize virtually the entire school delivery system. And you know, we have looked at the numbers and we think we can get government employment down from about 300,000 at the present time to about 75,000 in five years.” [26]
Of course, the intended beneficiaries of such a program aren’t Zimbabweans, but foreign investors.
The MDC’s role as agent of Western influence in Zimbabwe doesn’t stop at promoting economic policies that cater to foreign investors. The MDC has also been active in turning the screws on Zimbabwe to undermine the economy and create disaffection and misery in order to alienate Zanu-PF of its popular support. Arguing that foreign firms are propping up the government, the MDC has actively discouraged investment. For example, Tsvangirai tried to discourage a deal between Chinese investors and the South African company Implats, that would see a US$100 million platinum refinery set up in Zimbabwe, warning that a MDC government might not honor the deal. [27] The MDC leader, true to form, was following in the footsteps of his political masters in Washington. The United States has pressed China and other countries to refrain from investing in Zimbabwe “at a time when the international community (is) trying to isolate the African state.” [28] Washington complains that “China’s growing political and commercial influence in resource-rich African nations” [29] is sabotaging its efforts to ruin Zimbabwe’s economy. More damning is the MDC’s participation in the drafting of the principal piece of US legislation aimed at torpedoing the Zimbabwean economy: The Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act. Passed in 2001, the act instructs “the United States executive director to each international financial institution to oppose and vote against-
(1) any extension by the respective institution of any loan, credit, or guarantee to the Government of Zimbabwe; or
(2) any cancellation or reduction of indebtedness owed by the Government of Zimbabwe to the United States or any international financial institution.” [30]
The effect of the act is to cut off all development assistance to Zimbabwe, disable lines of credit, and prevent the World Bank and International Monetary Fund from providing development assistance and balance of payment support. [31] Any African country subjected to this punishment would very soon find itself in straitened circumstances. When the legislation was ratified, US president George W. Bush said, “I hope the provisions of this important legislation will support the people of Zimbabwe in their struggle to effect peaceful democratic change, achieve economic growth, and restore the rule of law.” [32] Since effecting peaceful democratic change means, in Washington’s parlance, ousting the Zanu-PF government, and since restoring the rule of law equates, in Washingtonian terms, to forbidding the expropriation of white farm land without compensation, what Bush was really saying was that he hoped the legislation would help overthrow the government and put an end to fast-track land reform. The legislation “was co-drafted by one of the opposition MDC’s white parliamentarians in Zimbabwe, which was then introduced as a Bill in the US Congress on 8 March 2001 by the Republican senator, William Frist. The Bill was co-sponsored by the Republican rightwing senator, Jesse Helms, and the Democratic senators Hillary Clinton, Joseph Biden and Russell Feingold.” Helms, a notorious racist, had a penchant for legislation aimed at undermining countries seeking to achieve substantive democracy. “He co-authored the Helms-Burton Act of 1996, which tightened the blockade on Cuba.” [33]
The Distorting Lens of the Western Media
Western reporting on Zimbabwe occurs within a framework of implicit assumptions. The assumptions act as a lens through which facts are organized, understood and distorted. Columnist and associate editor for the British newspaper The Guardian, Seamus Milne, points out that British journalists see Zimbabwe through a lens that casts the president as a barbarous despot. “The British media,” he writes, “have long since largely abandoned any attempt at impartiality in its reporting of Zimbabwe, the common assumption being that Mugabe is a murderous dictator at the head of a uniquely wicked regime.” [34] If you began with these assumptions, ordinary events are interpreted within the framework the assumptions define. An egregious example is offered in how a perfectly legitimate exercise was construed and presented by Western reporters as a diabolical exercise. Zanu-PF held campaign workshops to explain what the government had achieved since independence and what it was doing to address the country’s economic crisis. The intention, according to Zimbabwe’s Information and Publicity Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu, was to “educate the people on the illegal sanctions as some of them were duped to vote for the MDC in the March elections.” [35] But that’s not how the British newspaper, The Independent, saw it. “The Zimbabwean army and police,” its reporter wrote, “have been accused of setting up torture camps and organizing ‘re-education meetings’ involving unspeakable cruelty where voters are beaten and mutilated in the hope of achieving victory for President Robert Mugabe in the second round of the presidential election.” [36] Begin with the assumption that Mugabe is a murderous dictator at the head of a uniquely wicked regime and campaign workshops become re-education meetings and torture camps. Note that The Independent’s reporter relied on an accusation, not on corroborated facts, and that the identity of the accuser was never revealed. The story has absolutely no evidentiary value, but considerable propaganda value. The chances of many people reading the story with a skeptical eye and picking out its weaknesses are slim. What’s more likely to happen is that readers will regard the accusation as plausible because it fits with the preconceived model of Mugabe as a murderous dictator and his government as uniquely wicked. How do we know the accuser wasn’t a fellow journalist repeating gossip overheard on the street, or at MDC headquarters? How do we know the accusation wasn’t made by the US ambassador to Zimbabwe, James McGee, or any one of scores of representatives of Western-funded NGOs, whose role is to discredit the Zimbabwe government? McGee is a veritable treasure trove of half-truths, innuendo, and misinformation. And yet the Western media, particularly those based in the US, have a habit of treating McGee as an impeccable source, seemingly blind to the reality that the US government is hostile to Zimbabwe’s land democratization and economic indigenization programs, that it has an interest in spinning news to discredit Harare, and that its officials have an extensive track record in lying to justify the plunder of other people’s countries. To paraphrase Caesar Zvayi, if George Bush can lie hundreds of times about Iraq, what’s to stop him (or McGee or the NGOs on the US payroll) from lying about Zimbabwe? That the Western media pass on accusations made by interested parties without so much as revealing the interest can either be regarded as shocking naiveté or a sign of the propaganda role Western media play on behalf of the corporate class that owns them. If the US and British governments and Western media are against the democratization and economic indigenization programs of Zanu-PF, it’s because they’re dominated by a capitalist ruling class whose interests are against those of the Zimbabwean majority.
It is typical of Western reporting to attribute the actions of the Zanu-PF government to the personal characteristics of its leader: his alleged hunger for power for power’s-sake; demagogy; incompetence in matters related to economic management; and brutality. The government’s actions, by contrast, are never attributed to the circumstances, the conditions in which the government is forced to maneuver, or to the demands of survival in the face of the West’s predatory pressures. This isn’t unique to Zimbabwe; every leader the West wants to overthrow is vilified as a “strongman,” “dictator,” “thug,” “war criminal,” “murderer,” or “warlord” and sometimes all of these things. All of the leader’s actions are to be understood as originating in the leader’s deeply flawed character. If Iran is building a uranium enrichment capability, it’s not because it seeks an independent source of fuel for a budding civilian nuclear energy program, but because the country’s president is to be understood as a raving anti-Semite who seeks to acquire nuclear weapons to carry out Hitler’s final solution by wiping Israel off the face of the map. The same reduction of international affairs to a moral struggle between the West and what always turns out to be a nationalist, socialist or communist country headed by a leader whose actions are invariably traced by Western reporters to the leader’s evil psychology applies equally to Zimbabwe. If the Mugabe government has banned political rallies, it is not because the rallies have been used by the opposition as an occasion to firebomb police stations, but because the president has an unquenchable thirst for power and will brook no opposition. If opposition activists have been arrested, it’s not because they’ve committed crimes, but because the leader is repressive and dictatorial. If Morgan Tsvangirai is beaten by police, it’s not because he tried to break through police lines, but because the leader is a brutal dictator and ordered Tsvangirai’s beating because that’s what brutal dictators do. If an opposition leader is arrested and charged with treason, it’s not because there is evidence of treason, but because the president is gagging the opposition to cling to power because it is in the nature of dictators to do so. If the economy falls into crisis, it’s not because the West has cut off the country’s access to credit, but because of the leader’s incompetence. If agricultural production drops, it’s not due to the drought, electricity shortages and rising fuel costs that have bedeviled other countries in the region, but because the leader is too stupid to recognize his land reform policies are disastrous.
A New York Times story published three days before the March 29 elections shows how Western governments and mass media cooperate with civil society agents on the ground to shape public opinion. The aim of the March 26, 2008 article, titled “Hope and Fear for Zimbabwe Vote,” was to discredit the elections that Zanu-PF seemed at the time likely to win.
Harare had barred election monitors from the US and EU, but allowed observers from Russia, China, Iran, Venezuela, South Africa and the SADC to monitor the vote. The Western media pointed to the decision to bar Western observers as indirect evidence of vote rigging. After all, if Zimbabwe had nothing to hide, why wouldn’t it admit observers from Europe and the US? At the same time, Western reporters suggested that Zimbabwe was only allowing observers from friendly countries because they could be counted on to bless the election results. By the same logic, one would have expected that a negative evaluation from observers representing unfriendly countries would be just as automatic and foreordained, especially considering the official policy of the US and EU is to replace the current government with one friendly to Western business interests. Indeed, it is this fear that had led Harare to ban Western monitors.
With Western observers unable to monitor the elections directly, governments in North America and Europe found themselves on the horns of a dilemma. How could they declare the vote fraudulent, if they hadn’t observed it? To get around this difficulty, the US, Britain and other Western countries provided grants to Zimbabweans on the ground to monitor the vote. These Zimbabweans, part of civil society, declared themselves to be independent “non-governmental” observers, and prepared to render a foreordained verdict that the election was rigged. Cooperating in the deception, the Western media amplified their voices as “independent” experts on the ground. The US Congress’s National Endowment for Democracy – an organization that does overtly what the CIA used to do covertly – provided grants to the Zimbabwe Election Support Network “to train and organize 240 long-term elections observers throughout Zimbabwe.” The NED is also connected to the Media Monitoring Project through the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, which it funds, and the Media Institute of Southern Africa, which is funded by Britain’s NED equivalent, the Westminster Foundation for Democracy and Canada’s Rights and Democracy. The Media Monitoring Project calls itself independent, but is connected to the US and British governments, and to billionaire speculator George Soros’ Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa.
When the New York Times needed Zimbabweans to comment on the upcoming election, its reporters turned to representatives of these two NGOs. Noel Kututwa, the chairman of the Zimbabwe Election Support Network, told the newspaper that his group would be using “sampling techniques to assess the accuracy of the results announced nationally.” Yet, Mr. Kututwa also told the newspaper that, “We will not have a free and fair election.” If Kututwa had already decided the election would be unfair and coerced, why was he bothering to assess its accuracy? Andrew Moyse, a regular commentator on Studio 7, an anti-Mugabe radio station sponsored by the US government’s propaganda arm, Voice of America, was quoted in the same article. “Even if Mugabe only gets one vote,” Mr. Moyse opined, “the tabulated results are in the box and he has won.”
Moyse, on top of acting as a US mouthpiece on Voice of America, heads up the Media Monitoring Project. While part of the NGO election observer team the US and EU were relying on to ostensibly assess the fairness of the vote, he had already decided the vote was rigged. Kutatwa and Moyse were the only experts the New York Times cited in its story on the upcoming elections. Yet both represented NGOs funded by hostile governments whose official policy is to replace Robert Mugabe and his government’s land reform and economic indigenization policies. Both presented themselves as independent, though they could hardly be independent of their sources of foreign government and foundation funding. Both declared in advance of the election that the vote would be coerced and unfair and that the tabulated results were already in the box. Their foreordained conclusions – which turned out to be wildly inaccurate – happened to be the same conclusions their sponsors in the US and Britain were looking for, to obtain the consent of a confused public to intervene vigorously in Zimbabwe’s affairs. This is emblematic of the symbiotic collaboration of media, Western governments, and NGOs on the ground. Western governments, corporations and wealthy individuals fund NGOs to discredit the Zanu-PF government, and the Western media present the same NGOs as independent actors, and provide them a platform to present their views. Meanwhile, the Western media marginalize the Zanu-PF government and its supporters on the ground, denying them a platform to present their side. To publics in the West, the only story heard is the story told by the MDC and its civil society allies, who reinforce, as a matter of strategy, the view that Mugabe is a murderous dictator at the head of a uniquely wicked regime. The MDC, civil society, the Western media, the British and US governments, and imperialist think tanks and foundations, are all interlocked. All of these sources, then, tell the same story.
Safeguarding the Revolution
After the revolutionary war, would the Americans who led and carried out the revolution have allowed loyalists to band together to seek public office in elections with a program of restoring the monarchy? We’ve already seen that the answer is no. When the Nazis were ousted in Germany, was the Nazi party allowed to reconstitute itself to seek the return of the Third Reich through electoral means? No. Countries that have gone through revolutionary change are careful, if the revolution is to survive, to deny those who have been overthrown an opportunity to recover their privileged positions. That often means denying former exploiters and their partisans opportunities to band together to contest elections, or constitutionally prescribing a desired form of government and prohibiting a return to the old. The US revolutionaries did both; they repressed the loyalists and declared a republic, which, as a corollary, forbade a return to monarchy. Even if every American voter decided that George Bush should become king, the US constitution forbids it, no matter what the majority wants. The gun (that is, the violence employed by the American revolutionaries to free themselves from the oppression of the British crown) is more powerful than the pen (Americans can’t vote the monarchy back in.)
In Zimbabwe, the former colonial oppressor, Britain, has been working with its allies to restore its former privileges through civil society and the MDC. Britain doesn’t seek a return to an overt colonialism, complete with a British viceroy and British troops garrisoned throughout the country, but to a neo-colonialism, in which the local government acts in the place of a viceroy, safeguarding and nurturing British investments and looking after Western interests under the rubric of managing the economy soundly. Britain, then, wants the MDC, for the MDC is British rule by proxy. Many Zimbabweans, however, are vehemently opposed to selling out their revolution to a party that was founded and is financed by a country to which they were once enslaved.
Western media propaganda presents Zimbabwe as a pyramidal society, in which an elite at the apex, comprising Mugabe, his ministers and the heads of the security services, brutally rule over the vast majority of Zimbabweans at the base who long for the MDC to deliver them from a dictatorship. A fairer description is that Zimbabwe is a society in which both sides command considerable popular support, but where Zanu-PF has an edge. This may sound incredible to anyone looking at Zimbabwe through the distorting lens of the Western media, but let Munyaradzi Gwisai, leader of the International Socialist Organization in Zimbabwe, a fierce opponent of the Mugabe government, set matters straight.
“There is no doubt about it – the regime is rooted among the population with a solid social base. Despite the catastrophic economic collapse, Zanu-PF still won more popular votes in parliament than the MDC in the March 29 parliamentary elections. Mugabe might have lost on the streets, but if you count the actual votes, his party won more than the MDC in elections to the House of Assembly and Senate. Zanu-PF won an absolute majority of votes in five of the country’s 10 provinces, plus a simple majority in another province. By contrast, the MDC won two provinces with an absolute majority and two with a simple majority. But because we use first past the post, not proportional representation, Zanu-PF’s votes were not translated into a majority in parliament. It was only Mugabe himself, in the presidential election, who did worse in terms of the popular vote.” [37]
Those in the thrall of Western propaganda will dismiss strong support for Zanu-PF in the March 29 elections as a consequence of electoral fraud, not genuine popular backing. But it would be a very inept government that rigged the election and lost control of the assembly and had to face a run-off in the presidential race. No, Mugabe’s support runs deep.
“According to a poll of 1,200 Zimbabweans published in August (2004) by South African and American researchers, the level of public trust in Mr. Mugabe’s leadership” more than doubled from 1999, “to 46 percent – even as the economy” was severely weakened by Western sanctions. [38] Significantly, it was over this period that the government launched its fast track land reform program. Notwithstanding Western news reports that Mugabe’s supporters are limited to his “cronies”, Zimbabweans participated in a million man and woman march last December, where marchers “proclaimed that Washington, Downing Street and Wall Street (had) no right to remove Mugabe.” [39]
Elsewhere in Africa, Zimbabwe’s president is enormously popular. As recently as August 2004, Mugabe was voted at number three in the New Africa magazine’s poll of 100 Greatest Africans, behind Nelson Mandela and Kwame Nkrumah. [40] The Los Angeles Times, no fan of the Zimbabwean president, acknowledges that “Mugabe is so popular on the continent…that he is feted and cheered wherever he goes.” [41] That was evident last summer when, much to the chagrin of Western reporters, who had been assuring their readers that Mugabe was being called to a meeting of SADC to be dressed down, that “Mr. Mugabe arrived at the meeting to a fusillade of cheers and applause from attendees that…overwhelmed the polite welcomes of the other heads of states.” [42] A European Union-African Union summit planned for 2003 was aborted after African leaders refused to show up in solidarity with a Mugabe who had been banned by the Europeans for promoting the interests of Zimbabweans, not Europeans. The summit went ahead in 2007, but only after African leaders threatened once again to boycott the meeting if Mugabe was barred. With China doing deals with African countries, the Europeans were reluctant to sacrifice trade and investment opportunities, and laid aside their misgivings about attending a meeting at which Mugabe would be present. That is, all except British Prime Minister Gordon Brown. He stayed home in protest. German leader Angela Merkel did attend, but thought it necessary to scold Mugabe to distance herself from him. Senegal’s president Abdoulaye Wade sprang to Mugabe’s defense, dismissing Merkel’s vituperative comments as untrue and accusing the German leader of being misinformed. [43]
Opposition’s Failed Attempts at Insurrection
Mugabe’s popularity, and that of the movement for Zimbabwean empowerment he leads, explains Zanu-PF’s strong showing in elections and why the opposition’s numerous efforts at seizing power by general strike and insurrection have failed. Civil society organizations and MDC leaders have called for insurrectionary activity many times. In 2000, Morgan Tsvangirai called on Mugabe to step down peacefully or face violence. “If you don’t want to go peacefully,” the new opposition leader warned, “we will remove you violently.” [44] Arthur Mutambara, a robotics professor and former consultant with McKinsey & Company and leader of an alternative wing of the MDC, declared in 2006 that he was “going to remove Robert Mugabe, I promise you, with every tool at my disposal.” Asked to clarify what he meant, he replied, “We’re not going to rule out or in anything – the sky’s the limit.” [45] Three days before the March 29 elections, Tendai Biti, secretary general of Tsvangirai’s MDC faction, warned of Kenya-style post electoral violence if Mugabe won. [46] In the US, where United States Code, Section 2385, “prohibits anyone from advocating abetting, advising, or teaching the duty, necessity, desirability, or propriety of overthrowing or destroying the government of the United States by force or violence,” opposition leaders like Tsvangirai, Mutambara and Biti would be charged with treason (Biti has been.)
Leaders of civil society organizations which receive Western funding have been no less diffident about threatening to overthrow the government violently. Last summer, the then Archbishop of Bulawayo, Pius Ncube, said he thought it was “justified for Britain to raid Zimbabwe and remove Mugabe. We should do it ourselves but there’s too much fear. I’m ready to lead the people, guns blazing, but the people are not ready.” [47] Ncube complained bitterly that Zimbabweans were cowards, unwilling to take up arms against the government. This was a strange complaint to make against a people who waged a guerilla war for over a decade to achieve independence. Zimbabweans’ unwillingness to follow Ncube, guns blazing, had nothing to do with cowardice, and everything to do with the absence of popular support for Ncube’s position.
Recently, the International Socialist Organization, one of the founding members of the MDC along with the British government, argued in its newspaper that “the crisis was not going to be resolved through elections, but through mass action.” ISO – Zimbabwe leader Munyaradzi Gwisai “said that the way forward for the Movement for Democratic Change and civil society was to create a united front and mobilize against the regime.” [48] The ISO makes the curious argument that Zimbabweans should take to the streets to bring the MDC to power, recognizing the MDC to be a comprador party (one the ISO helped found). A comprador party, in the febrile reasoning of the ISO, is preferable to Zanu-PF. Gwisai’s offices were visited by the police, touching off howls of outrage over Mugabe’s “repressions” from the ISO’s Trotskyite brethren around the world. Followers of Trotsky are forever siding with reactionaries against revolutionaries, the revolutionaries invariably failing to live up to a Trotskyite ideal. If they can’t have their ideal, they’ll settle for imperialism. While Gwisai wasn’t arrested, Wellington Chibebe, general secretary of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, was. He too had urged Zimbabweans to take to the streets to bring down the government.
Some opponents of Mugabe’s government go further. An organization called the Zimbabwe Resistance Movement promises to take up arms against the Zanu-PF government if “the poodles who run the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission,” fail to declare Tsvangirai the victor of the presidential run-off election. [49] The Western media have been silent on this form of oppositional intimidation and threats of violence.
The opposition has also tried other means to clear the way for its rise to power. In April, 2007 it called a general strike, as part of the Save Zimbabwe Campaign. The strike fizzled, accomplishing nothing more than showing the opposition’s program of seizing power extra-constitutionally had no popular support. The campaign “was a joint effort of the opposition, church groups and civil society… As a body…it (did) not…have widespread grassroots support,” reported the Toronto newspaper, The Globe and Mail. [50] While depicted in the Western media as a peaceful campaign of prayer meetings, the campaign was predicated on violence. MDC activists carried out a series of fire bombings of buses and police stations, events the Western press was slow to acknowledge. A May 2 2007 Human Rights Watch report finally acknowledged that there had been a series of gasoline bombings, but questioned whether the MDC was really responsible. By this point, as far as Western publics knew, peaceful protests had been brutally suppressed by a uniquely wicked government. To keep matters under control, the government banned political gatherings. The opposition defied the ban, calling their rallies “prayer meetings.” It was a result of this defiance that Arthur Mutambara was arrested, and Morgan Tsvangirai roughed up by police when he tried to force his way through police lines to demand Mutambara’s release. The MDC took full advantage of the event to play up to the Western media, claiming Tsvangirai had been beaten up as part of a program of political repression, rather than as a response to his tussling with the police. As the Cuban ambassador to Zimbabwe explained, “What happened in Zimbabwe of course is similar to what groups based in Florida have done in Cuba. They put many bombs in some hotels in Cuba. They were trying to…generate political instability in Cuba, so I see the same pattern in Zimbabwe.” [51]
Making the Economy Scream
While quislings work from within the country to make it ungovernable, pressure is applied from without. Western governments say they’ve imposed only targeted sanctions aimed at key members of the government, nothing to undermine the economy and hurt ordinary Zimbabweans, but as we’ve already seen, the US Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act has far-reaching economic implications. On top of this, other, informal, sanctions do their part to make the economy scream. As Robert Mugabe explains:
The British and their allies “influence other countries to cut their economic ties with us…the soft loans, grants and investments that were coming our way, started decreasing and in some cases practically petering out. Then the signals to the rest of the world that Zimbabwe is under sanctions, that rings bells and countries that would want to invest in Zimbabwe are being very cautious. And we are being dragged through the mud every day on CNN, BBC, Sky News, and they are saying to these potential investors ‘your investments will not be safe in Zimbabwe, the British farmers have lost their land, and your investments will go the same way.'” [52]
In March 2002, Canada withdrew all direct funding to the government of Zimbabwe. [53] In 2005, the IT department at Zimbabwe’s Africa University discovered that Microsoft had been instructed by the US Treasury Department to refrain from doing business with the university. [54] Western companies refuse to supply spare parts to Zimbabwe’s national railway company, even though there are no official trade sanctions in place. [55] Britain and its allies are now planning to escalate the pressure. Plans have been made to press South Africa to cut off electricity to Zimbabwe if the MDC doesn’t come to power. Pressure will also be applied on countries surrounding Zimbabwe to mount an economic blockade. [56] The point of sanctions is to starve the people of Zimbabwe into revolting against the government to clear the way for the rise of the MDC and control, by proxy, from London and Washington. Apply enough pressure and eventually the people will cry uncle (or so goes the theory.) You can’t say Zanu-PF wasn’t forewarned. Stanley Mudenge, the former foreign minister of Zimbabwe, said Robin Cook, then British foreign secretary, once pulled him aside at a meeting and said: “Stan, you must get rid of Bob (Mugabe)…If you don’t get rid of Bob, what will hit you will make your people stone you in the streets.” [57]
Harare’s Options
Those who condemn the actions of the Zanu-PF government in defending their revolution have an obligation to say what they would do. Usually, they skirt the issue, saying there is no revolution, or that there was one once, but that it was long ago corrupted by cronyism. Their simple answer is to dump Mugabe, and start over again – a course of action that would inevitably see a return to the neo-liberal restructuring of the 1990s, a dismantling of land reforms, and a neo-colonial tyranny. Not surprisingly, people who make this argument find favor with imperialist governments and ruling class foundations and are often rewarded by them for appearing to be radical while actually serving imperialist goals.
Throughout history, reformers and revolutionaries have been accused of being self-aggrandizing demagogues manipulating their followers with populist rhetoric to cling to power to enjoy its many perks. [58] But as one writer in the British anti-imperialist journal Lalkar pointed out, “The government of Zimbabwe could very easily abandon its militant policies aimed at protecting Zimbabwe’s independence and building its collective wealth – no doubt its ministers would be rewarded amply by the likes of the World Bank and the IMF.” [59] If Mugabe is really using all means at his disposable to hang on to power simply to enjoy its perks, he has chosen the least certain and most difficult way of going about it. Lay this argument aside as the specious drivel of those who want to bury their heads in the sand to avoid confronting tough questions. What would you do in these circumstances?
In retaliation for democratizing patterns of land ownership, distributing land previously owned by 4,000 farmers, mainly of British stock, to 300,000 previously landless families, Britain has “mobilized her friends and allies in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand to impose illegal economic sanctions against Zimbabwe. They have cut off all development assistance, disabled lines of credit, prevented the Bretton Woods institutions from providing financial assistance, and ordered private companies in the United States not to do business with Zimbabwe.” [60] They have done this to cripple Zimbabwe’s economy to alienate the revolutionary government of its popular support. For years, they have done this. Soni Rajan, employed by the British government to investigate land reform in Zimbabwe, told author Heidi Holland:
“It was absolutely clear…that Labour’s strategy was to accelerate Mugabe’s unpopularity by failing to provide him with funding for land redistribution. They thought if they didn’t give him the money for land reform, his people in the rural areas would start to turn against him. That was their position; they want him out and they were going to do whatever they could to hasten his demise.” [61]
The main political opposition party, the MDC, is the creation of the Rhodesian Commercial Farmers’ Union, the British government and the Zimbabwe Democracy Trust, whose patrons are former British foreign secretaries Douglas Hurd, Geoffrey Howe, Malcolm Rifkind and whose chair is Lord Renwick of Clifton, who has collected a string of board memberships in southern African corporations. The party’s funding comes from European governments and corporations, and its raison d’etre is to reverse every measure the Zanu-PF government has taken to invest Zimbabwean independence with real meaning. Civil society organizations are funded by governments whose official policy is one of regime change in Zimbabwe. The US, Britain and the Netherlands finance pirate radio stations and newspapers, which the Western media disingenuously call “independent”, to poison public opinion against the Mugabe government and its land democratization and economic indigenization programs. It’s impossible to hold free and fair elections, because the interference by Western powers is massive, a point acknowledge by Mugabe opponent Munyaradzi Gwisai. [62]
Guns Trump “Xs”
Zimbabweans who fought for the country’s independence and democratization of land ownership are not prepared to give up the gains of their revolution simply because a majority of Zimbabweans marked an “X” for a party of quislings. There are two reasons for their steadfastness in defense of their revolution: First, Americans can’t vote the monarchy back in, or return, through the ballot box, to the status quo ante of British colonial domination. The US revolutionaries recognized that some gains are senior to others, freedom from foreign domination being one of them. Americans would never allow a majority vote to place the country once again under British rule. Nor will Zimbabwe’s patriots allow the same to happen to their country. Second, no election in Zimbabwe can be free and fair, so long as the country is under sanctions and the main opposition party and civil society organizations are agents of hostile foreign governments. The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Justice has called on the government “to consider the possibility of declaring a state of emergency,” pointing out correctly that “Zimbabwe is at war with foreign elements using local puppets.” [63] Western governments would do – and have done – no less under similar circumstances. Patriots writing to the state-owned newspaper, The Herald, urge the government to take a stronger line. “The electoral environment is heavily tilted in favour of the (MDC) because of the economic sanctions,” wrote one Herald reader. “If it was up to me there should be no elections until the sanctions are scrapped. If we don’t defend our independence and sovereignty, then we are doomed to become hewers of wood and drawers of water. I stand ready to take up arms to defend my sovereignty if need be.” [64] The heads of the police and army have let it be known that they won’t “salute sell-outs and agents of the West” [65] – and nor should they. And veterans of the war for national liberation have told Mugabe that they can never accept that their country, won through the barrel of the gun, should be taken merely by an ‘X’ made by a ballpoint pen.” [66] Mugabe recounted that the war veterans had told him “if this country goes back into white hands just because we have used a pen, we will return to the bush to fight.” The former guerilla leader added, “I’m even prepared to join the fight. We can’t allow the British to dominate us through their puppets.” [67] Zimbabwe, as patriots have said many times, will never be a colony again. Even if it means returning to arms.
NOTES:
1. Herbert Aptheker, “The Nature of Democracy, Freedom and Revolution,” International Publishers, New York, 2001.
2. Herald (Zimbabwe) April 2, 2008.
3. “No Better Opportunity,” German Foreign Policy.Com, March 26, 2007. http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/56059
4. Times (London), November 25, 2007.
5. Rob Gowland, “Zimbabwe: The struggle for land, the struggle for independence,” Communist Party of Australia. http://www.cpa.org.au/booklets/zimbabwe.pdf
6. Herald (Zimbabwe) May 29, 2008.
7. Guardian (UK), March 3, 2008.
8. Wall Street Journal, quoted in Herald (Zimbabwe) March 23, 2008.
9. Talkzimbabwe.com, June 19, 2008.
10. Guardian (UK), August 22, 2002.
11. Herald (Zimbabwe) May 29, 2008.
12. Herald (Zimbabwe), February 22, 2008.
13. New York Times, March 27, 2005.
14. Ibid.
15. Los Angeles Times, July 8, 2005.
16. Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman, “Manufacturing Consent,” Pantheon Books, 1988, p. 28.
17. The Independent (UK), October 22, 2007; New York Times, October 23, 3007.
18. New African, June 2008.
19. Antonia Juhasz, “The Tragic Tale of the IMF in Zimbabwe,” Daily Mirror of Zimbabwe, March 7, 2004.
20. Herald (Zimbabwe) September 13, 2005.
21. Herald (Zimbabwe) August 12, 2005.
22. Morgan Tsvangirai, “Zimbabwe’s Razor Edge,” Guardian (UK) April 7, 2008.
23. Globe and Mail (Toronto), May 31, 2008.
24. Response to Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Monetary Policy Statement,” Ambassador Christopher Dell, February 7, 2007.
25. The Independent (UK), September 20, 2007.
26. John Wright, “Victims of the West,” Morning Star (UK), December 18, 2007.
27. Herald (Zimbabwe), July 6, 2005.
28. AFP, July 29, 2005.
29 Ibid.
30. US Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001.
31. Herald (Zimbabwe) June 4, 2008.
32. “President Signs Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act, December 21, 2001. www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/12/200111221-15.html
33. www.pslweb.org, October 17, 2006.
34. Guardian (UK), April 17, 2008. Milne is also clear on who’s responsible for the conflict in Zimbabwe. In an April 17, 2008 column in The Guardian, he wrote, “Britain refused to act against a white racist coup, triggering a bloody 15-year liberation war, and then imposed racial parliamentary quotas and a 10-year moratorium on land reform at independence. The subsequent failure by Britain and the US to finance land buyouts as expected, along with the impact of IMF programs, laid the ground for the current impasse.”
35. Herald (Zimbabwe), June 11, 2008.
36. The Independent (UK), June 9, 2008.
37. Weekly Worker, 726, June 19, 2008 http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker/726/forced.html
38. New York Times, December 24, 2004.
39. Workers World (US), December 12, 2007.
40. Proletarian (UK) April-May 2007.
41. Los Angeles Times, December 15, 2007.
42. New York Times, August 17, 2007.
43. New York Times, December 9, 2007.
44. BBC, September 30, 2000.
45. Times Online, March 5, 2006.
46. Herald (Zimbabwe), March 27, 2008.
47. Sunday Times (UK), July 1, 2007.
48. Weekly Worker, 726, June 19, 2008 http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker/726/forced.html
49. The Zimbabwe Times, May 31, 2008.
50. Globe and Mail (Toronto) March 22, 2007.
51. Herald (Zimbabwe) April 15, 2007.
52. New African, May 2008.
53. Herald (Zimbabwe), October 18, 2007.
54. Herald (Zimbabwe), January 28, 2008.
55. Herald (Zimbabwe), January 11, 2008.
56. Guardian (UK), June 16, 2008.
57. New African, May 2008.
58. See, for example, Michael Parenti, “The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People’s History Ancient Rome,” The New Press, 2003.
59. Lalkar, May-June, 2008. http://www.lalkar.org/issues/contents/may2008/zim.php
60. Address of Robert Mugabe to the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization, June 3, 2008.
61. New African, May 2008.
62. Weekly Worker, 726, June 19, 2008 http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker/726/forced.html
63. TalkZimbabwe.com, May 15, 2008.
64. Letter to the Herald (Zimbabwe), May 6, 2008.
65. Guardian (UK), March 15, 2008.
66. Herald (Zimbabwe), June 20, 2008.
67. The Independent (UK), June 14, 2008.
Reproduced from:
http://gowans.wordpress.com/2008/06/24/zimbabwe-at-war/
This is a very comprehensive analysis of the problem facing this beautiful country. Africans got to get their acts together soon however. To have one European tribe rule you for 91 years and follow that with one African tribe 27 years. I am so happy we were spared that misery her in good old T&T. At least we have free and fair elections and our political leaders don’t have to run for sanctuary in embassies. You know we have a saying that “when your neighbor’s house is on fire, you should wet yours”.
. I hope that the people of South Africa are taking good notes on this. What a very steep price to pay for peace and reconciliation. Are you aware that there are black families living in the ghettos of Joburg and other areas in SA that can point out the house and lands that were confiscated from them during the barbaric system called Apartheid? In the meantime you have Euro and Asian/ Africans driving around in Benzes, and lamenting how the country has degenerated to the dogs. What a travesty. I still believe that 84 year olds have no business running a country, and no excuses can be made for tyrannical and undemocratic rule. I expect soon to see some US, EU, or better yet AU troops enter Harare and do the right thing. But then I can be dreaming.
Neal Noray said:
You have not advanced any reason for someone being unsuitable for leadership at 84, so that aspect of your comment could simply be your anti-elderly prejudice. What diminished abilities has Mugabe shown to justify that comment?
Where is the tyrannical and undemocratic rule in Zimbabwe? Am I to assume that you are just repeating that line based on the volume of bogus European and US news reports that have been selling that very line? They have saturated the media with their demonizing campaign of Mugabe, so I am not surprised by that comment.
What is the right thing that can be achieved by the US and EU entering Harare to remove a leader because he returned lands to indigenous Africans that was illegally seized by White settlers? To me, your comment sounds like you are just a supporter of imperialism and colonialism.
Heru, regarding Zimbabwe, take your head out of the sand and get real.
Blow your trumpet ‘Gabriel’ Mugabe
By Lloyd Whitefield BUTLER, Jr.
June 26, 2008
talkzimbabwe.com
A US Virginia Governor told the legislature: “You may place the slave where you please–you may put him under any process, which, without destroying his value as a slave, will debase and crush him as a rational being–you may do all this, and the idea that he was born to be free will survive it all. It is allied to his hope of immortality–it is the ethereal part of his nature which oppression cannot reach–it is a torch lit up in his soul by the hand of the Deity, and never meant to be extinguished by the hand of man.” Robert Mugabe recently told the British American Pharaohs “Only God will remove me!”
Full Article : talkzimbabwe.com
Besides being an undemocratic cry baby and all out thug, Mr. Mugabe has single-handedly presided over one of the worst instances of economic collapse and poverty escalation on recorded history.
Yes, initially he was a heralded hero, delivering his country from apartheid hell, but has long since wore off this hero status. He is now simply an outdated tyrant and despot!
His age shouldn’t be a factor, but his other inefficiencies and negatives ring damned loud and clear, making him a clear liability!!
Imagine me this morning listening to the news and hearing that Mugabe’s knighthood was revoked by the UK. Eh? So they gave him honours hoping that his behaviour would suit them and when he did not comply they took it back. Mugabe will be remembered for his courage to choose the interests of his people over the platitudes of the former massa. Is there a western leader who has the guts of Mugabe?
When will we realize that our history does not begin with the Colonials, will we ever shed the chains of European socializing propaganda.
In response to Kerry
So Mugabe is a Tyrant and a despot because he is attempting to correct some historical injustices. Who gave the Colonials the right to declare other people’s land as theirs. Should we forget this very significant historical fact. If the deliverance from apartheid does not translate into the restoration of land and resources for the ordinary person of colour to live; then apartheid has ended only in word and not in the lived reality of those who were previously oppressed under apartheid. Perhaps, with the greatest possible respect Nelson Mandela might want to take a page from Mugabe’s book.
Pat
Heru ,good of you to respond. Let me make it absolutly clear that I have no problem with anyone of any age serving as the democratic leader of a country. My sole concerns however will be that he or she advance the interest of the country as a whole. Mr. Mugabe of course should be commended for his service to the country , and I, like many of my good Caribbean brothers and sisters looked with pride as both him and the esteemed Dr. Jushua Nkomo stood up the British and later Ian similar ways that we looked at the likes of Mandela a true liberator who stood up to evil systems.
Heru , my apologies . Let me to continue – but first put some blame on my computer for allowing my response to go out before I am ready – in essence it was a computer glitch. That is not too bad a trend to follow seeing that you , most African thinkers, and leaders have continually done the same – do the blame game perpetually. Rule the country for over four decades and still want to put full blame and responsibility on on our savage colonial masters. Of course while you are at it, blame every effort at meaningful discussion from a fellow brother within the Diaspora. View them as mere puppets that are incapable to understand the subtle issues that affect our continent.
To the issue at hand, let’s face it, Mr . Mugabe’s time has past him by. It was politically expedient for him perhaps to treat the respected Dr. Nkoma the way he did in the early post revolutionary days. His behavior today to hold on to power and treat the opposition leader and his party – as well as any dissent to his long rule-is reprehensible. Your argument about the land reform might be valid, but Mugabe is not the person to advance it after serving for this long and not making it a priority. What is most sad is the facts that not a single African leader can emerge that have the guts to stand up this thug, and we know why. Most are of similar ilk. Where are the likes of Julius Nyerere when you need them? Selfless, passionate statesmen, that cares about his country and reputation of his region. One cannot depend on cousin Mandela too much again as he did his part and is busy trying to protect whatever tenuous legacy he still have in SA .
I was being facetious when I made the comment about the EU for no one really cares about the African people in case you did not know. If they did then 800,000 Rwandans, and twice the amount in Congo and Sudan with not take place and no one do anything. A bit of history lesson for you Heru – Google the name George Padmore and while you are it throw in CLR James , these were the type of folks that started real consciousness via the Pan Africanist movement -among African leaders like your much admired Kwame Nkrumah that eventually served as an influence for Mugabe.
One of the biggest problems with Africans from the entire Diaspora is that we never like to get any type of advice from another outside our narrow ‘tribal milieu’ – [for want of a better word] The African American/ Stokley Carmichaels had to run to Guinea from criminals from within the Black Panther Movement , Africans and of course the good folks from the Caribbean …?Well you know the rest. That stupid attitude perhaps worked for some during the dreary days of the Cold – War and ideological divide. Unfortunately today, we all need to establish new 21st century thinking as a mechanism for moving forward.
I have a simple rule; emulate success where ever it exists. An old teacher of mind had a good line- “something is good if it works.” That old school tribal nonsense favored by the likes of borderline tyrants such as like Mugabe, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni, Kenya’s Mwai Kibaki,and Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir won’t cut it any more. Asia can make efforts to get it right, and tribal Europe can definitely make it work after two world wars- so can Africa. Away with petty excuses! Europeans and Arabs must be held accountable for their past atrocities in Africa and made to pay for removing ‘the brightest and best minds’ from the continent via the barbaric system call slavery. Simultaneously, African leaders must step up to the plate and not allow modern day slavery, despotic rule, squalor, and economic degradation to flourish.
Mugabe may have outstayed his time in the leadership role, but there must be concern too, for the sell out back into the arms of the western colonial powers, that it seems that the opposition favors.
No one is blaming Britain for their role in the history of Zimbabwe, beginning with the regime of Ian Smith. The imported settler class that began to arrive in the 1950’s were given other people’s land, African land, and opportunities to begin farming- favorable bank loans and so on.
Now, Mugabe is a pariah in Africa, but this does not need British intervention, or that of France Belgium or the USA. These colonialpowers do not have the interests of African sttes ta hert. A negotiated peace, monitored by the African Union, is the only way to go.
We can no longer sit back and watch those who failed to help in Ruwanda and Darfur, or even in South africa for more than eighty years, suddenly unleash their problem solving skills on Zimbabwe. The land resettlement program has to give both parties supporters land on which to feed their people.
The west has absolutely no moral authority in this case, including her Britannic Majesty’s taking back her knighthood, while giving one to salman Rushdie.
Pat in response, that I was the precise point I was trying to make in reference to Mugabe. Perhaps he is not the one to try and take them over that Plateau. It calls for new leaderships. Guys like Mandela and Mugabe are revolutionaries and freedom fighters that like some of the Caribbean leaders took the country thus far and can do more. Mandela recognized his limitations especially as he was advancing in age and the question of his health became an issue. What his successor Mbeki failed to do is to begin a comprehensive plan to educate the young that were caught up n the early struggles, job creation became stagnant, no comprehensive housing plan was put in place and the people got disgruntled more and more by the day.
Now let us not be delusional and try to compare SA with Zimbabwe – South Africa is a extremely wealthy country that was created on the blood of black Africans. This Mugabe stunt will not be allowed to occur in that country – as you might know. I am not too sure if any might want to place a bet on that.
The trick is to convince white South Africans that it is in their own self interest to look out for the mass of people- and share some of that wealth- that have made the ultimate sacrifice in the name of peace and reconciliation.
That is why others outside of Africa – including Africans -got to put some pressure on powers- emulating the Jewish people methodologies. Bono, Madonna, Oprah and entertainers alone won’t do the trick. Where were Ms. Condi Rice, Colin Powell, and Black Caucus over the past 12 years? They were busy trying to bring democracy to the Middle East. It is time for the ACP and Commonwealth body working in collaboration with the EU to be a real force of change and influence in Africa.
The Caricom is simply a small fish in a small pool and can only do so much. The world benefits when Africa rises, doubt that? Then ask any European or Asian what it means to have India, China and former Soviet Satellite countries thriving.
Linda, valid points on a Western Europe and former colonial powers sleeping at the wheel along with the US and a complicit UN. I notice no one puts much responsibility on the former USSR when the distorted ideology was partly the reason much of the problems existed as well. Now if Africa is irrelevant in the eyes of former colonial powers who is to be blamed for that? Let me see, we should have faith in the AU the Nigerians and their military elites are in control of. Now we know how enthusiastic they be to run into a Southern African state devoid of any tangible natural resource such as oil, gold or diamonds. Ah well, the Victoria Falls is worth saving and if everything fails one can break even with South Africa.
Nigerians and the EU as constituted lacks the moral authority to enter any other sovereign state to attempt to ensure democratic change and solve historical social problems , when they have their own tribal com religious / economic debacle in the delta and throughout the country. If ever there was a reason to never have any military ever run a country, look at Nigeria, followed closely by the West Points and Sand Hurst incompetent in Pakistan. I digress, and should quit while I am ahead.These are sensitive times .
Neal Noray,
Ok. In my view you have not researched this issue and are running with some incorrect assumptions. I can easily show how some of your assumptions are based on you not knowing enough of the history behind the events in Zimbabwe. To help expedite a debate I would suggest that you read the original article carefully and show what you disagree with and why.
If you have some time also read the articles linked below which provide some extensive research and give a chronology of the events in Zimbabwe.
Neal Noray said:
Zimbabwe: White Lies, Black Victims by Rosemary Ekosso
and
‘This time, Bob, it’s personal’ by Barrie Collins
Neal Noray said:
These quotes below should explain what transpired over the years that delayed the efforts to redress the land issue in Zimbabwe:
Zim land reform ‘waited for SA’
Related Articles:
Zimbabwe: White Lies, Black Victims by Rosemary Ekosso
http://www.africaspeaks.com/articles/2006/0308.html
Zimbabwe’s Fight For Justice by Gregory Elich
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/ELI505A.html
Zimbabwe Under Siege by Gregory Elich
http://www.swans.com/library/art8/elich004.html
One Zimbabwe or Another: An Interview with Greg Elich
by Mickey Z
http://www.raceandhistory.com/historicalviews/2005/1504.html
U.S. and Britain are Fueling Violence in Zimbabwe
http://www.africaspeaks.com/articles/2007/1503.html
PS:
If you or anyone else do not want to discuss this issue dispassionately and are simply going to throw around insults or unfounded remarks like: “Of course while you are at it, blame every effort at meaningful discussion from a fellow brother within the Diaspora. View them as mere puppets that are incapable to understand the subtle issues that affect our continent.” then I would simply allow you to share your views and leave it at that.
Please leave room for others to comment before responding repeatedly.
Heru , thanks for the informed rebuttal. I am in total agreement that Europeans especially are culpable for the delay in addressing the land issue. It’s a policy they have utilized repeatedly for years. My prime concern is how we move forward in aiding not only Zimbabwe, but all of Africa. I hope you are not trying to say that Mugabe was justified in treating Mr. Morgan Tsvangirai and opposition members in such an inhumane manner. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/zimbabwe-opposition-leader-beaten-unconscious-by-police-439954.html
It is not enough to claim that Western interference are involved in bolstering him.
There is no need to preach to the choir here my friend as we all know the problems of Africa especially Zimbabwe and SA. The real issue is to formulate a comprehensive strategy that can work in the best interest of all. You lose credibility however when you ignore his treatment of people that holds a different viewpoint as to how to move the country forward. One cannot as a leader treat your fellow citizens like garbage and try to justify it, by pointing to Europeans treatment of the continent in the past.
I have this discussion frequently with an Nigerian ex Major friend of mine that try to convince me that the strong arm tactics Muslim Generals use against the poor and neglected Christian brothers and sisters in the south- the oil conglomerates are always blamed as well.
You got to bear with me however; I come from a part of the world that treasures our democracy. Guys can attempt coups and turn round and sue or later become state men. We believe in open and fair election, and allow our citizens to ridicule or leaders. People can also leave to country on scholarships, achieve fame, yet turn around and even tarnish the name of the country, by not giving any credit and return home to countless awards, not bullets. That’s how we do it.
You are correct I should not clog up the discussion with pointless comments especially if I fail to support fully your arguments. Mr. Mugabe should continue to do his thing in defiance of international opinions because the world is a fair. There was a guy named Saddam who thought the same as well. Now his country is on the verge of being transformed to the Stone Age. Let’s me jump off now and allow others to show support.
Regards.
“So Mugabe is a Tyrant and a despot because he is attempting to correct some historical injustices.” Because what???? Where did I say or imply that?
One of course has to give jack his Jacket for his heroic stance and struggles against apartheid. He did play an illustrious, larger than life role in delivering Zimbabwe from the white masters of yesteryear. That can not be argued against, but it also can not be considered the sole judging point of his character and leadership!
30 years of Mr. Mugabe’s rule have left Zimbabwe’s black population with no future legacy! The whites are still largely affluent, having mostly fled (with their money) to South Africa and the UK. And the black majority..what do they have…sentimentality? That can not fill bellies, provide housing or educate children!
Mr. Mugabe’s economic policies have clearly failed Zimbabwe, creating abject poverty and touching off unprecedented economic chaos for blacks. If that’s not bad enough, he not only refuses to allow others a fair chance at steering the country out of this abyss, but he also promotes violence and thuggery as a means to keep himself in power! Can you imagine Mr. Manning or any other Caribbean leader behaving like this?
Mr. Mugabe’s intentions and actions may have been stellar in the beginning,…but what someone tell me..what kind of person would forceably and intentionally heave such hardships on his people???
Commenting after watching two commentaries on Africa: Nightline, with Ben Afleck,in the Congo, and CNN harrying Mugabe agin. According to Afleck, more than one million people have died in the war in the Congo over the last fifteen years. The west does not gie a damn. Few white people live thee, and none of them had “good land” in the highlands, growing tobacco when Africans needed to grow food. All the passion about Zimbabwe has to do with the land, land which Mugabe took back from the Ian Smith group. The fact that he did not sem to redistribute the land equitably,his supporters gettin the most, is a problem; but according to informed Zimbabweans, freedom fighters got the land.
The western powers who are creaming intervention, really want to roll Zim back to pre-1980. The people are not having that, this is why there is still so much support for the old patriarch. He is a Castro figure, but without a Raul to hand over to. Meanwhile all bloggers are asked to ponder the difference between Congo and Zim. One is in the East African Highlands, above the tse-tse fly level, and one is a tropical rainforest, full of biting flies and mosquitoes. Western Europe is not interested in the people of Zimbabwe. they want revenge on Mugabe for having repeated Jomo Kenyatta’s action of throwing out the “white settlers” of Ian Smith. It is alleged that many of them never saw a cow before they landed in Rhodesia as “farmers”.
May I suggest tht readers also read my piece: The Troublig Question of Land Reform, written in 2000, but which I could get NO paper in TnT to publish, until 2005. Rosemary Okosso had it listed on her blog also. When I say could not get it published, it includes giving it to the Editor in chief of a major Tnt paper, who lost it, twice. I then gave up.African people do not control the western press, including the media in TnT.
Neal Noray,
About that beating of Tsvangirai: the mainstream media gave their own take on it while other Zimbabweans and the government gave their account. Because of the history of deceit from Tsvangirai and the mainstream press, I do not accept their version of events. Also, the government did not order the police to beat Tsvangirai. After the fact, Mugabe felt he deserved what he got given the circumstances. In my view, he was not innocent; he was inciting youths to use violence for the purpose of destabilizing the country.
Of the various accounts of that incident given, what seems quite plausible is that the beating came about as a result of the actions of Tsvangirai that prompted his youth groups to break the law. It has been reported the youths confronted a group of police officers who were monitoring their illegal protest which they disingenuously called a ‘prayer meeting’. Members of one of the youth groups cornered and injured some police officers. The police officers called for support and in retaliation, they rained blows on Tsvangirai together with members of his ‘youth group’ whom they felt were responsible for injuring a few police officers. This type of incident is not exclusive to Zimbabwe and is not evidence of government’s mandated brutality against the opposition.
Tsvangirai routinely calls on the US and Europe to invade Zimbabwe. It has been reported at one time he suggested that Mugabe be killed. He has enjoyed tremendous freedom, empowered by the US and Britain, to say more than would be tolerated in the US and Britain.
The fourteen nations that comprise the Southern African Developing Community (SADC) have been sending observers to elections in Zimbabwe and have found them to be free and fair. Personally, I find the majority of elections in the west to be unfair and I can also find similar faults with elections in Zimbabwe and Trinidad and Tobago, but Zimbabwe’s elections are monitored and tallied in the presence of members from many African nations, and I will not accept the West’s racist condemnations of elections in Zimbabwe as if they are the only ones to determine what is free and fair.
Here is another view:
Tenth petrol bomb attack in Zimbabwe:
Police nab 35 MDC activists, confiscate arms, explosives:
UN blocks British, US attempts to halt run-off
Mugabe accuses MDC of terror
http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/Zimbabwe/0,9294,2-11-1662_2085397,00.html
Zimbabwe: Deal decisively with security threat
http://raceandhistory.com/selfnews/viewnews.cgi?newsid1174063608,12477,.shtml
Jonathan Moyo often criticizes Mugabe, so you might want to check out his views, as reported by Dyke Sithole, on the latest turn of events in Zimbabwe.
Tsvangirai pull-out was ill-informed and untimely — Moyo
Thu, 26 Jun 2008
Mugabe was (some may argue still is) one of the greatest leaders in Africa and perhaps the world. However, in my opinion, people change with time. While his land reforms had all the best intentions, many citizens of Zimbabwe complain that it was not implemented properly i.e. the new land owners not given the training for large scale farming. The original owners were pushed off the land years ago and the farming techniques have changed since then so new training would have been needed. The worst part of the land reforms was that a lot of the original owners didn’t get back their land. Mugabe gave large parcels of land to his supporters.
Before as onlookers we all (at least me and quite a few on this blog) though that Western countries were putting undue pressure on Zimbabwe, further contributing to economic downfall. But now with Zimbabwe citizens from all walks of life complaining and even close neighbours seeing what is really going on, many have come to the conclusion that Mugabe has become corrupt.
Kerry Mulchansingh wrote:
“30 years of Mr. Mugabe’s rule have left Zimbabwe’s black population with no future legacy! The whites are still largely affluent, having mostly fled (with their money) to South Africa and the UK. And the black majority..what do they have…sentimentality? That can not fill bellies, provide housing or educate children!”
When did ‘SIR’ Robert Mugabe become such a misfit? Now LisaB wants back her “blessings”. Is it because he dare to utter such dirty words as LAND REFORM? It’s over 200 years since and Haiti is still paying, “They must not succeed, for they can inspire others to …”.
Anyway, time to go look at dem stock market… And they worried about Sir Robert Mugabe as if they don’t have enough problems.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sPyJMKoqHSM
Heru, Let me make something very clear. Multi ethnic and racially mixed societies can present huge and sometimes very difficult political challenges for some leaders. To be honest, it can be just as complex for societies that lack any major differences among its people to develop their countries. {The benefits however are tremendous when you can harness such differences into one socially cohesive unit with love for country as the glue.} It is for this reason, that not everyone is well suited for this profession. There are those that consider compromise as being a sign of weakness. However, that is the true essence of politics. I therefore have one single yardstick- assure me that you care about the country and its people and you’ll get my support. This does not mean that any particular leaders should ignore personal interest that encouraged them to enter the political arena, but the nation’s interest should always be paramount.
I am not going to use this forum to attempt to defend or justify what might be described by you as borderline terrorist tactics by the opposition leader’s overzealous supporters as they try to stand up to the power that be. Let me just say that the Zimbabwe debacle as it stands now has transcends race, and colonialist exploitations. It is now about fairness, power sharing, and economic development to help a struggling people, and true respectability for a region and by extension a continent so that it can finally assume its rightful position in the world of economic and political relevance. Let me ask you something serious. If I have $400 million and want to come to Africa today and do some investments, is Zimbabwe high on my list? It is perhaps the instability and pervasive security breakdown that prevails. The fundamental question to you now is who holds that key? Never lose sight of that question when trying to analyze any troubling political or social issue.
I am not sure that I fully agree with you, that the land reform gene will necessarily return to the closed bottle simply because Mr. Mugabe steps aside or is out of the direct political picture. The message was delivered loud and clear, that business as usual cannot continue. Are the Eurocentric media exploiting the tenuous political situation between the several parties for their own advantage? It is possible, but to counteract that you have to create your own Afro centric independent media outlets willing to compete on a global level. It is logical that Mr. Tsvangirai would look outside for any help he can acquire in the struggles. The Mandela’s and Mugabe’s of the world utilized the same ploys in the past when they were dealing with white tyranny. Unfortunately, Black African lives are not treated with the seriousness it deserved sometimes by the outside, because of the manner that their own leaders justify genocide , similar mass killings, exploitations , neglect, and other forms of politically expedient persecutions.
So you believe that elections in Trinidad and Tobago are unfair like many in the West? I cannot argue with you on score, as there might be some merits in such an argument. There is no perfect system of course. One of the pertinent hallmarks of a Democratic Country is what it strives to do to address issues of justice for the aggrieved. My country has many shortcomings, but I dare you to find a more democratic, open and fair one in the world. What we lack at times are prudent, genuinely patriotic leaders, willing or able to work closely with progressives, so as to form sensible coalitions, alliances, and networks that might possibly help produce social, economic, and political policies that are beneficial to ‘all citizens’.
The lessons here are similar for Zimbabwe or any other former exploited European colony. Hold on tightly to failed divisive cultural norms that pragmatic European masters thrust upon us, or tear up the old play book that inhibits us from transforming our respective nations and peoples into the 21st century- where peace, security, and economic security for all citizens are reachable ideals. Let’s start scouting the history books for systems that can work, and not hold on rigidly to those that have proven to be irrelevant for today. Finally, a policy has failed when the hearts and minds of the intended beneficiary are lost. Generally people the world over are the same. They want to live in security, feed their families, and have the possibility of a bright and pleasant future. They could care less in the end who is the ‘ruler of the roost’. Simply give them the assurances and make efforts to deliver. I wish you luck my friend.
http://www.africasia.com/services/news/newsitem.php?area=africa&item=080627153953 http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/zimbabwe-inflation-over-100000-per-
Riaz Ali said:
I have heard much in the mainstream media about Mugabe giving the land to his cronies, but I am skeptical about those reports that do not give verifiable figures. They sound like the customary exaggerations.
Here are some other opinions on that:
This extract from the article “Zimbabwe: More Than Complicity of Silence” is part of a response by Netfa Freeman on May 01, 2008, to an article from Fletcher:
On August 03, 2006, Rosemary Ekosso in her article titled “Zimbabwe: White Lies, Black Victims” had this to say:
Firstly, anyone who thinks that Trinidad and Tobago is one of the most “democratic, open and fair” systems in the world, as Neal Noray purports, is unaware of the true nature of our politics and the true nature of democracy. Just because we have not degenerated to a situation of civil war does not mean that our political situation is an advanced one. Democracy in Venezuela is more advanced than ours. Voters in Venezuela have the right to recall their leaders and they have referendums unlike Trinidad and Tobago. In Trinidad and Tobago you have the right to vote once every five years and there is little you can do if you find the government is not performing adequately during that period.
Several recent developments have highlighted the shortcomings of our system which, by the way, is a mimicry, with minute alterations, of the British Westminster system: the same nasty, racist and corrupt values are applied here. Although people can vote for the persons and party of their choosing (although people usually vote for the persons who are aligned with a particular party regardless of their capabilities, political experience or integrity), they are still trapped by their colonialist mindsets that box them into voting for either the “lesser of two evils” (which is nonsensical, of course), or for (assumed) political favors, even if these leaders demonstrate corruption, which includes thievery and deceit. People do not have equal access to media, to funding and to the financial affairs of the country. It is for these and other reasons that we do not have a free and fair society and by extension, free and fair elections in the truest sense of the words.
Secondly, has “the Zimbabwe debacle … [transcended] race, and colonialist exploitations”? Surely the very foundation of the Zimbabwe (African, Caribbean, Australian, American, World) struggle is based on racism and colonialism which is still a very stark reality there. To think that Zimbabwe has overcome these conditions is to think that Zimbabwe exists in a bubble. Such fantastical ideas fail to highlight the ongoing battles that Zimbabwe faces with the international community, namely the European and USA governments, along with the racism and corruption meted out by Whites living in Zimbabwe and throughout Africa. The hero of Zimbabwe in the West’s eyes has suddenly become the pariah. Why? Simply because of his attempt to address one aspect of European colonialism: the problem of stolen land. Of course, this is already known. It is for this reason and because he was so adored by the West before this, that the ongoing demonizing campaign against President Mugabe is suspicious. And to think that people choose to favor the anti-African, pro-colonialist views propagated by the Western media without looking to alternative sources for other views or even reviewing history. Real pathetic!
Neal Noray said, “Let’s start scouting the history books for systems that can work, and not hold on rigidly to those that have proven to be irrelevant for today.” This idealistic view cannot work without addressing racism; not only racism against Zimbabwe (and other places) by the West, or racism that the Western media has demonstrated against Mugabe and supporters of Mugabe, but the racism that leads people to favour anti-Africanism without a whim to question.
Neal, Mugabe scouted the history books. It was a system of the Roman rulers/conquerrors, to give their soldiers land at the end of a tour of duty. Sometimes they were settled on conquerred land, to perpetuate the Pax Romana by forced colonialisation. Mugabe restored to his people, land that had been theirs for perhaps the two thousand years that the Shona people had lived there. Those who ran roughshod over East Africa during the last one hundred and fifty yers, had things their own way. It is easy to become a farmer if you take away my land, have subsidized seeds and equipment loans, and you grow a crop for shipment to Europe, while those forced off their land and into your labour camp subsist on mealie porrige.
It is to be hoped that these descendants of the people who built Great Zimbabwe would work out a settlement among themselves- something they are quite capable of, if the MArk Thatchers and their cohorts stay out of it. Were these European coup plotters not arrested in Zimbabwe? No wonder the west demonizes Mugabe. Now,no political leader is a saint, ecept peerhaps MAndela, but the image of the black east African devil has too much currency. I have often said that East Africa, to the European, is a beautiful place, but there are indigenous East Africans there, who believe that that is their land.
I was hoping I could put this discussion to rest and not monopolize the board as I was accused of by Huru. Let’s try to understand where L.Pual is coming from. Perhaps I am really naïve and out of touch with our politics. So Venezuela is now held up as the standard model of democracy. Good for them.Finally a Junta can do something excellent for a Ltin American State.
Referendums are fine but the Opposition might not fall for it. You know the nature of our politics and all. I really wonder if Trinidadians are prepared for this referendum charade however, imaging that every major decision must be subjected to some costly and outlandish debate and vote.
Enlighten me if you can, as I always wanted to ask, who are victims of racism in Trinidad and Tobago presently? Are you saying that the two majority groupings are showing racism to each other or one is enforcing and the other receiving?
I can see your point on the links between media access, funding, and the country’s financial affairs with non election non fairness.
I am glad we had this discussion, as I am a bit tired of beating that dead horse involving Zimbabwe. It is often said that a people get the leader they deserve. If Africans love their leaders who are we to call them tyrants? If Mugabe believes that he can stand up to colonialism by treating his citizens in this manner, hooray for him and his supporters. You are correct, the way to deal with years of racism against black Africans is to do an ID Amin and kick every non – black African off the continent. Better yet the Fujians have a better idea that might just be a worthwhile military model worth emulating. It is though to accept, but after careful consideration, Trinidad and Tobago might be a mini version of Zimbabwe. Thanks for the edification. See what we can achieve through honest dialogue. Viva Democratic Venezuela!
Neal Noray said:
“I was hoping I could put this discussion to rest and not monopolize the board as I was accused of by Huru.”
I did not accuse you of anything. I said:
“Please leave room for others to comment before responding repeatedly.”
The reason for my comment: when a poster gives several responses, one after another, it can put off some people who may wish to respond to your first comment (that is now buried below several others). Their response, that would be posted way below, can sound out of place. So I think it is a good practice to do one response and wait to give others a chance to respond before doing another.
If you feel you have nothing more to add to the discussion, you can move on, but the discussion will not go to rest simply because you’ve had enough of it. The rest of your response is just a dishonest diatribe that moved away from the civility of your prior responses and is not deserving of a reply.
Look, regardless of the history, the only voices capable of influencing Mugabe are those of his African neighbours who unfortunately are not standing shoulder- to- shoulder demanding that the “Old Man” run free and fair elections and stop murdering and terrorizing his own people.
It’s clear that harsh words and expressions of outrage from the international community have no impact on Robert Mugabe and the half dozen henchmen who are pulling his string.
Mugabe has a visceral dislike of Britain for a host of colonial and post-colonial reasons, is deeply suspicious of the United states and takes no notice of the United Nations where he has powerful allies to snuff out any real threats to his rule.He has become a power hungry, murdering thug. Very Unfortunate!
“He has become a power hungry, murdering thug. Very Unfortunate!” This is in a nutshell, what the great hero has been reduced to. All of his great acheivements, while recorded in the history books for posterity, are just that…HISTORY! He could have gone the route of Nelson Mandela…govern like a hero, then hand the reigns over to more competent. It’s a shame
Again, not sainthood for Mugabe here, but its true that CNN was not present when a german general marched the entire Herero nation of South West Africa, into the Otaheite desert and left them there, saying that a real people do not perish so easily. Nor was CNN there when Thomas Jefferson, the founding father of the Republic I now live in, spoke of eliminating ever First American, as Perpetual enemies of the American people. he meant of course, the American white people. Nor was CNN and the BBC present and reporting, when White Australians created the Black Linein tasmania-walked across the country in a line, killing every Aboriginal Tasmanian they could fine, and thus eliminated them all. Nor is CNN and the BBC asking what happened to the indigenous population of Uruguay- They all disappeared after WW11 when a number of Germans, fleeing the retribution of their actions in Europe, settled there. They were present when the Balkans erupted in to genocide, and the Hutus began murdering the Tsutsis in Rwandaa. This late holiness on their part is just hogwash.
We demonise Black Africans in every way, throwing mud in the hope that some would stick. This is why informed Africans are not taking the west overly seriously. they have more information than most westerners ever could.
now, supposing there was an agent of ethnic strife in TnT operating in New York, and every crime committed in the last year, was attributed to the MAnning government, as if ordered by him, and engineered by his people, then Hope Arismandez, Avita’s kidnapping, arranged by her friend, the murder of a PNM councillor, the fake kidnapping of the thirteen year old found with her boyfriend in ah ouse and all the victims of slice and dice as happens daily in the country, would be blamed on the PNM. If the media bought that story lock stock and barrel, how could MAnning fight back?
Discussion opens people to many viewpoints, and the little shadowed recesses of bigoted minds need the light of day shining into them.
CNN was not there, Linda, but does that justify Mugabe’s actions?
Gosh Linda, The PNM is a victim of their own circumstances. If I were to search anything relating to the plight of African people on the World Wide Web, there is a 75% chance my search engine will point me to Trinicenter. That says a lot for the people who run these websites. Yet, (correct me if I am wrong) there is no Trinicenter Radio Station in T&T.. In this age of HD radio (3 stations broadcasting from one transmitter) and Digital TV (600+ stations over the airwaves), I hope they will find a place on the airwaves of T&T. But until then, our hearts goes out for Mr. Manning and the poor PNM, sush.
From 7yrs ago.
http://www.trinicenter.com/Cudjoe/2001/May/2052001.htm
Kerry, I hope this article brings some comfort to your soul.
SOUTH Africa’s land reform programme is in dire straits and there is no chance of reaching a 2008 deadline to complete the restitution process, said a report released by a think tank.
The gloomy report issued by the Centre for Development and Enterprise (CDE) said the country’s agriculture was under serious threat from the struggling land reform strategy.
“The future of South African commercial agriculture is now on the table,” said CDE executive director Ann Bernstein in a statement.
“The economic viability of many rural regions of the country is under threat, which could lead to serious negative consequences for the broader economy and society.”
At the onset of democracy in 1994, some 87 percent of agricultural land in the country was owned by whites, who make up less than 10 percent of the population.
Thirteen years later only four percent of land, or four million hectares (nearly 10 million acres), had been transferred to blacks, said the CDE.
Land reform was taking place “far too slowly” to reach the target of 30 percent — 25 million hectares — by 2014, it added.
The land restitution programme focuses on returning land to blacks that was seized by whites after 1913.
There is “absolutely no prospect” of meeting a 2008 deadline for completing all land restitution claims, the report said.
Land restitution was seriously bogged down in its last phase as the biggest rural claims — involving thousands of people — had led to “large swathes of productive land being placed under claim and therefore effectively frozen for years to come.”
The sugar and timber industries were particularly under pressure.
At least 50 percent of land reform projects had been abject failures, with beneficiaries worse off after land reform due to a lack of post-settlement support from government, said the CDE.
It also warned that South Africa could go down the same path as its neighbour Zimbabwe, where white farmers were forced off their land, if land policy reform was based on racially tinged assumptions about what was holding the process back.
AFP
http://www.talkzimbabwe.com/news/119/ARTICLE/2348/2008-05-07.html
I hope Mugabe’s people have enough sense not to let him attend that upcoming African Union summit. The western media+governments- sometimes they are the same, seem to be waiting for him to take off to declare him out of office. We are watching another Aristide situation unfolding here. Knowing that the EU will not attack the west, it would be easy to have him stripped of power in absentia, and have the opposition leader installed. Bush needs one last hurrah to boost his ratings and Mugabe would give him it if he leaves the country.( Interfering in African politics is right up there with Adopting African Babies by American celebrities, as the current cause to embrace for spotlight purposes.
A panel of Eminent Persons should be appointed instead to go to Zimbabwe and help sort things out. Recommended reading on tangential issue: A Yahoo piece on Black Farmers suing the US government about their land. The First American people would also like to have the US government treat them fairly on their land issue, but Africa is the current “media place” to be.