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: Zimbabwe
Tensions grow between Zimbabwe's ZANU-PF government and MDC
opposition
By Chris Talbot
12 April 2000
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Five people have been killed and several seriously injured
in clashes, as supporters of the ruling ZANU-PF party stepped
up their occupations of white-owned farms in Zimbabwe. Violence
has escalated in the past two weeks, since ZANU-PF supporters
wielding clubs and iron bars attacked a march through the capital
Harare organised by the opposition National Constitutional Assembly
(NCA). The NCAa coalition of politicians, church groups,
academics and others opposed to the ZANU-PF regimeis dominated
by the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Much of the recent violence has centred on white-owned farms
belonging to leading MDC members. The attack on last weekend's
march also singled out whites. ZANU-PF has pushed the land issue
to the fore in the run-up to parliamentary elections scheduled
for next month, and regards the promise of land reform as a means
of winning back lost support amongst Zimbabwe's rural masses.
The farm occupations began at the end of February, after the defeat
of ZANU-PF in a referendum on a new constitution, which sought
to strengthen Robert Mugabe's grip on the presidency by allowing
him to stand for another two terms. Although Mugabe had added
a clause empowering the government to seize land held by white
farmers and demanding that the British government pay compensation,
this failed to convince voters to support the referendum.
Over half the land in Zimbabwe, more than 45 million acres,
is owned by a mere 3 percent of the population, predominantly
whites. About 4,000 white-owned farms take up 70 percent of the
prime farming land, while the majority black population are left
with areas of low fertility. This gross inequality is a legacy
of the colonial period, when white settlers under Cecil Rhodes
seized the country and took the best land for themselves. Further
dispossessions took place after the Second World War when demobilised
British officers were encouraged to settle in what was then called
Rhodesia.
Mugabe could not convince the rural masses that he was serious
about land reform because he has lived with this situation for
20 years. Having fought an armed struggle against British-backed
white minority governments since the 1960s, Mugabe came to power
in 1980, claiming to be a Marxist. His ZANU-PF government immediately
ended all pretensions to socialism, declaring that it would "accept
the capitalist base of the Rhodesian economy with 'modifications
in a gradual way' without seizure of private property or blanket
nationalisation."
The Lancaster House agreement, the deal with Britain establishing
Zimbabwe as an independent country, allowed for the Harare government
to acquire land from white farmers only on the "willing seller/willing
buyer" principle for the first 10 years after independence.
This provision was little used because Mugabe did not want to
threaten the profitability of the white-owned tobacco farms that
are one of Zimbabwe's main export earners.
Recently, the state redistributed about 270 farms formerly
owned by whites, but these did not go to the rural poor. They
were given to just 400 people, all leading ZANU-PF figures, who
include the attorney general, the mines and tourism minister,
the speaker of parliament, two high court judges and a retired
general. When poor black farmers attempted to occupy three farms
over a year ago, Mugabe's government sent riot police to drive
them out.
Mugabe has raised the issue of land redistribution too late
to win spontaneous approval and so has resorted to strong-arm
tactics. Although it is claimed that veterans of the war against
the white regime have carried out the farm occupations, only an
estimated 15 percent are actual veterans. Most of the occupiers
are unemployed youth whom ZANU-PF pays Z$50 (83p) a day. Mugabe
recently gave the war veterans' £330,000 to finance their
campaign.
Economic and social crisis
ZANU-PF ministers have blamed their referendum defeat on the
MDC and claim that white farmers forced their workers to vote
against the new constitution. But the widespread nature of the
opposition to Mugabe can hardly be explained by the existence
of wealthy white farmers, who until the last two or three years
enjoyed the support of Mugabe's rule and profited from it. The
real causes lie in the economic crisis that is engulfing Zimbabwe,
driving the mass of the population into poverty, as well as the
social changes that have taken place since independence, undermining
ZANU-PF's rural base of support. Scratching a pittance on a small
farm holds few attractions for youth that have flocked to the
towns looking for work, where they have tended to lose their tribal
allegiances and begun to identify with other workers.
In 1991 Mugabe called in the IMF, and the Zimbabwean government
accepted a structural adjustment programme to deal with their
debt. Although the country had a budget deficit, it did not have
an unsustainable foreign debt like many other sub-Saharan African
countries. The private sector economy grew in the first half of
the 90s, particularly in manufacturing, reaching a peak GDP growth
of 7.3 percent in 1996. However, government earnings fell and
government debt actually increased as the result of cutting taxes
and giving tax breaks to business, as the IMF prescribed.
From 1997 onwards loss of export earnings from agriculture
and mining plunged the economy into a sharp decline. In just over
a year, the value of the Zimbabwean dollar fell against the American
dollar from Z$11 to just over Z$38. Inflation increased from 19
percent in 1997 to over 60 percent in 1999.
Forced to go to the IMF again in order to pay their foreign
creditors, the Zimbabwean government was faced with impossible
terms. The IMF demanded that 14,000 public sector jobs must go,
that there should be further reductions in health and education
spending following the already savage cuts of the early 1990s,
and that the army should pull out of the Congo war, which was
costing an estimated one million US dollars a day.
If Mugabe cut off the lucrative earnings that the generals
were making from their incursion into the Congo, he risked destroying
his own political base and a military coup.
By the end of 1999 the IMF cut off all funds to Zimbabwe. Private
lenders followed suit, bringing the economy to the brink of collapse.
For the majority of the population this has meant even greater
levels of unemployment and poverty, and long queues for petrol
and other basic commodities, boosting illusions in the MDC and
their call for "change".
Movement for Democratic Change
Whether Mugabe survives beyond May's elections remains to be
seen. But if he does, or the MDC replaces him and brings the country
back into the IMF fold, there will be more savage attacks on workers'
living standards and deeper cuts in the public sector.
The MDC was set up last year by trade union bureaucrats, previously
leaders of the NCA, who saw the possibility of creating an electoral
alliance to topple Mugabe. It calls for a crash program of privatisation,
the slashing of public spending and opening up of the economy
to international capital investment. This program has the support
of a coalition of white and black businessmen, with the trade
union bureaucracy playing a key role in selling it to the masses.
The MDC's slogan "Let's change things" is an attempt
to mobilise support on the basis of discontent with the Mugabe
regime. Its leader Morgan Tsvangirai is the secretary general
of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trades Unions. He claims that the
economic dislocation caused by the IMF structural adjustment programme
is the result of a "failure of administration not policy".
In his speeches to rallies, he promises to address the poverty
and unemployment that daily confront the mass of the population.
But he makes clear to foreign reporters that he supports the IMF
programme.
The April 11 Guardian wrote of the MDC, White
support is proving crucial to the opposition. The party will not
say how much money it has raised, or from where. But the head
of its campaign in Mashonal and West's 10 constituencies, Duke
du Coudray, concedes that a significant proportion of campaign
funds comes from white-owned businesses.
Noting that three of the top four positions on the party's
executive are held by whites, it cited du Coudray's explanation:
"There's only one reason we whites are so visible.... The
mass of this party is black but the black bourgeoisie is afraid
to take a public stand.
The MDC's Stabilisation and Recovery Program promises
to reduce all non-essential government expenditure and restructure
government itself, to implement fast track privatisation
of all government-controlled business entities and the contracting
out of many government functions to the private sector,
and provide supply side incentives that will entice the
private sector to undertake [previously state-run] activities.
Its land policy is based not only on the preservation of white
ownership of the best farming areas, but the break-up of communal
land and encouraging the spread of private ownership. MDC's version
of redistribution of land is to take over 6-7
million ha [hectares] of land for resettlement through the acquisition
of under-utilised, derelict and multiple owned [i.e. communal]
land. To do this it pledges to relocate and resettle
200,000 households in communal areas, while introducing
freehold title in communal and resettlement areas, to enlarge
the land to be used as security to attract much needed investments.
This policy would benefit a thin layer of better-off blacks in
the countryside, while herding hundreds of thousands of the rural
poor into undeveloped, substandard state farms.
The trade union leaders boast of their long record of
effective administration and organisation. This is to be
utilised in order to curb any expressions of political independence
or social opposition amongst working people. The MDC promises
to halt the current passive labour market approach, and
actively pursue employment-intensive growth and an employment
policy co-ordinated by a Tripartite [government, employers and
unions] Labour Market Commission.
Imperialist support
It is this program that has won the MDC the political backing
of Zimbabwe's former colonial rulers, Britain. There have also
been accusations made that America's International Republican
Institute sponsors the MDC.
Mugabe has demagogically threatened to "go to war"
with Britain, in response to clear attempts by London to destabilise
his regime. Last autumn at the Commonwealth Conference, Prime
Minister Blair publicly criticised the Zimbabwean government for
not controlling the country's AIDS epidemic, which has resulted
in one in four of the population being HIV positive. Relations
between London and Harare deteriorated further when Zimbabwean
customs officials opened a crate labelled as British diplomatic
baggage, hoping to find material destined for the opposition MDC.
Foreign Office Minister for Africa Peter Hain stated, "This
is not the act of a civilised country." Hain, who was born
in Kenya and brought up in South Africa, cut his political teeth
in the anti-apartheid movement. He knows Africa well and such
a remark by him, echoing the language of the white racist regime
in South Africa and British colonialism, is a calculated insult.
As the land occupations escalated, the British government let
it be known that it had made arrangements to airlift 20,000 British
passport holders out of Zimbabwe. Hain declared, "This sort
of thuggery, licensed from on high, is dragging Zimbabwe's already
tainted name through the mud."
Britain fears that Mugabe is managing Zimbabwe's economy in
the interests of his own cronies, rather than those of international
capital. It is also concerned at the disintegration of the Congo
since the fall of Mobutu, the dictator imposed by America during
the Cold War. Zimbabwe has the infrastructure to exploit the Congo's
minerals and could provide a gateway into this rich region where
Zimbabwe's army is currently propping up Mobutu's embattled successor,
Laurent Kabila, and has seized control of the largest diamond-mining
complex in Africa at Mbuji Mayi, as well as the vast copper and
cobalt operations in Katanga. British capitalists have longstanding
interests in the Congo, where they covertly backed the breakaway
Katanga province in the 1960s.
See Also:
Zimbabwe: Referendum defeat
for Mugabe shakes Zanu-PF government
[22 February 2000]
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