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Zimbabwe: Resistance to Mugabes rule deepens
By Chris Talbot
29 March 2007
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The arrest yesterday of Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the
opposition Movement For Democratic Change (MDC), is the latest
move in a desperate clampdown on growing opposition to the rule
of President Robert Mugabe.
Tsvangirai was taken into police custody along with a number
of others following a raid on the MDCs headquarters in Harare.
There are also reports that two nearby streets were sealed
off, with tear gas fired at witnesses to the event.
At an anti-government rally on March 11, police subjected Tsvangirai
and other MDC supporters to a severe beating, leaving him with
a fractured skull and severe bruising. The results were shown
to the worlds media.
Up to 50 MDC leaders have been severely beaten whilst in jail,
including Arthur Mutambara, leader of a breakaway faction of the
MDC, and Nelson Chamisa, MDC spokesman, who was attacked by eight
security men with iron bars and critically injured. Several MDC
leaders have had to flee to South Africa for medical attention.
In the aftermath of the rally police hit squads are reported
to be arresting and beating up opponents throughout the country.
In the capital the civic group, the Combined Harare Residents
Association, reported that individuals caught moving at night
in the townships had been stopped by police and beaten. The Independent
reported a phone call from a Harare resident saying that some
people had more serious injuries than Tsvangirai.
There are signs of a growing mood of resistance, despite the
attempts of MDC leaders to keep protest to a limited and peaceful
nature. The BBC reports an eyewitness account of the rally on
March 11. After Tsvangirai and other leaders were taken away,
there were over a thousand youths protesting and only 30 police
attempting to control them. After first using teargas the police
started shooting and one of the protesters, Gift Tandare, was
killed. After this, the eyewitness said, We went on the
rampage and we did not even fear for our lives.
The police ran for their vehicles and the six or so left behind
were badly beaten. Only the intervention of a local community
youth leader prevented the police from being killed.
The ZANU-PF authorities, fearing that the funeral of Gift Tandare
would spark off mass opposition to the regime, stole the body
and buried it without the presence of family and friends.
The United States sees the growing opposition to Mugabe as
an opportunity to impose its agenda in Zimbabwe. Ambassador Christopher
Dell said that opposition to Mugabe had reached a tipping
point. He detected a new spirit of resistancesome
would say defianceon the part of the people.
He went on to praise the comments of Zimbabwes Reserve
Bank Director Dr. Gideon Gono, who had warned that inflation was
now comparable to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Zimbabwe and proposed
a programme of tough austerity measures.
Dell denied that the US administration wants to overthrow the
government, insisting that for us the question is not who
rules Zimbabwe, but how Zimbabwe is ruled.
His interview was a clear message to elements within the ruling
ZANU-PF party that the US is willing to do business with them
if they oust Mugabe and form a regime that is more directly accountable
to global capital.
It is clear that change is coming, Dell said, it
is clear that a succession is in the offing, everybody knows that
the economic crisis that Zimbabwe is experiencing simply provides
the backdrop for the internal dissentions within the Ruling Party;
thats where the succession struggle is playing itself out
right now.
When asked whether the international donors would provide economic
assistance for Zimbabwe, Dell made it clear that any help was
dependent on regime change. The US is prepared to provide
that helping hand but only on the basis that whoever is governing
this country is clearly, demonstrably and irrevocably committed
to reforms to restore the economy and democracy.
What particularly concerned Dell was Mugabes disregard
for private property.
The UK is following the US lead closely. The Independent
quotes an unnamed British official who explains that Britain and
the Western powers would reengage quite vigorously
with factions in ZANU-PF, and in return for limiting the violence
against the opposition and moving to elections they would lift
the present sanctions in place against the regime.
Another unidentified diplomat told the Guardian, The
feeling is that the way forward is a deal between those in ZANU-PF
that want rid of Mugabe to try and save their party and those
in the opposition prepared to work with them. Its the best
way of bringing about swift change and if they can come to a deal,
that changes everything. That is what we are working toward.
While Western governments have not given up on the MDC, they
are using it essentially in order to put pressure on ZANU-PF so
as to provoke a split. An alliance between the MDC and ZANU-PF
would hopefully provide the major global investors and banks with
a regime that could then impose drastic austerity measures on
the working class and rural poor.
ZANU-PF would bring with it control of the armed forces, its
continued influence in the countryside and what remains of its
anti-imperialist credentials. The MDC would be a political vehicle
within government for Zimbabwes white businessmen and estate
owners, while hopefully using its status as a democratic opposition
to Mugabe and its influence in the trade unions to ensure the
compliance of the urban working class.
The main rival factions within ZANU-PF are led by Solomon Mujuru,
whose wife Joyce is vice president, and by Emmerson Mnangagwa.
Both are wealthy businessmen with considerable support in the
armed forces and intelligence services. British Channel Four Television
filmed a secret meeting taking place last week in Johannesburg
between Joyce Mujuru and the South African vice president, Phumzile
Mlambo-Ngcuka.
The fact that Western governments want to replace Mugabe with
a rival faction from ZANU-PF exposes the hypocrisy of their condemnation
of human rights violations in Zimbabwe. Solomon Mujuru was head
of the Zimbabwean army and, as part of the ZANU-PF leadership
since the 1970s, has fully supported the recent repression. So
has Emmerson Mnangagwa, also part of the ZANU-PF elite and notorious
for his role as minister of state security in the 1980s when more
than 20,000 ethnic Ndebeles were killed to stop a threatened uprising
against the Mugabe regime.
Western governments are putting pressure on neighbouring South
Africa to intervene. Most vocal has been Australian Prime Minister
John Howard, who criticised South Africa especially: He
[Mugabe] was a brother in arms against apartheid, I know that,
but thats a long time ago. Hes been a disaster as
a leader of his country and I think theres a very special
responsibility on his neighbouring African colleagues to do things.
Whilst the official response from South Africa has been low
key, there is intense activity behind the scenes to organise a
palace coup from within ZANU-PF. Zimbabwe is economically
dependent on South Africa.
Mugabe can no longer rely on much of the police and army. A
leaked confidential police memo reported wide-scale desertions
by poorly paid officers and soldiers. Many of them are going to
South Africa to work as security guards. Only special units that
report directly to the president can be trusted to carry out the
beating of oppositionists and intimidating the population. There
are also reports that Mugabe is obtaining the support of around
2,500 Angolan paramilitary police as part of a bilateral deal
with the Angolan government.
The failure of bourgeois nationalism
The description of Zimbabwe as being in a state of meltdown
hardly does justice to the catastrophe that the population faces.
Life expectancy is now the lowest in the world: 37 for men and
34 for women. These figures were obtained two years ago and the
real figures could be as low as 30, with an estimated 3,500 people
dying each week. The most popular organisations are burial societies
that collect money for a decent funeral. As one of the few places
where people are allowed to meet, these societies have become
centres of political opposition.
There is a raging AIDS pandemic, with virtually no treatment
available. Food shortages are widespread and thousands are going
hungry with reports of poor rainfall in a situation where most
people have to grow their own food. Most factories and other sources
of employment have closed down and hyperinflation is running at
1,700 percent and rising. Unemployment is 80 percent and 85 percent
live in poverty.
At least a million people, mainly those with professional qualifications,
have fled to the West. Up to a quarter of the remaining population,
over 3 million people, have fled to South Africa as illegal immigrants.
The border is heavily policed and crossing the Limpopo River dangerous,
but hundreds are paying people smugglers and fleeing every day.
Zimbabwes slide into such a disaster cannot be explained
in terms of the personal failings of Mugabe, or as something that
is peculiar to African politics. Mugabe led a successful liberation
struggle to oust the white Rhodesian regime that was allowed to
stay in power by Britain, the former colonial ruler, and the Western
governments.
But his politics, characteristic of bourgeois nationalists
throughout the world, led to a compromise deal, the Lancaster
House agreement, with Western imperialism in 1979. Whilst Mugabe
employed socialist rhetoric to win support, he did so in order
to preserve capitalism and the interests of the transnational
corporations and banks.
All opposition to investment by the imperialist powers was
dropped. Also abandoned was the policy of nationalizing the land
that had originally won ZANU its rural support. The Mugabe regime
was widely praised by Western governments and as aid flowed into
state-funded healthcare and education expanded.
By 1990 the Zimbabwe government accepted an International Monetary
Fund Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility. The free-market
measures contained in such programmes, imposed on many developing
countries, were devastating. State spending had to be slashedfor
example spending per person on healthcare fell by a third from
1990 to 1996, despite the AIDS pandemicand the economy slumped,
giving rise to increasing government debts. Further global competition
in agriculture and falling prices of minerals resulted in severe
economic decline, for which Mugabes nationalist policies
had no answer.
Mugabes relations with the IMF and the Western powers
became increasingly strained as the cuts in state spending being
demanded hit the system of patronage on which the regime depended.
By the late 1990s growing resistance from the working class led
to a series of strikes, but opposition to the ZANU-PF regime was
channelled into the pro-IMF MDC.
In 2000 Mugabe attempted to win back support from the landless
poor by seizing farms from their white owners. Until then such
larger-scale capitalist agriculture had been allowed to continue
unhindered. Some of the farms were taken over by the rich ZANU-PF
elite, others divided up amongst the landless. But with no state
funding for investment in agricultural inputs, machinery or training
a collapse in farming has resulted that has had dire consequences
for the economy and the food supply.
The role of the MDC
This combination of free-market IMF measures with ZANU-PFs
nationalism is responsible for the appalling state of Zimbabwe
today. However, the tragic consequences for the population have
been compounded by the leaders of the MDC.
Based partly on the support of the trade union bureaucracy
of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trades Unions (ZTUC) and partly on
businessmen opposed to Mugabe, the MDC were able to gain a mass
following in the urban areas. They hoped, with pro-IMF policies,
to use Western backing to oust Mugabe. In the elections of 2002
they won a large proportion of the vote, but Mugabe clung onto
power.
Apart from denouncing Mugabe for rigging the votes, Western
governmentsunable to get support from South Africadid
not take further action. The MDC had no alternative to pleading
for Western support apart from further election campaigns and
protest strikes. In consequence their support slumped. Two years
ago they split into two factions with differences over election
tactics and criticisms of Tsvangirais leadership.
In neighbouring South Africa, the much larger working class
has also been prevented from coming to the aid of their brothers
and sisters in Zimbabwe by the politics of the South African trade
unions in COSATU, which is in a governmental alliance with the
ANC and bases itself on a pro-capitalist programme. COSATU has
now called for a two-day sympathy strike and has politically distanced
itself from Mugabes regime, but only to offer verbal support
for the pro-Western MDC.
At the same time it has raised no opposition to the South African
government declaring refugees from Zimbabwe illegal and shipping
them backmore than one thousand people a day are bussed
back over the border from Johannesburg.
Instead the union leaders are campaigning against the use of
cheap labour from Zimbabwe to hold down wages and demanding harsh
penalties for employers breaking the labour laws.
If resistance to Mugabes rule is to succeed it can only
be achieved through a politically independent and unified movement
of working people in Zimbabwe and throughout southern Africa and
on the basis of an international socialist perspective. Such a
movement would repudiate the debts to the Western banks, take
the mines and factories out of the hands of Western corporations
and the local wealthy elites, and develop a socially progressive
policy for agriculture.
See Also:
Zimbabwe: Mugabes
Operation Murambatsvina
[16 July 2005]
Pakistan and Zimbabwe:
a tale of two autocrats
[26 May 2004]
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