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WSWS : News
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: Zimbabwe
Civil war looms in Zimbabwe
By Chris Talbot
11 August 2000
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Zimbabwe faces a growing danger of economic collapse and open
civil war, provoked in large part by the efforts of the West to
destabilise the regime of President Robert Mugabe.
Last week Mugabe declared that 3,000 white-owned farms, two
thirds of the total, would be earmarked for seizure. This includes
800 farms already designated for takeover and distribution to
the rural poor. A government statement said that the army would
be brought in to move millions of peasants onto the land, half
a million before the rainy season starts in a few weeks time.
The move came after a series of production stoppages organised
by the Commercial Farmers Union (CFU), which represents Zimbabwe's
wealthy white farmers, who were protesting government-backed farm
occupations by the War Veteran's Association. The CFU actions
anticipated a general strike called by the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) in support of the CFU, and more generally in opposition
to political violence by the Mugabe regime. The MDC action won
wide support in the urban areas.
The MDC, led by Morgan Tsvangirai, who also heads the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), is a self-styled reform party
that openly supports the economic prescriptions of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF).
In announcing an expansion of farm seizures, Mugabe is responding
to intensifying pressure from the Western powers. As retribution
for Mugabe's support for land occupations, the US Congress recently
passed the Zimbabwe Democracy Act 2000, which commits
Washington to use its influence to block all international aid
and financial assistance for Zimbabwe. This comes on top of IMF-related
sanctions already implemented.
Britain, meanwhile, has decided to beef up the African activities
of its foreign intelligence service MI6. A new ministerial committee
has been established, ostensibly to give advanced warning of coup
attempts and threats of civil war in sub-Saharan Africa. The remit
of the committee, headed by Secretary of State for International
Development Clare Short, will undoubtedly include Zimbabwe. It
has a £110 million a year conflict prevention fund
to co-ordinate MI6 operations.
Divisions between town and country
The MDC, which is mainly based in the cities and towns, has
alienated the land-hungry and poverty-stricken people in the countryside
by allying itself domestically with the wealthy white landowners
and internationally with the US, Britain and the IMF. Mugabe,
for his part, has increasingly sought to channel rural discontent
into hostility toward the cities and their working class population.
The widening political division between town and country contains
the potential for civil war. To explain how this has evolved,
it is necessary to examine how the present standoff between Mugabe
and the Western powers developed.
Mugabe came to power as a result of a 15-year armed struggle
against the British-backed white regime in what was Rhodesia.
While spouting Maoist slogans, he was the political representative
of an aspiring national bourgeoisie, whose ambitions were thwarted
by the racist nature of the regime. The 1980 Lancaster House Agreement
signed by Mugabe with Britain preserved capitalist property relations
and the domination of the key mining and agricultural sector by
international corporations and a thin layer of rich white farmers.
Land redistribution could only take place on the basis of a willing
seller agreement, with compensation to be paid with the
aid of British funds.
For a time, Mugabe was able to combine his government's defence
of business interests with limited measures of social reform,
ensuring a popular base for his regime. He was viewed by the West
as a valuable ally and stabilising force on the African continent.
But over the past decade the IMF and World Bank have increasingly
pressed for the imposition of restructuring programs involving
substantial cuts in the public sector and the opening of the economy
to private international capital. As export prices fell and Zimbabwe's
foreign debt mounted, the IMF-dictated reforms led
to growing poverty. A United Nations Development Programme study
notes that the proportion of Zimbabweans living in poverty has
increased from 40 percent to 75 percent over the last decade.
The sharp decline in living standards, 50 percent unemployment
and the increasingly repressive character of Mugabe's rule provoked
popular opposition and created conditions for violent social conflict.
Aware of the extent of social and political tensions, Mugabe felt
unable to meet IMF demands for further cuts in spending as well
as the withdrawal of 10,000 Zimbabwean troops from the Congo,
where they are supporting the regime of Laurent Kabila.
He could not accept measures that would undermine his rule.
This was confirmed by a comment in the July 5 New York Times
by an anonymous Western economist, who said, We all underestimated
the social impact of the [IMF] program. And when we recognised
it, we didn't get our act together quickly enough to help.
Several years ago the Western powers, led by Britain and the
US, decided that it was time to move against Mugabe. While cutting
off virtually all funds and investment to Zimbabwe, they encouraged
the formation of the MDC as an alternative leadership more responsive
to their demands. The MDC is based on an alliance between wealthy
white farmers and sections of black capitalists and the urban
middle class, mainly drawn from a younger layer who grew up after
the civil war.
The trade unions played the key role in the MDC's creation
and have provided it with popular support amongst the urban working
class. White farmers hold three of its top four leadership posts,
but its general secretary is trade union leader Tsvangirai.
Mugabe offers no progressive response to Western threats and
meddling. Instead, he is seeking to hold onto power by whipping
up the legitimate anger of the rural poor not only against the
privileged white farmers and their British backers, but also against
the working class. Here he is given crucial assistance by the
reactionary policies of Tsvangirai and the ZCTU.
For nearly two decades, Mugabe did little to effect land redistribution,
resulting in an erosion of popular support in the countryside
for his regime. In an attempt to reverse this decline and counter
the provocations of Western governments and financial institutions,
he organised earlier this year the occupation of hundreds of white
farms, through the intermediary of the War Veterans association,
which is controlled and financed by ZANU-PF. In general elections
held in June of this year, the MDC won the majority of urban seats,
but ZANU-PF won a narrow overall victory due to its support in
rural seats.
Of ZANU-PF, Mugabe recently declared, Our roots are in
the soil and not in the factories. His ruling clique has
regularly denounced the population of the cities as stooges of
the white farmers and the British government. This has taken on
malignant forms, with attacks on agricultural workers on the large
white-owned farms spreading to urban areas.
For the last month the army has been patrolling the poorest
neighbourhoods, beating up people suspected of supporting the
MDC. To some extent this accounts for the widespread urban support
for the MDC's recent general strike, rather than any broad-based
sympathy for the white farmers.
The land question
Mugabe has been able to increase his popularity throughout
Africa by exploiting the land issue. Already 5,000 squatters are
occupying land in the KwaZulu-Natal area in South Africa, inspired
by the Zimbabwe land seizures. At the end of a recent two-day
summit in Windhoek, Namibia, the 14-country Southern African Development
Community endorsed Mugabe's stance on the land question and urged
South African President Mbeki to press Britain for compensation
for farms seized by the Mugabe government.
However, the situation regarding land ownership in Africa epitomises
the inability of any section of the national bourgeoisie to resolve
the democratic and social problems produced by imperialist domination
and economic underdevelopment. Two decades after formal independence,
Zimbabwe's white farmers still own more than half the arable farmland,
while the majority of rural blacks eke out an existence on small
plots of poor quality, or are completely landless. Black South
Africans, 75 percent of the population, own only 25 percent of
the land and in Namibia 4,000 whites own about 44 percent of the
total.
For its part, the MDC's policy on the land question is virtually
identical to that of the white farm owners and the British government,
insisting that white farmers be fully compensated for any land
taken over.
While the status quo in the countryside is neither socially
just nor economically viable, Mugabe's role is to exploit the
land question as a political weapon without offering a rational
policy for the development of agriculture, Zimbabwe's second major
export industry after gold. The break-up of large and profitable
estates and settlement of millions of families on plots with no
water or agricultural equipment, and without access to cheap credit
or subsidies, sets the stage for a social and economic disaster.
Moreover, despite his anti-Western rhetoric, Mugabe remains
committed to the defence of big business interests at the expense
of the working people. While pledging to expropriate white estates,
his government has devalued the currency and promised further
budget cuts and privatisationmeasures entirely in line with
IMF demands and the policies advocated by the MDC.
A just and viable solution to the land question can only be
found through the development of a political and social movement
of the workers and oppressed rural poor, independent of both rival
camps within the national bourgeoisie. This requires a new socialist
leadership, armed with a program for liberating Zimbabwe and the
whole of Africa from the grip of the transnational corporations,
the IMF and the Western banks.
See Also:
Narrow victory for Mugabe
in Zimbabwean elections sets stage for further upheavals
[29 June 2000]
Zimbabwe
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