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Zimbabwe: Mugabe government halts food aid
By Ann Talbot
19 June 2008
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The ZANU-PF government of President Robert Mugabe has banned
aid agencies from distributing food in rural areas of Zimbabwe
in the run up to the second round of the presidential elections
later this month. The effect of the ban is to give the government
almost complete control over the food supply.
This is the latest phase in Operation Makavhoterapapi?
or Where did you put your vote? The campaign has involved
systematic beatings, kidnappings and murders in an attempt to
intimidate the population into voting for Mugabe.
More than one third of the Zimbabwean population is dependent
on food aid. Some 1.3 million of the four million people who face
starvation as a result of the governments ban on aid agencies
are children under the age of five who have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS.
In the past Mugabe has always been able to rely on support
from the countryside, particularly Mashonaland. But in the March
elections it was clear that ZANU-PF had lost its electoral heartland
and that mass opposition was developing among the rural poor.
The ban on food aid is Mugabes response to the collapse
of his previous social base.
The order to halt food distributions came as Mugabe was at
the world food summit in Rome. He used the occasion to posture
as an opponent of imperialism. But behind his cynical rhetoric,
he is prepared to starve the most vulnerable sections of the Zimbabwean
population rather than relinquish power.
Mugabe and the corrupt elite that surround him are seeking
to hold on to power at whatever cost to the rural poor and urban
working class. It is estimated that 25,000 people have been displaced
since the March election, 65 people are thought to have been killed,
a further 200 are reported missing and 3,000 people have been
treated in hospital as a result of violent attacks.
Many of those killed have been activists of the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) led by Morgan Tsvangirai. Tsvangirai won
a majority of the vote in the presidential poll, but according
to the official count did not win the overall majority needed
to avoid a second round. The MDC emerged from the parliamentary
and local government polls that took place at the same time as
the majority party.
Tsvangirai and other leading members of the MDC have been repeatedly
arrested and harassed during the election campaign. Trade union
leaders and smaller political groups have been treated in the
same way as the MDC. Arthur Mutambara, the leader of a breakaway
faction of the MDC, was arrested. Lovemore Matombo, president
of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), and Wellington
Chibebe, general secretary of the ZCTU, were arrested and banned
from speaking at political rallies. Six members of the International
Socialist Organisation have been arrested and the partys
offices raided. Despite their tactical differences with Tsvangirais
MDC, all these organisations share a common perspective.
Tsvangirai is a former trade union leader and his party is
composed of businessmen and a smattering of union bureaucrats.
The MDC advocates free market measures and it has the backing
of the United States and European governments.
Unemployment is running at 80 percent and inflation reached
1.7 million percent in April. One third of the population has
fled the country in search of work. Many others travel regularly
across the border to buy food in neighbouring countries.
The MDC has been able to win support by speaking in general
terms about the need for change. It has tapped into a groundswell
of hostility to the ZANU-PF regime. But there are no differences
of a fundamental class character between ZANU-PF and the MDC.
Mugabe himself was able to work with Western governments and the
international financial institutions for 20 years. He only rejected
their dictates when he realised that he risked undermining his
own power of patronage.
On his return from Rome, Mugabe stepped up his anti-imperialist
rhetoric. Speaking at the funeral of a veteran of the war against
the racist Smith regime, he said We are prepared to fight
for our country or to go to war if we lose itas happened
to our forefathers.
Once again we want to make it clear to the British and
Americans that we are no ones subjects and will never be,
said Mugabe. This country shall not again come under the
rule and control of the white man, direct or indirect. Never,
ever.
Mugabes pugnacious language is to a great extent a bargaining
position as he attempts to cut a deal with Washington and London
that will allow him to hold on to power. Despite his strident
tone, behind the scenes attempts are being made to establish a
government of national unity. Negotiations are going on in South
Africa to arrive at a power sharing deal like that established
recently in Kenya. According to the Financial Times President
Thabo Mbeki of South Africa and former UN General Secretary Kofi
Annan are working for an agreement that would see victory declared
for Mugabe.
Mr Mugabe would then be sworn in for another term as
president, but would later agree to step down in favour of a unity
government headed by a Zanu-PF leader.
South Africa is rushing 300,000 tonnes of maize to Zimbabwe
ahead of the elections. With the rural population starving, this
food may allow Mugabe to tilt the vote in his favour.
For his part, Tsvangirai is attempting to put pressure on Thabo
Mbeki to reach a deal favourable to him. He recently wrote to
Mbeki accusing him of being unfit to mediate in Zimbabwe.
But the British and US governments have shown no readiness
to accept a compromise that leaves Mugabe in power, and want him
to be either deposed or removed in a palace coup.
The US is openly hostile to Mbekis efforts. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice and Assistant Secretary of State for
African Affairs Jendayi Frazer are looking to President Levy Mwanawasa
of Zambia to take over the role of mediator on behalf of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC).
At the weekend,, a group of African statesmen, including former
presidents of Nigeria, Botswana, Mozambique, Malawi, Tanzania
and Benin, signed a declaration expressing their concern at the
violence in Zimbabwe. The fact that former Mozambican President
Joaquim Chissano is among the signatories is significant because
in the past he has been close to Mugabe.
President Bush, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and Britains
Prime Minister Gordon Brown are said to be demanding that Zimbabwes
neighbours impose an economic blockade. This would include switching
off electricity supplies from South Africa. China has come under
pressure to break off its economic relations with Zimbabwe.
An unnamed Western diplomat told the Zimbabwe Guardian,
One way or another, this summer is likely to mark the endgame
for Robert Mugabe.
Mbekis choice for Mugabes successor would be Simba
Makoni. Makoni split from ZANU-PF to run against Mugabe in the
presidential elections. He came in third with about nine percent
of the vote. His name has been suggested as a possible president
because of the support he retains in ZANU-PF.
Despite the repression that is being directed against their
party, the leaders of the MDC have shown themselves willing to
accept a government of national unity with ZANU-PF.
Tsvangirai has stressed his readiness to work with the ruling
party. Instead of focusing on what divides us, Tsvangirai
said, We must now try to heal our nation. This means that
we can even talk about restoring ZANU-PF.
Nelson Chamisa of the MDC reiterated Tsvangirais words.
The MDC fishing rod is going to be thrown into all rivers
including the ZANU-PF rivers, he said.
If the talks are successful the run off may even be abandoned.
An unnamed ZANU-PF insider was quoted in the Harare-based Financial
Gazette as saying, It is clear to both ZANU-PF and the
MDC that proceeding with the election is more of a zero sum game.
Both parties are aware that the solution to the crisis lies in
a GNU and so why should we waste resources with this costly charade?
The political elite are well aware of the danger of attempting
to hold an election when the political authority of ZANU-PF has
broken down and the country is in economic meltdown. The governments
campaign of repression is further alienating the mass of the population
from Mugabes regime.
We need to establish an authority that will take care
of business up until we are able to run an election. Simba
Makoni said.
Even if by the remotest of chances we could have an election
whose results would resemble the will of the people, it would
still not resolve the crisis. He added. Neither of
the two leaders ... would be able to form an effective government
if they won the run-off.
Such is the depth of the economic and political crisis that
even the most hard line supporters of Mugabe have begun to doubt
their ability to ensure a victory for him. A group of war veterans
has also called for the second round of the presidential elections
to be suspended. Chris Pasipamire, spokesman for Mwana Wevhuthe
Revolutionary Councilsaid that Zimbabwe cannot afford an
election. Mwana Wevhu is sponsored by First Lady Grace Mugabe.
The clique around Mugabe has enriched itself fabulously. Leading
military figures profited from the invasion of the Democratic
Republic of Congo, where they seized mineral and logging rights.
The redistribution of white-owned commercial farms has benefited
those close to Mugabe, who have received land in return for their
loyalty.
But there are factions of ZANU-PF that would be prepared to
ditch Mugabe because he has become a liability and threatens their
ability to act as the local representatives of global capital.
The group of businessmen and trade union officials around Tsvangirai
simply want their share of power and the wealth that goes with
it. They have broken with Mugabe because they see him as being
out of step with the global financial interests that want to make
use of Zimbabwes resources. With every day that goes by
the potential profit to be gained from Zimbabwes farmland
and mineral resources increases as commodity prices rise. They
have no objections to sharing power if the returns are great enough.
Such are the rivalries between the MDC and ZANU-PF that it
may not be possible for them to establish a government of national
unity. But that there is a desire to do so at all reflects the
fear that all sections of the Zimbabwean political elite have
of the urban working class and rural poor. The election revealed
a rising tide of anger and hostility toward the old regime. For
the present Tsvangirai has been the beneficiary of that anger,
but he cannot be unaware of the fact that his economic programme
would be unwelcome to the majority of Zimbabweans once its implications
were understood.
Tsvangirai has consistently refused to mobilise mass opposition
to Mugabe because he is afraid that such a movement would get
out of his control. He is willing to countenance sharing power
with Mugabe and his cronies because he knows that he may need
their proven ruthlessness to enforce the kind of economic measures
he plans to introduce.
The International Monetary Fund Structural Adjustment Plan
that Tsvangirai advocates would mean destroying the few jobs that
remain in the public sector, privatising the parastatals that
still run utility services and opening up Zimbabwean agriculture
to the world market. Tsvangirais backers in the West have
made it clear that they want the money supply controlled to halt
inflation. That would mean savage pay cuts and the further destruction
of social conditions. Such a programme could not be imposed without
provoking mass opposition.
See Also:
Zimbabwe: Tsvangirai agrees
to second round of elections
[13 May 2008]
Zimbabwe: Mugabe government
responds to mass opposition with repression
[11 April 2008]
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