Re: [NewPacifica] Flashback 1980: What Future for Zimbabwe Now



That should have read 'hegemonic neoliberalism'

Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T

-----Original Message-----
From: "Joseph Wanzala" <wanzala@xxxxxxxxx>

Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2008 12:19:18 
To:newpacifica <NewPacifica@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Fulcrums of Change" 
<fulcrumsofchange@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [NewPacifica] Flashback 1980: What Future for Zimbabwe Now


Thanks for sending this Steve. Terrific stuff. It certainly puts the
current crisis in Zimbabwe, and Africa, in perspective and shows how
sublimely hypocritical the stance of the West and the 'international
community' is. In fact, it has major bearing for contemporary leftist
thought in general, in the face of non-hegemonic neo-liberalism.

Joe W.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Steve Zeltzer <lvpsf@xxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 9:57 AM
Subject: Flashback 1980: What Future for Zimbabwe Now?
To: Joe Wanzala <wanzala@xxxxxxxxx>



http://www.labournet.net/world/0806/zimbab4.html

This article from late 1980 shows that even in the midst of general
euphoria at the collapse of Ian Smith's Rhodesia there was plenty of
evidence on how things might develop under Mugabe, for those willing
to look. The authors were active in the Anti-Apartheid movement. It
was first published in Revolutionary Socialism no. 6, Winter 1980-81,
the magazine of the libertarian communist organisation Big Flame
[gone, but not forgotten!]. It is reprinted with the original
introduction by the editors.

Often the left tends to ignore the detail of the developing situation
after a successful anti-imperialist struggle – it's far more
straightforward to be in solidarity with a struggle whilst it is still
directly fighting imperialism. Once a struggle has succeeded in its
immediate task it is difficult to balance a critical socialist
analysis with an understanding of what is possible for a new regime to
achieve in often unfavourable political and economic circumstances.

Recently Big Flame published a pamphlet (The Century of the
Unexpected) which suggested that under-developed countries, if they
tried to break from imperialism and capitalism, would most likely
develop along a path called "state collectivism", where the laws of
the market are eliminated or minimized and a new ruling class would be
formed, not based on the ownership of capital and the means of
production but on the control of the state (and often the party)
apparatus. The accuracy of this is a matter for debate inside Big
Flame. It provides the wider context in which the analysis of recent
developments in Zimbabwe can be placed.

To analyse the way a national situation is developing we need, as well
as an overall political method, an accurate understanding of the
situation on the ground. This article, which is written by three
members of Big Flame's Southern Africa Group, is based on detailed
first-hand reports on the events in Zimbabwe since the Mugabe regime
came to power. If the analysis leads to what may seem as a somewhat
pessimistic, premature judgement, it is as well to remember that other
successful anti-imperialist struggles have also gone on to develop in
ways socialists would not have wanted.

The situation in Zimbabwe is particularly important for us in Britain
because of the historical, and continuing, involvement of British
imperialism. Of still wider importance are the implications of
Zimbabwe to a reading of the current balance of forces in Southern
Africa, particularly South Africa. The authors' interest stems from
the involvement in Southern Africa solidarity work and the need to
make the difficult balance of combining continuing opposition to
imperialism with a critical stance towards policy of the new regime
which may be against the interests of the Zimbabwean masses.

________________________________

"We recognise that the economic structure of the country is based on
capitalism and whatever ideas we have must build on that. Modification
can only take place in a gradual way." (Mugabe, March 1980)

"We believe we are going through a national democratic revolution
whereby the institutions, the society has to be democratised. This is
a national democratic phase, but it is also a transition to
socialism... we envisage a socialist society in the final
analysis."(Kangai, Minister of Labour, March 1980)

ZANU came to power in March 1980, after 19 years of struggle, 8 years
of intensive armed struggle, and after a stunning election victory in
which ZANU and ZAPU between them received 87% of the votes cast and
gained 77 of the 80 seats reserved for non-whites. A Government was
formed including ZAPU and two members of the white Rhodesian Front,
but ZANU's strength was such that it commanded effective power, at
least within the structures that prevailed.

Nevertheless, as the above quotations indicate, the victory of the
liberation movement in Zimbabwe was different from that of Frelimo in
Mozambique or MPLA in Angola. Whereas the latter came to power by
smashing the 'settler capitalist' state apparatus (1), ZANU and ZAPU
inherited, despite the years of struggle, a settler state that was
still largely intact.

This inevitably poses a host of problems for the liberation movement.
Can they keep the struggle going and move towards a socialist Zimbabwe
by whittling away and replacing the oppressive and racist state
apparatuses? Or are they restricted to limited power within the
existing state, able only to assist a transformation which white
settler colonialism to neo-colonialism?

Limited victory

Mugabe's victory in the Zimbabwean election in March 1980 was truly
overwhelming, reflecting widespread support, in both town and country,
for the liberation movement. (2)Nevertheless, we do not fully accept
the Anti-Apartheid view of the victory, which is that the 'Black
carpet' has rolled further south, leaving only Namibia and South
Africa to be liberated. The sad truth is that there has been a
substantial rollback at the same time as an advance. This rollback has
left the economies of Mozambique, Angola and Zambia in crisis, trapped
the new Zimbabwean Government at birth, and furthered the domination
of South Africa – and imperialism – over the region as a whole. The
advance has been perhaps less in Zimbabwe (as yet) and more in South
Africa, where the euphoria over Zimbabwean independence led to the
first ever combination of a strike wave, student struggles and an
intensification of armed confrontation (the Sasol bombings) [SASOL was
the state oil-from-coal plant, designed to evade sanctions. It was
bombed by the ANC]. Our excitement over such positive developments
should not blind us to the fact that many of the problems of South
African liberation remain far from resolution.

Workers v. the Government

ZANU's election victory gave it power in a state still very much
dominated by foreign multinationals. Around 70% of capital in Zimbabwe
is foreign investment, half of that being British (including Dunlop,
Lonrho, Turner and Newall, RTZ, Unilever, BAT, Barclays) and one-third
South African (Anglo-American Corp. being the most notable). The
foreign companies control manufacturing and agricultural production
for the domestic and African markets; and asbestos, gold, chrome,
nickel, copper and coal production (among others) for the world
market. As the economist Duncan Clarke has written:

"It is hard to find a sub-Saharan African example comparable to the
Zimbabwean case, in which the role of foreign investment has been so
long established, as deeply integrated into the sectors producing the
bulk of output, so strongly interconnected with local capital, and in
consequence probably as difficult to foresee being quickly and
successfully altered." (3)

Living standards?

Of the 7 million Africans in Zimbabwe, only one million are in waged
work. Unemployment is growing with the return of more than a million
people displaced by the war and the addition of school leavers and
demobilised guerrillas. The unemployed depend on peasant production,
the extended family network in the tribal trust lands, and
increasingly, such activities as moonlighting, petty theft, petty
trading, etc. Most Africans who are employed are attempting to support
large families on wages of less than the Poverty Datum line level
(around £70 a month). The average wage on the large white-owned farms
is about £15 a month, which means a monthly income per person of less
than £3 a month. (Government figures, Sept. 1980).

The racist work set-up which survived from the UDI period meant that
Africans, with 96% of the population, had only 20% of apprentices.
Promotion, even for skilled workers, was more or less blocked; white
supervisors meant constant harassment and abuse; scarce attention was
paid to health and safety, so that workers in asbestos mines, for
example, worked unprotected, with many getting asbestosis; hours were
long and work arduous and often back-breaking; where unions existed,
they were bureaucratic, closer to management than the workforce, and
often in league with the reactionary Western union body, the ICFTU;
and if strikes occurred, most were illegal under an Industrial
Conciliation Act which gave workers no protection against dismissal
and gave the police and the army every opportunity to come in as
strike-breakers.

The fact that workers played little direct part in the liberation
struggle has often been held against them, not least during the
post-election strike-wave. The other side of the coin, however, is
that only ZAPU ever had an orientation towards the workers that was
anything more than rhetorical and that, even though many of the
workers were relations of those waging the war in the rural areas, few
genuine attempts were made to draw the links.

Strike Wave

The explosion of strikes and other forms of action immediately after
the February elections did not, it is true, reflect any sort of
revolutionary working class consciousness. But it did reflect years of
pent up anger and frustration. The Government did not support the
strikers for a moment. It evidently decided that Zimbabwe's future
well-being required, for now, enough concessions to foreign companies
to keep them deeply entrenched in the Zimbabwean economy. While
workers were fobbed off with a £40/month minimum wage, Mugabe extolled
the virtues of private enterprise. And there was the unbelievable
sight of the crack Rhodesian army unit, the Rhodesian African Rifles,
being sent in against strikers at the Wankie coke plant.

But what was the position lower down the ranks of the ZANU hierarchy?
What happened when ZANU members confronted the strikers? After all, we
cannot base our assessment simply on statements made to the Western
press. (4)

The strikes took different forms: some were against racist abuse by
white supervisors; others were for wage demands of up to 400% (on an
average industrial wage of £10 a week); others were for both. With the
strikes against racist supervisors, the Government was usually willing
to put pressure on an employer to remove a supervisor who would not
change his attitude. But low wages were another story.

With big strikes, Kangai, the Minister of Labour, would intervene;
with small strikes, lower ranking labour officials would be sent in.
Workers would be told to end their action because a) they were
privileged in relation to the many people who had no job, especially
people who had suffered, for example, in protected villages; b) a
strike would not help other workers in the industry, and c) wages
would be going up when the new minimum wage was introduced. They were
told that if they wouldn't go back to work they would lose their jobs
– and we have heard of a few instances where this actually occurred.
(5)

Workers' committees

A hopeful sign that the relationship between workers and the
Government may improve was the latter's encouragement for workers'
committees. These would operate at a shop steward level, replacing the
'business unions' of the Smith regime and negotiating with the
Government either directly or via a new central union body, the
Zimbabwean Congress of Trade Unions. They would fulfil the workers'
need for a representative body and the Government's need for
formalised structures.

But any illusions disappeared when the Government proved incapable of
reconciling its commitment to change with its fear of challenging the
status quo. Thus those members of workers' committees who opposed
Government policies were victimised and/or sacked, and those who were
conciliatory were rewarded with managerial or supervisory jobs. The
discussions on a new minimum wage involved no workers' representatives
– instead industrialists and members of the Chamber of Commerce and
the white Farmers' Union were invited to talks with the Cabinet and
the ZANU Central Committee.

Discussions on the formation of the Zimbabwe TUC involved Trade Union
officials from the old regime, ZANU Party nominees (chosen by the
Government) and delegates from the American AFL-CIO and the notorious
ICFTU. And while everyone was expecting a new law to replace the
anti-strike, corporatist Industrial Conciliation Act of the Smith era,
Kangai was informing an international gathering in Salisbury
(organised by the ICFTU) that:

"I firmly believe that the regulated system of labour relations that
we in Zimbabwe have (the Industrial Conciliation Act) is more
beneficial for the community as a whole rather than the 'dog-eat-dog'
industrial philosophy of the so-called free labour movement which
operates in some countries held to be more developed than our own."

Fear

The only conclusion that can be drawn from the above – selected from
many similar examples – is that the new Government has a basic fear of
spontaneity and self-activity. Its concern for workers' committees and
workers' participation is no more than a concern for regulation, under
state and capitalist control, of workers' demands. The talk is always
of one nation, as in Mugabe's statement that "now is the time for
reconciliation, reconstruction and nation-building. Let us set aside
our differences once and for all and pull together."

Yet Zimbabwe is very far from one nation. Oppressive, racist
structures prevail and will continue as long as 'differences are put
aside'. For workers, this means no change in all the oppressive
working conditions mentioned earlier. As regards the multinationals,
so strong in Zimbabwe, it means no change in the Government policy –
concessions, combined with haggling over the percentage of profits
that can be taken out of the country. The multinationals retain their
hold over the economy, blocking any transition away from a system of
high unemployment, high levels of foreign debt, bad wages and working
conditions, etc.

Rural areas: devastation and democracy

The people who suffered most in the struggle for national liberation
were the masses of peasants, largely from the Tribal Trust Lands, who
provided the guerrillas, the mujibas (6)and so many others who
confronted the white settler state.

The war hurt the rural poor in a number of ways: Operation Turkey
destroyed crops, granaries, cattle and other basic means of
livelihood; the herding of peasants into protected villages left much
peasant land untended for long periods; the destruction of cattle dips
– by both the guerrillas and the Whites – allowed disease to devastate
the cattle population; and the destruction of villages by the
Rhodesian Army left many people homeless and destitute. Many people
faced daily coercion from either the Rhodesian Army or Muzorewa's or
Sithole's 'auxiliaries'; the numbers suffering from malnutrition rose,
as did the numbers dying from disease. (7)

Meanwhile, the white farmers continued to exploit a large army of
Black agricultural labourers who produce, on the white-owned farms,
the bulk of Zimbabwe's agricultural goods. Although production levels
fell off a little in the last period of the war, State-guaranteed
prices ensured high profits for a privileged elite who constituted a
core element of the white-settler state. (8)

Government policy

What has been the policy of the new Government? Most surprising
perhaps has been ZANU's commitment to maintaining the white farming
sector, and this despite the wartime rhetoric which talked of all the
land belonging to the Africans being expropriated from those who stole
it from its rightful owners by force of arms.

The new Government began by appointing Dennis Norman, former President
of the reactionary Commercial Farmers' Union, as Minister of
Agriculture. This signalled that ZANU had no intention of violating
the provisions of the Lancaster House agreement which prohibited any
expropriations of white land without compensation. Instead, the
Government would encourage 'efficient' white farmers (i. e. those
whose African labourers were most productive) and gradually buy up the
land of less efficient farmers, in order to redistribute it to
landless peasants and returning refugees. There is vague talk of
workers' participation on the white farms, but there have been no
indications of how the white farmers will be persuaded to accept this,
or whether it will do anything to change the racist hierarchy on the
farms.

The Government strategy with regard to the small plots of the African
population is equally vague. Though there is talk of improving
productivity by uniting family units of land into a larger
cooperative, in which the peasants will manage their own affairs on a
collective basis, there are few signs of this being put into practice
in a way that accords with the peasants' own view of what is best.
Many peasants have moved beyond a reactionary, tribalist perspective,
having participated for years in this war, and their views on how a
cooperative should be run ought to be taken into consideration. (9)

Unfortunately, in many parts of the country the talk is not at all of
cooperatives but of basic survival. Lacking cattle, large numbers of
peasants are unable to plough their land for next year's crops and
they have no crops from last year because they were locked up in
'protected villages'. There is a desperate need for food now and seeds
for the next harvest.

In so far as the national liberation struggle was largely about land,
the present situation is disastrous – whole structures remain to be
changed. It would seem to be crucial for the Government to support
those who have been radicalised by the struggle, and who try
constructively to change things. Yet the Government has failed to
support peasants who have occupied white land, even if it was not
being efficiently used. Likewise, they seem to be conflicting with a
number of village committees, even though these are in many ways the
most democratic form of institution to come out of the liberation
struggle.

Village committees

The village committees are the governing bodies at the local level,
though some administration is still carried out by the District
Commissioners of the settler state. There are officers on the village
committees for all aspects of local life, including education, health,
social welfare and agriculture, and generally the officers carry out
the same function as they did on the base committees during the war.

The base committees had replaced the structures of the local state in
those areas where ZANLA (or ZIPRA in the West) had effective control.
They were elected by the people and worked in their interests, at the
same time as working closely with the liberation movement. Because the
village committees are direct descendants of the base committees, they
retain the trust and confidence of the people. At ground level, they
are one of the most democratic structures in the new state.

But they are not independent bodies. They clash regularly with the
District Commissioners(10) and they also have to answer to the
hierarchy of committees above them. For their are a number of levels
of committee, from village through branch, district and region to the
central committee, and all decisions of import have to be ratified at
the level above. While this allows the Party to keep in touch with the
people at a local level, it is also a way of keeping control – and
there have been a number of clashes between ZANU and the village
committees over decisions taken.

The October elections replaced the village committees and the District
Commissioners with District Councils, which combine all political and
administrative functions. This won't necessarily mean an end to local
democracy, but there will be a struggle over the degree of autonomy
that the new bodies should be allowed. At the same time there will be
more tension between ZANU and ZAPU, with the latter trying to
capitalise on the growing disenchantment with the post-Independence
developments. The outcome of these two overlapping confrontations will
go a long way towards determining other developments over the next few
years.

Women

Women have always played an important role in Zimbabwean society, and
an equally important role in the struggle for liberation. Back in the
1890's, a woman spirit medium, Nehanda, played an inspiring part in
the first struggle against the British settlers before being hanged in
1898. Nevertheless, many patriarchal traditions survived, others were
even enhanced by the period of settler rule, and it was only in the
war of the 1970's that women began, on a large scale, to fight for
liberation. In fact, the gains of ZANU and ZAPU would not have been
possible without the organisational role of women in the villages, the
bravery of the women guerrillas, the role of girls as message bearers,
the provision of food by women and the work of women as nurses and
teachers in the guerrilla camps.

Sadly, but all too characteristically, the struggle has brought women
few benefits. Already, as the elections approached, ZANU women lost
their fight for a representative number of women candidates (they were
allowed only a handful). Soon after the elections, market women
organised a demonstration against white police harassment, only to see
the new Government send in the anti-riot squad against them.

On a positive note, the Government has undertaken at some point to
introduce equal pay for equal work, thus replacing the Rhodesian
regulation by which women received between 56% and 67% of the man's
pay for the same work. Nevertheless, there are still no maternity
benefits, women are still demoted following maternity leave (max. 3
months), and women are generally excluded from union politics.

And, as the vast majority of women are not in waged employment, there
is a vital need to change the situation in the rural areas. Here
unmarried women cannot own land, widows are often deprived of it,
women do most of the work for the tiniest wage, and there is still far
too little land to adequately feed the families. As has been said,
there will be no women's liberation without a revolution on the land.

Perhaps things will change, and certainly there must be some spillover
from the fantastic level of commitment, and the energy and the gallons
of blood that women gave to the struggle. But it is not heartening to
find one of Zimbabwe's two women Government Ministers, and a long-time
guerrilla, saying the following:

"The purpose of the war was to eliminate a system. Now that it has
been eliminated, there is no need for people to be divided. Women have
a great role to play in uniting the nation because they are household
builders, mothers of the future generations and wives to the rulers...
Women should get equal pay with men so that they can hire people to
help them with the housework." (11)

Assembly points

The guerrillas live in the assembly camps in quite appalling
conditions. Food supplies are inadequate, water often has to be
transported to the remote camps from far away. Daily life is extremely
routine, with neither practical nor political education. Many of the
occupants are young teenagers, probably mujibas who were sent as
substitutes for guerrillas as a precaution against treachery during
the ceasefire. It would also have been important to keep guerrillas in
the villages to act as election officers for ZANU (or ZAPU).

The Government has tried to resolve the guerrilla predicament in three
ways. The first, unification of the armies, has foundered on
sectarianism and an understandable cynicism with regard to the
Rhodesian Army's trustworthiness. It now seems further away than ever,
but, even if achieved, it will only take up one third to a half of the
32, 500 guerrillas.

Operation Seed, the Government programme whereby guerrillas from the
camps help out in some of the worst hit agricultural areas, has barely
begun, and there have been several reports of guerrillas absconding
because of disenchantment with the scheme. Finally, there is the
attempt to move guerrillas to one of the townships outside Salisbury,
which has inevitably provoked resistance from the people affected and
which does nothing, anyway, to resolve the dilemma over the
guerrillas' future.

Most of the guerrillas want a career in the Army, if only because it
offers good pay and job security in a country with high levels of
unemployment. (12) More and more guerrillas, however, are simply
leaving the camps, sometimes smuggling their guns out with them.
Either they are dissatisfied with the camp regime, or with the
policies of the Government they brought to power. The latter tend, it
seems, to return to the areas they fought in, in order to take up the
struggle again in some form. Others resort to banditry, or individual
acts of frustrated anger.

Government conflicts

The direction the new Government has taken has inevitably provoked
open dissent. In particular, ZAPU has tried to capitalise on some of
ZANU's more obvious policy weaknesses, especially in the run-up to the
municipal elections in November 1980. With ZANU trying to counter this
with its own sectarianism, conflicts became inevitable. The Bulawayo
tragedy, when over 40 people died, was neither the first nor the last
incident to arise from these tensions.

But the wider tensions in Zimbabwean society manifest themselves
within ZANU too, right up to ministerial level. One of the most vocal
dissenters was Edgar Tekere, Minister for Manpower and Development and
Secretary-General of ZANU.

Tekere's politics, like those who are close to him including
Shamuyarira, Minister of Information, are militantly nationalist, in
the sense of favouring Africanisation of state institutions,
nationalisation of certain key industries, and moves to challenge the
power of the white farmers. His militancy, and his populist appeal,
can be seen in the following statement in an interview in July:

"It is natural for the people, after... losing so many lives, to
expect change as soon as we come in. The people expect it from those
who behaved and acted like revolutionaries for all those years. So the
revolution continues, a luta continua, this is what the people are
saying."

The direction of the new Government must, then, remain flexible. It
will not be allowed to stop at a few measures here, a few measures
there. Pressures will grow, whether from within the Party or outside,
forcing the ZANU leadership to decide between either widespread
conflict with ZAPU, striking workers and militant peasants, or a major
reassessment of the direction it is taking.

History

Looking at the history of the liberation movement, of ZANU and ZAPU
(13), there is a remarkable degree of continuity between the early
years – when ZAPU was still the ANC – and the later years, when large
guerrilla armies were occupying substantial areas of Zimbabwe.

Of course, continuity is only part of the picture. It could be
forcefully argued that the development of the movement is
characterised far more by change, leadership struggles, radicalisation
of the grass roots, new alliances overseas etc. Yet the point is that
the changes are obvious, while the continuity tends to be ignored. And
the continuity not only completes the picture, it alters its general
complexion.

Commentators have pointed to the intellectual background of the
leadership of ZANU and ZAPU. This would be unimportant if there wasn't
also a tendency to be elitist, to generally distrust the spontaneity
and intelligence of the masses. This tendency both feeds and feeds off
the hierarchical structures of the organisations, and is revealed in
the Government's attitude during the strikes, its expressed opposition
to spontaneous land occupations by landless peasants, and its
rejection, to date, of alternative proposals for collectivisation of
peasant land. It is a tendency that can be traced back through the
movement, through the disciplining of various factions and perhaps to
the ZANU-ZAPU split itself. It raises problems at the same time: if a
war of liberation cannot be fought without hierarchical forms of
organisation – which it cannot – how can the negative effects of this
on the post-war period be controlled, if at all?

Neo-colonialism or beyond?

If a pragmatic socialist Party is to change things over time, as ZANU
intends, it must be aware of not only the limitations of its room for
manoeuvre, but also the dangers of itself becoming integrated into the
structures it sought to overthrow.

Take for example the deceptively glib ZANU Manifesto statement that
'private enterprise will have to continue until circumstances are ripe
for socialist change. ' Who, for example, will develop the capitalist
economy to ripeness if not the ZANU Government? Who will assist in
this if not multinationals and Western Governments? How will
Zimbabwean capitalism become 'ripe' without emphasising productivity
and efficiency, thus weakening the position of workers? How will ZANU
decide when conditions are 'ripe for socialist change'? And how will
it avoid developing a vested interest in the status quo before then?

ZANU is walking a difficult tightrope and one which is being
repeatedly shaken – workers striking in mid-1980 and likely to do so
again in early -81; peasants threatening to explode over the land
question; guerrillas furious over their treatment, then provoking
reaction from local residents when the Government tries to move them
to a Salisbury township; rank-and-file ZANU members challenging
Government policy in the village committees and rural collectives.

The tightrope appears to be between some kind of neo-colonial Zimbabwe
and a socialist Zimbabwe. Yet somehow a socialist Zimbabwe seems
frustratingly elusive, while neo-colonialism appears in so many ways
inescapable. Many of the social forces putting pressure on the
Government (whether workers, peasants, women or guerrillas) are
essentially progressive, but they lack cohesion. In stark contrast,
the forces of reaction (white farmers, multinationals, police etc.)
are cohesive, strong and, in the case of multinationals, have
international backing.

The only way the Government will be able to confront the danger of
neo-colonialism is by taking a lead in mobilising all progressive
forces in a clear anti-imperialist direction. Now is perhaps not the
time for this – the gains won remain to fragile – but the Government
must soon indicate that it is moving in such a direction or the
possibility of mobilisation could be lost, perhaps irrevocably. (14)

Lessons

In this article, we have written critically about several aspects of
the new Zimbabwe. But what right have we, as socialists in Britain, to
make these criticisms?

We have tried to indicate that imperialism – mainly British – set the
conditions in which the struggle for national liberation was fought.
As we oppose British imperialism – which oppresses us here too, in a
different form – we worked in solidarity with those forces, ZANU and
ZAPU, which were most effectively confronting it. But this never
implied a blind acceptance of every position taken by the Patriotic
Front, not least because in our solidarity work we have to take into
account (1) the need to mobilise all progressive forces, including
workers, feminists, gays and Black activists, and (2) the fact that we
will be confronting imperialism all over, not only in Zimbabwe.

So we did not support the use of British troops to implement the
ceasefire and election process. We know the reactionary nature of
British troops too well. And now, if Zimbabwean workers are organising
in British and other foreign-owned multinationals, we encourage
support from British workers and solidarity activists, whether or not
the Zimbabwean Government supports them.

Future of solidarity work

The time is past when we can use "anti-imperialism" as a three-line
whip for all progressives to attend demonstrations, pickets etc. We
have seen too many 'anti-imperialists' oppose the demands of women,
gays, and often workers too (e. g. in Iran). If solidarity work is to
retain any credibility in the 1980's it must address itself more
consistently to liberation as a whole. We do this effectively not by
posing maximum, all-or-nothing demands, though, but by always pressing
that bit further, by raising and pushing feminism, socialism,
democracy whenever relevant or possible, by considered and comradely
criticism, by self-criticism, by appropriate actions of solidarity (e.
g. with women as well as men in struggle.)

So we support the Zimbabwean Government, and we remain enthused by the
massive election victory that brought it to power. But we also support
those who, by their actions and their links with the oppressed, take
the struggle forward. For, to repeat Tekere's comment: "The people
expect (change) from those who behaved and acted like revolutionaries
for all those years. So the revolution continues, a luta continua,
this is what the people are saying."

This article is the product of a long period of collective work and
discussion by the BF Southern Africa Group. We are indebted to the
Zimbabwean Information Group, three members of which have visited
Zimbabwe since Independence and reported back, and without which this
article would not have been possible. We also thank the many
Zimbabweans who have provided information and analysis.

Notes

1. The Mozambicans and Angolans did have the advantage, in this
respect, that the European settlers left en masse. The statement here
is not intended to suggest that the Zimbabwean struggle was inferior
in some way, nor to suggest that Frelimo and the MPLA had no problems
in taking power. In fact, their difficulties have worsened over time.

2. We should not exaggerate the political content of this support.
Many election observers in the rural areas, including some sympathetic
to the liberation movement, reported a universal desire for peace.
People voted for liberation, but in large part their vote was a vote
for the parties they knew could end the war.

3. D. G. Clarke, Foreign Companies and International Investment in Zimbabwe.

4. What follows here is based on an interview with a ZANU official in
the Ministry of Labour, interviews with strikers and trade union
leaders, and reports in the Zimbabwean press.

5. In one case, for example, a strike at Swift Transport in June 1980,
half of the 1500 workers were dismissed for striking, despite the
formation of workers' committees.

6. Mujibas were boys of less than fighting age who carried messages
between guerrilla units, supplies to the guerrillas from villages etc.

7. An Oxfam survey in selected areas in the summer of 1980 found 40%
of children aged 1-5 malnourished, and 15% severely malnourished.
Common diseases include scabies, malaria and measles (often fatal for
under-nourished children).

8. The following figures indicate the scale of the land problem, and
the desperate need for change:

Africans and Europeans have the same amount of land (45 million acres)
but there are 100 times more African cultivators.
There is enough African arable land for 275, 000 cultivators, yet
there are 675, 000 of them which means overuse, low yield, ecological
decay, impoverishment. The result is a steady stream of cheap labour
to the towns and the European farms. And discontent.
Of the 9 million acres of arable land in the European areas, 1. 4
million is cultivated. Many of the 6, 700 European farms require
Government subsidies to survive. Others are vast, are owned by
multinational companies, and yield huge profits. Little of their
produce is consumed by Zimbabweans.
In 1975, 88% of African farm workers earned less than £15 a month

(source for most figures Roger Riddell, The Land Question (publ. CIIR)

9. The Sunday Times of August 3 1980 reported resistance to Government
land policies from "former guerrillas among the tribesmen (who) have
their own ideas about farm collectives and resent officials imposing
their authority in villages where guerrilla influence has prevailed
since the ceasefire last year". Similar reports have appeared in the
Zimbabwean press.

10. The Rhodesian District Commissioners retained certain
administrative functions but their role was not clearly defined until
their demise at the end of 1980.

11. This quote is taken from the pamphlet Black women in Zimbabwe,
published by War on Want.

12. Guerrillas earn £70 per month at present, well above the basic
industrial wage.

13. This section is a much shortened version of a document we produced
for the Leeds Conference on Zimbabwe in July 1980.

14. In Autumn 1980, the Government threatened to take over land
without compensation (its first threatened violation of the Lancaster
House Agreement) and to take over the press. While this clearly
reflects the growing pressure on the Government from its grass roots
supporters and other social forces, it is a positive sign which may
belie the more pessimistic elements of our conclusion.

------------------------------------

New Pacifica Working Group
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