By Stephen Gowans
Zimbabwe's Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Patrick
Chinamasa on Friday denounced the US and Britain for their interference
in Zimbabwe's elections. At the same time, he decried the Morgan
Tsvangirai faction of the main opposition party, the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC-T), and its civil society partner, the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN), as being part of a US and British
program to reverse the gains of Zimbabwe's national liberation struggle.
"It is no secret that the US and the British have poured in large
sums of money behind the MDC-T's sustained demonization campaign,"
Chinamasa said. (1)
"Sanctions against Zimbabwe (were intensified) just before the
elections," while "large sums of money" were poured into Zimbabwe "by
the British and Americans to bribe people to vote against President
Mugabe." (2)
The goal, Chinamasa continued, is to "render the country ungovernable
in order to justify external intervention to reverse the gains of the
land reform program." (3)
The justice minister went on to describe opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai and his MDC "for what they are — an Anglo-American project
designed to defeat and reverse the gains of Zimbabwe's liberation
struggle, to undermine the will of the Zimbabwean electorate and to
return the nation to the dark days of white domination." (4)
The minister also described the ZESN as "an American-sponsored civil
society appendage of the MDC-T." (5)
Were they reported in the West, it would be fashionable to sneer at
Chinamasa's accusations as lies told to justify a crackdown on the
opposition. But, predictably, they haven't been. For anyone who's
following closely, however, the minister's charges hardly ring false.
The ZESN is funded by the US Congress and US State Department though
the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and United States Agency for
International Development (USAID). Its board is comprised of a phalanx
of US and British-backed fifth columnists. (6)
Board member Reginald Matchaba Hove won the NED democracy award in
2006. Described by its first director as doing overtly what the CIA used
to do covertly, the NED – and by extension the NGOs it funds — are not
politically neutral organizations. They have an agenda, and it is to
promote US interests under the guise of promoting democratization. Hove
is also director of the Southern Africa division of billionaire
financier George Soros' Open Society Institute, which has been involved
in funding overthrow movements in Yugoslavia, Georgia, Ukraine and
elsewhere. Soros also has an agenda: to open societies to Western profit
making. Indeed, the board members of the ZESN comprise an A-list of
overthrow activists, with multiple interlocking connections to
imperialist governments and corporate foundations.
It doesn't take long to connect Hove to left scholar Patrick Bond (of
Her Majesty's NGOs) and his Center for Civil Society. The Center is a
program partner with the Southern Africa Trust, one of whose trustees is
ZESN board member Reginald Matchaba Hove. The Center for Policy Studies,
whose mission is to prepare civil society in Zimbabwe for political
change (that is, to prepare it to overthrow the Zanu-PF government), is
funded by the Southern Africa Trust, a partner of Bond's Center for
Civil Society. Other sponsors include the Soros, Ford, Mott, Heinrich
Boll (German Green party), and Friedrich Ebert (German Social Democrats)
foundations, the Rockefeller Brothers, the NED, South African Breweries
and a fund established by the chairman of mining and natural resources
company, Anglo-American. Significantly, Zimbabwe is rich in minerals.
Zanu-PF's program is to put control of the country's mineral resources,
as well as its land, in the hands of the black majority, depriving
transnational mining companies, like Anglo-American, of control and
profits. Everjoice Win, the former spokesperson for the ZESN, is on the
advisory board of Bond's center. The Center supports the Freedom of
Expression Institute (FEI), which is funded by George Soros and the
British government's Westminster Foundation for Democracy (WFD). The FEI
is a partner of the Media Institute of Southern Africa (also funded by
the British government), whose director Rashweat Mukundu is a board
member of the ZESN.
Bond co-authored a report with Tapera Kapuya, a fellow of ZESN
sponsor, the NED. He also contributed to a report titled Zimbabwe's
Turmoil, along with John Makumbe and Brian Kagoro. The report was
sponsored by the Institute for Security Studies, which is financed by
the governments of the United States, Britain, France and Canada, the
Rockefeller Brothers, and of course, the ubiquitous George Soros and
Ford foundations. Makumbe has published in the NED's Journal of
Democracy, and is a former director of the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
(funded, not surprisingly, by the NED). The Coalition, like the Center
for Policy Studies, is devoted to ousting the Mugabe government under
the guise of promoting democracy, but in reality promotes the profits of
firms like Anglo-American and the interests of US and British investors.
Kagoro is a former coordinator of the Coalition. Significantly, the
Coalition is a partner of the ZESN.
Add to this Bond's celebrating the Western-trained and financed
underground movements Zvakwana and Sokwanele as an "independent left"
(7) and his co-authoring a Z-Net article on Zimbabwe with MDC founding
member Grace Kwinjeh [8] (MDC leader Tsvangirai admitted in a February
2002 SBS Dateline program that his party is financed by European
governments and corporations (9)), and it's clear that Bond links up
with the spider web of American and British-sponsored civil society
appendages of the MDC-T.
Chinamasa's clarification of the connections between the US and
Britain and Zimbabwe's civil society and opposition fifth columnists is
a welcome relief from Western newspapers' attempts to cover them up. The
ZESN, despite being generously funded by the US through Congress and the
State Department, is described by the Western media as "independent"
while ZESN partner, the National Democratic Institute (NDI), is called
"an international pro-democracy organization" (10) and "a
Washington-based group." (11) What it really is, is the foreign arm of
the Democratic Party. The NDI receives funding from the US Congress (as
well as from USAID and corporate foundations), which it then doles out
to fifth columnists in US-designated "outposts of tyranny." Only in the
service of propaganda would the Democratic Party be called "a
Washington-based group." One wonders how Americans would have reacted to
the British monarchy parading about post-revolutionary Washington as a
"London-based" group – an "international good government" organization
bankrolling an American NGO to monitor US elections? Would anyone be
surprised if the leaders of the British-financed NGO were dragged off to
jail, especially were its backers openly working to oust the government
in Washington to restore the rule of the British monarchy? In Zimbabwe,
the only surprise is that the Zanu-PF government hasn't reacted with as
much force as the Americans would have done under the same
circumstances. That Zimbabwe's government has tried to preserve space
for the exercise of political and civil liberties in the face of massive
hostile foreign interference is to be commended.
Washington is quite open in its intentions to overthrow the Mugabe
government. Under the 2001 US Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery
Act "the President is authorized to provide assistance" to "support an
independent and free press and electronic media in Zimbabwe" and
"provide for democracy and governance programs in Zimbabwe." (12) This
translates into the president financing anti-Zanu-PF radio stations and
newspapers and bankrolling groups opposed to Zimbabwe's national
liberation movement to inveigle Zimbabweans to vote against Mugabe.
"The United States government has said it wants to see President
Robert Mugabe removed from power and that it is working with the
Zimbabwean opposition…trade unions, pro-democracy groups and human
rights organizations…to bring about a change of administration." (13)
Last year, the US State Department acknowledged once again that it
supports "the efforts of the political opposition, the media and civil
society" in Zimbabwe through training, assistance and financing. (14)
And the 2006 US National Security Strategy declares that "it is the
policy of the US to seek and support democratic movements and
institutions in every nation…with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny
in…" North Korea, Iran, Syria, Cuba, Belarus and Zimbabwe. (15)
The goal of the overthrow agenda is to reverse the land reform and
economic indigenization policies of the Zanu-PF government — policies
that are against the interests of the ruling class foundations that fund
the fifth columnists' activities. The chairman of Anglo-American
finances Zimbabwe's anti-Mugabe civil society because bringing
Tsvangirai's MDC to power is good for Anglo-American's bottom line.
Likewise, the numerous Southern African corporations that Lord Renwick
of Clifton sits on the boards of stand to profit from the MDC unseating
Zimbabwe's national liberation agenda. Lord Renwick is head of an outfit
called the Zimbabwe Democracy Trust (ZDT), also part of the interlocked
community of imperialist governments, wealthy individuals, corporate
foundations, and NGOs working to reverse Zimbabwe's liberation struggle.
The ZDT is a major backer of the MDC. (16)
Police raids on the offices of the ZESN and Harvest House, the
headquarters of the MDC, seem deplorable to those in the West who are
accustomed to elections in which the contestants all pretty much agree
on major policies, with only trivial differences among them. But in
Zimbabwe, the differences are acute – a choice between losing much of
what the 14-year long national liberation war was fought for and
settling for nominal independence (that is crying uncle, so the West
will relieve the pressure of its economic warfare) or moving forward to
bring the program of national liberation to its logical conclusion:
ownership of the country's land, resources and enterprises, not just its
flag, by the black majority. In this, there is an unavoidable conflict
between "a government which is spearheaded by a revolutionary party,
which spearheaded the armed struggle against British imperialism" and "a
party that was the creation of the imperialists themselves (that) has
been financed the imperialists themselves." (17)
It's impossible to achieve independence from foreign control and
domination without turmoil, disruption and fighting – not when the
opposition and civil society are directed from abroad to serve foreign
interests. Can Zimbabwe's elections honestly be described as free and
fair when the economy has been sabotaged by the West's denying Harare
credit and debt relief [18] and where respite from the attendant
miseries is promised in the election of the opposition? Are elections
legitimate when media are controlled by outside forces (19), and civil
society and the opposition have been controlled by foreign powers?
Chinamasa's complaints, far from being demagoguery, are real and
justified. Zanu-PF's decision to fight, rather than capitulate, ought be
applauded, not condemned. Imperialism cannot be opposed without opposing
the MDC and its civil society partners, for they too are imperialism.
1. Herald (Zimbabwe) April 26, 2008.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
6. Michael Barker, "Zimbabwe and the Power of Propaganda: Ousting a
President via Civil Society," Global Research.ca, April 16, 2006.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8675
See also
http://www.ned.org/dbtw-wpd/textbase/projects-search.htm and
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Zimbabwe_Election_Support_Network
7. Stephen Gowans, "The Politics of Demons and Angels," April 15, 2007,
http://gowans.wordpress.com/2007/04/15/zimbabwe-and-the-politics-of-demons-and-angels/
8. Stephen Gowans, "The Company Patrick Bond Keeps," March 24, 2008,
http://gowans.wordpress.com/2008/03/24/the-company-patrick-bond-keeps/
9. Rob Gowland, "Zimbabwe: The struggle for land, the struggle for
independence," Communist Party of Australia,
http://www.cpa.org.au/booklets/zimbabwe.pdf . The MDC is also
financed by the British government's Westminster Foundation for
Democracy and the Zimbabwe Democracy Trust, whose patrons include former
British foreign secretaries and is headed by Lord Renwick of Chilton,
vice-chair of investment banking at JPMorgan (Europe.)
10. The Globe and Mail (Toronto), April 26, 2008.
11. The Washington Post, April 26, 2008.
12.
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=s107-494
13. The Guardian (UK), August 22, 2002.
14. US Department of State, April 5, 2007.
15.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss/2006/
16. "Zimbabwe ambassador: Self-determination is at the root of the
conflict," FinalCall.Com News, April 22, 2008.
http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/article_4611.shtml
17. Ibid.
18. Under the US Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001,
"the Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States
executive director to each international financial institution to oppose
and vote against–
(1) any extension by the respective institution of any loan, credit,
or guarantee to the Government of Zimbabwe; or
(2) any cancellation or reduction of indebtedness owed by the
Government of Zimbabwe to the United States or any international
financial institution."
See
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=s107-494
19. The same question can be asked of elections in Western liberal
democracies, where the media are controlled by an interlocked community
of hereditary capitalist families and corporate board members who share
common economic interests inimical to those of the majority.

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