Lead article
June 2000
The challenge of Africa in crisis
by Lou Turner
Today Africa faces crises-military, political, economic, and human-more
daunting than any since the imperialist carving up of the continent began
in 1884, the year following the death of Karl Marx. Though Marx didn't live
to see the new stage of capitalist globalization that would come to be
called "imperialism," nor its human wastage of sub-Saharan Africa, nothing
is more concrete today for understanding the depth of Africa's crisis than
his scathing critique of the rapaciousness of capitalist accumulation, and
the philosophy of human liberation he developed as a pathway from under it.
Whether we take such so-called "natural" disasters as the devastating
famine in the Sahel in which an estimated 24,000 people die daily, or the
epidemiology of the HIV/AIDS crisis in which two-thirds of the 34 million
people in the world living with the infection are dying in sub-Saharan
Africa, or the two cyclones that wracked Mozambique with the heaviest
flooding of the Limpopo and Save rivers in living memory, there is nothing
"natural" about Africa's crises.
On the contrary, a man-made array of crises stretches from the
Ethiopia-Eritrea "border war" in the Horn of Africa west to the Foday
Sankoh/RUF (Revolutionary [sic] United Front), Charles Taylor-sponsored war
of atrocities and diamonds in Sierra Leone, southward to Jonas
Savimbi/UNITA's counter-revolutionary war of attrition in Angola, northeast
to "Africa's world war" in Congo-Kinshasa, and finally southeast to Robert
Mugabe's opportunistic nurturing of Zimbabwe's neocolonial contradictions
over land and the legacy of white settler colonialism.
SOUTH AFRICA: CLASS STRUGGLE, THE PARTY, AND MARX
Neither the political-military crises nor the so-called natural ones which
reveal the violent contradictions now tearing Black Africa asunder
constitute all there is to Africa's contradictory reality. Instead, our
point of departure must be the contradictory process by which the
creativity of the African masses also develops in such ongoing class
struggles as the one unfolding in Africa's most industrially developed
country-South Africa.
The African National Congress (ANC) came to power at the head of a
tripartite alliance with the South African Communist Party, and the massive
2 million member COSATU (Congress of South African Trade Unions). Thabo
Mbeki, South Africa's first post-Mandela president, has pressed ahead with
his government's Growth Employment and Redistribution (GEAR) program while
retrenching deeper into neoliberalism through privatization of public
assets like utilities and government agencies, and boosting further the
country's huge 32% unemployment rate.
In addition to this government-sponsored unemployment, the working class
also faces the deadly impact of HIV/AIDS: as much as 20% of the country's
skilled workforce will be infected with the retrovirus over the next
decade. Yet President Mbeki heads the most scandalous state response to the
HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa. With the highest HIV rate of any country in the
world, and a projected 3.5 million person mortality rate over the next
decade, Mbeki's government has drastically cut funding to fight HIV/AIDS,
including the state's refusal to pay for the use of the anti-AIDS inhibitor
drug AZT by pregnant women to prevent the spread of the infection to their
babies because of his "personal" view that the drug is too toxic. All of
this flows from the widely discredited view Mbeki holds that the HIV
infection does not cause AIDS!
However, the reason the South African working class's May 10 general strike
which saw over 4 million workers stay away from their jobs must be our
point of departure is not only because it's easy to forget that revolution
in permanence (and not Mbeki's and the national bourgeoisie's rhetoric of a
capitalist "African renaissance") remains the ongoing impulse of the
African masses in the midst of seemingly endless crises. It is also because
most of the contradictions we see across the continent as a result of the
unfinished nature of the African revolutions are found in this most
technologically developed land in Africa.
Take so seemingly different hot spots as the Ethiopia-Eritrea war and the
"land war" in Zimbabwe. It is certainly true that these stem from the
historical contradictions of the legacy of imperialist colonialism.
Nevertheless the immediate forms that they take are organized around the
specific class impulses of the ruling party elites, namely, the fear that
their failure to deal with their internal economic and political crises
will result in the African masses voting out or severely weakening their
ruling party power through even such limited means as national elections.
Whether it's Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party, or the ruling EPRDF in
Ethiopia, fear of even a modest decrease in their monolithic state power
impels them onto the cynical path of fomenting armed conflicts to divert
the masses' attention from their governmental incompetence and corruption.
Exactly 40 years ago Frantz Fanon warned precisely of this phenomenon. "In
reality," Fanon wrote in his field notes published posthumously in TOWARD
THE AFRICAN REVOLUTION, "the colonized states that reached independence by
the political path seem to have no other concern than to find themselves a
real battlefield with wounds and destruction. It is clear, however, that
this psychological explanation, which appeals to a hypothetical need for
release of pent-up aggressiveness, does not satisfy us. We must once again
come back to the Marxist formula. The triumphant middle classes are the
most impetuous, the most enterprising, the most annexationist in the world
(not for nothing did the French bourgeoisie of 1789 put Europe to fire and
sword)."
ZIMBABWE AND MOZAMBIQUE: THE LAND, THE ECONOMY, AND THE PARTY
In Zimbabwe, Mugabe's ZANU-PF faced the most serious vote of confidence in
the 20 years of its single party rule when it lost the constitutional
referendum in February. Corruption and its incompetent handling of the
economy have made the party more unpopular than ever, as well as Mugabe's
intervention in the conflict in Congo-Kinshasa. Until the war veterans'
land seizures, the Western-favored MDC (Movement for Democratic Change)
stood to make serious inroads into ZANU-PF state power in the May, now
rescheduled June, national elections.
Which is why it is crucial to recognize that while the Zimbabwean masses
have every legitimate claim to the rich white-owned farm lands that were
brutally expropriated from them under colonialism and that have been
occupied since March, Mugabe's opportunistic support for the land seizures
(after his government fumbled a chance three years ago to confiscate 1,000
white-owned farms under eminent domain) is really aimed at silencing his
AFRICAN political opposition who were poised to unseat his party. The MDC
could win 50-70 seats in the 150-seat parliament in the upcoming national
elections.
The occupation of 1,000 of Zimbabwe's 6,500 commercial farms by
disenfranchised veterans of the country's liberation war reveals just how
important Zimbabwe's $32 billion a year agricultural industry is to the
country's most powerful political interests. Principal among them are the
white farmers organized under the Commercial Farmers' Union, Mugabe's
ZANU-PF government, and the farm laborers' union affiliated with the
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions whose general secretary, Morgan
Tsvangirai also heads the opposition MDC.
The agreement of white farmers to allow the African squatters represented
by the ZANU-PF-affiliated War Veterans Association to remain on the land
permits ZANU-PF to establish political bases on the farms to counter the
broad organizational support the MDC enjoys among farm laborers.
The current political crisis in Zimbabwe is unmistakably a class struggle.
It is no less so in neighboring Mozambique though submerged by torrential
floods. Once the poorest country in the world, Mozambique over the last
several years has had the fastest growing economy in the world with a 11%
growth rate.
Though it's true that the floods may have washed it all away, disclosing
just how difficult it is sustain economic development in poor Third World
countries, it is no less true that it is because IMF/World Bank and
Anglo/American investment and debt relief have divided the country north
and south. Most aid and investment is concentrated around the capital
Maputo in the south, the region of the flooding, while neglecting the
center and north of the country.
Mozambique, moreover, is evidence of a new ecological danger created by
capitalist globalization. Disastrous climatological changes, ranging from
drought and famine to floods, further exacerbate the uneven development
fostered by international finance institutions.
Zimbabwe's land crisis and Mozambique's "natural disaster" have
repercussions for the rest of the continent. South Africa's land commission
has nearly 64,000 land claims before it, of which only 4,000 have been
addressed. The Pan Africanist Congress has warned that unless the process
of redistributing vast, wealthy farmlands is speeded up, land seizures will
commence in South Africa.
AFRICA'S RENDEZVOUS WITH MARX?
Capitalist development of African agricultural lands has not succeeded in
lifting the African masses out of the most wretched poverty, despite the
small but growing stratum of Black commercial farm owners who have enriched
themselves as much at the expense of poor farm laborers as white farmowners
have. Nonetheless it is true that Africa's traditional peasant farming,
much of it done by women, is among the most productive sectors of the
agricultural economy, despite government and foreign subsidies going to big
commercial farms.
According to Mwesiga Baregu, research coordinator of the Harare-based
Southern African Regional Institute for Policy Studies, "The land question
in southern African...arises from the forceful and often brutal evictions
of indigenous people from fertile lands by colonial settlers. The
fundamental goal of the liberation struggles, therefore, was to redress
this historical wrong.
"But the liberation wars in Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa
were largely terminated by peaceful settlements which were essentially a
counter-strategy to armed victories.... Thus suing for peace or
'constructive engagement' in southern Africa was meant to establish a
controlled regional transition and, if that was not possible, at least a
negotiated one. A 'revolutionary transition' had to be avoided at all
costs.... The nearly century-old struggle for justice in South Africa
(understood as repossession of stolen land) was 'transformed' into a
crusade for peace and democracy. Form took the place of essence and
content."
There was however a historical moment during this second wave of the
African revolutions in which revolutionary intellectuals resisted foisting
theoretical responsibility for the making the revolution onto the shoulders
of the African masses, and took Fanon's advice to once again turn to Marx.
One such African Marxist, S. Mshonga, in addressing the land question in
Namibia, also had to wrestle with the contradictory legacy of post-Marx
Marxism, beginning with Engels.
On the one hand, Mshonga quotes Engels as an uncritical advocate of the
classical customary communal land tenure system, based the extended family
system, as the pathway to creating a modern socialist society. According to
Engels, "It is not only possible but inescapable that the countries which
have managed to make a start on capitalist production and where tribal
institutions or relics of them are still intact, will be able to use these
relics of communal ownership and the corresponding popular customs as
powerful means of considerably shortening their advance to socialist
society...."
On the other hand, however, Mshonga takes a second critical look at the
contradictions within the land question in the theoretical context in which
Marx posed it in the last years of his life, as European imperialism was
poised to makes its mad scramble for Africa.
Marx's insight into the duality in the traditional Russian commune, the
MIR, led Mshonga to critically consider the duality in Africa's communal
land forms: "In this regard Marx noted that 'either the propriety trend
will prevail over the collective one or the latter will prevail over the
former. Everything depends on the historical environment within which it
finds itself.'"
Africa once again finds itself at a crossroads. It is now self-evident to
the African masses what four decades of traveling down a road that has
postponed its rendezvous with MARX'S Marxism has meant.
FROM SIERRA LEONE TO THE HORN OF AFRICA-WARS, DIAMONDS, AND GLOBALIZATION
In Sierra Leone and the Horn of Africa, the question is no different though
it would seem that terrorist and annexationist wars have made sheer human
survival instead of revolutionary transformation the most immediate task at
hand.
The collapse of the UN-brokered, July 1999, Lome Peace Accords to end
Sierra Leone's 8-year civil war, the intervention of British military
forces, the appeasement diplomacy of President Clinton's special envoy to
Sierra Leone, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, and the latest capture of the Pol
Potist Foday Sankoh, May 18-all point to the reality that the terrorist RUF
remains in control of Sierra Leone's lucrative Kono and Tongo diamond fields.
The RUF's control of the diamonds fields, no less than its unspeakable
atrocities against the Sierra Leonean masses, have won Sankoh leverage and
appeasement from the UN and the U.S. who, against protests from human
rights and democracy movement groups, sponsored his power-sharing position
in the government.
As in Bosnia and Kosova, U.S. imperialism leads the way in appeasing
genocide. In Africa it's on a more monstrous scale: Sankoh's RUF
specializes in mass dismemberment of men, women, and children as young as
four months old, rape camps, and the recruiting of children by forcing them
to massacre their own families.
Meanwhile, Liberian President Charles Taylor, who helped found the rogue
RUF during his own war of atrocities in Liberia and who was himself given
legitimacy through the diplomatic fig-leaf of Jesse Jackson, has kept a
steady flow of arms going to the RUF in exchange for diamonds smuggled out
of Sierra Leone by the RUF.
The RUF and UNITA in Angola, as well as various forces in the civil war in
Congo-Kinshasa, especially the Kabila government, exploit their country's
diamond wealth to finance their war aims while their masses subsist in
grinding poverty. United Nations sanctions against UNITA's diamond
smuggling operations-the largest in the world-were curtailed by fears that
UNITA might dump the diamonds on the world market to raise cash, thereby
driving down diamond prices. Which is why in Angola and Sierra Leone
transnational corporations like DeBeers and Anglo-American are deeply but
secretly involved in the conflicts. Just as Taylor has done in Sierra
Leone, so has Mugabe come to Kabila's defense in Congo-Kinshasa by
defending its diamond rich Kasai province.
Finally, the Ethiopia-Eritrea war has returned Ethiopia to the
annexationist road it had unsuccessfully traveled down for three decades,
first under the monarch Haile Selassie and then under the Stalinist
Mengistu. After several months of cease fire in the border war instigated
by Eritrea's occupation of the desolate Badame region, Ethiopia resumed its
two-year old war with Eritrea on May 12. As we go to press, Ethiopia has
penetrated deep inside Eritrea, quickly taking control of a third of the
country, and declared victory.
Having supported the EPRDF to oust Mengistu's Derg government in 1991,
Eritrea achieved its own self-determination not long after. On the
anniversary of its independence, it finds itself at war with its former
ally. In two years, tens of thousands have died on both sides, and more
than a million Eritreans have been displaced by Ethiopia's latest
offensive. While Ethiopia has spent millions on this ill-considered war,
famine threatens millions of Ethiopians and Eritreans.
And all of this occurs in a "new world order" in which capitalist
globalization has inaugurated the recolonization of Africa. African
underdevelopment is at one and the same time the condition for such mass
human tragedies as famine, war, and disease, as well as for Western
"humanitarian" aid to further enrich big Western agricultural, military and
pharmaceutical interests. Food aid is part of the U.S.'s diplomatic
arsenal, whether in the form of sanctions which devastate vast impoverished
masses of people, or in the form of famine relief. Globalization has sunk
the old colonial and neocolonial relations to entirely new, more degenerate
depths.
As we have seen, however, the poor Africans are not only suffering but
fighting back. That's because Africa has known ever since the ill-fated,
UN-designated "Africa Year" of 1960 that the logic of capitalist
accumulation assures that there will never be enough capital available to
develop even one impoverished country in Black Africa.
Which is why Raya Dunayevskaya concluded her chapter in PHILOSOPHY AND
REVOLUTION on "The African Revolutions and the World Economy" that "It is
not possible to comprehend the African reality apart from the compelling
objective forces of world production, the pull of the world market, AND the
underlying philosophy of the masses which Marx called 'the quest for
universality.'" Working that out a quarter century later is what Africa's
myriad crises challenges us to do.
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