-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Dec. 6, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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U.S. BILL WOULD SANCTION ZIMBABWE: 
AIM IS TO BLOCK LAND REFORM

By Deirdre Griswold

The art of public relations goes back a long way, as the old 
expression "a wolf in sheep's clothing" shows us. Disguise 
something bad or give it a cuddly name and by the time 
people find out it has fangs, it may be too late.

A bill called the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery 
Act (ZDERA) now making its way through Congress is a case in 
point. Democracy, economic recovery--who could argue with 
that? But this bill is an open attack on Zimbabwe's economic 
and political independence. It was passed by the Senate on 
Aug. 1 and is now before the House.

Zimbabwe is a long-tormented land in the middle of Africa 
that was violently colonized by Britain in the 1890s. The 
British South Africa Company, headed by financier Cecil 
Rhodes, massacred the Matabele and Mashona people, grabbing 
their livestock and the best land in the area and parceling 
it out to soldiers who would settle there, laying the basis 
for the white-settler regime to be known as Rhodesia.

Zimbabwe has rich farmland, but 60 percent of the best land 
is still in the hands of descendants of the white settlers--
even now, more than 20 years since a united front government 
of the two main African liberation organizations took 
office. But now the government of Zimbabwe has passed a law 
that would redistribute millions of acres of land, currently 
owned by just 3,500 white farmers, to 5 million Black 
farmers.

It is obvious that the whites are into farming as a 
lucrative business, not for survival. The Black people, 
however, are desperately poor and need the land just to 
live. The land question has become the focus of a giant 
political battle.

'DEMOCRACY' THROUGH BOUGHT ELECTIONS

President Robert Mugabe and the Patriotic Front government 
are the targets of ZDERA. In the name of democracy, the bill 
would allow the U.S. Congress to spend $6 million to 
influence the upcoming national election, in the name of 
"voter education," and would put sanctions on the country's 
leaders. While members of the opposition party, the Movement 
for Democratic Change, would be free to travel around the 
world, the bill would restrict travel by the leaders of the 
Zimbabwe government and freeze their bank accounts.

The MDC doesn't hide the fact that it is funded by Britain's 
Westminster Foundation for Democracy, the political 
equivalent of Washington's National Endowment for Democracy 
that has poured millions of U.S. taxpayers' dollars into 
elections abroad, many in Eastern Europe, to get the results 
desired by U.S. strategists.

The sanctions proposed in ZDERA are not the only outside 
pressure on Zimbabwe. A delegation from the European Union, 
representing the countries that carved Africa up for 
colonial plunder in the 19th century, arrived in Harare Nov. 
22 threatening to suspend beef and sugar trade deals vital 
to Zimbabwe's economy. But Minister of Foreign Affairs Stan 
Mudenge told the Herald newspaper that the government was 
ready for them and wanted to expose the EU's interference in 
the internal politics of Zimbabwe by funding opposition 
parties.

There is strong support for the Patriotic Front government 
in the country's rural areas, where most of the people live. 
The opposition MDC is based largely in the cities.

Pressure on Zimbabwe from imperialist lending institutions 
like the IMF and the World Bank became heavy after Mugabe 
heeded the call of Congolese President Laurent Kabila to 
defend that country against invading troops from Uganda, 
Rwanda and Burundi, who were funded by the same banks that 
are squeezing Zimbabwe. Kabila was eventually assassinated. 
His successor, Joseph Kabila, was forced to come to 
Washington and make economic concessions to U.S. imperialism 
in order to end the war. The uneasy truce that now exists in 
the Congo is proof of the imperialists' responsibility for 
the earlier war and invasion.

The capitalists of the U.S. and Europe who make tremendous 
profits from their control over the rich resources and 
underpaid labor of Africa act shocked and hurt when accused 
of perpetuating the economic super-exploitation first 
established under colonialism. But there really is no other 
word for it.

IMF REFORMS DEEPENED POVERTY

The mechanisms in the modern era are more nuanced, of 
course. But they are every bit as oppressive. Today, 45 
percent of Zimbabweans are not able to meet "basic 
nutritional needs," according to a government poverty 
assessment survey. Three-quarters of the people live in 
poverty, up from 40 percent just a decade ago. At that time 
Western-backed economic reforms, the so-called "structural 
adjustment programs," forced underdeveloped countries 
everywhere to sell off state properties and end food and 
other subsidies. Mugabe, like other Third World leaders, 
went along with these programs reluctantly, knowing that his 
government would be up against a full-court press if it 
refused.

While Zimbabwe has passed its Land Acquisition Act and 
Mugabe has added a "fast-track" decree giving the white 
farmers just 90 days to move off requisitioned land, 
ultimately this issue will not be settled in the courts. The 
struggle is on the land itself and has been going on for 
some time.

Over the past 18 months, veterans of the liberation war and 
other militants have occupied an estimated 1,700 white-owned 
farms, demanding that they be redistributed to landless 
Blacks. They have done this in the teeth of virulent 
resistance by the commercial farmers.

To get a sense of what these farms are like, the Commercial 
Farmers Union reported Nov. 22 that an ostrich farm in 
Matabeleland North had been "invaded" by 15 Black farmers. 
The farm was a joint venture between a white Zimbabwean and 
an Indonesian investor who had sunk $12 million into the 
deal.

The people of Zimbabwe have seen what capitalist 
globalization brings. Land that should be feeding the people 
is being used to raise ostriches for the exotic food market 
in Europe and elsewhere. Programs that promise democracy and 
economic development bring national humiliation and economic 
slavery.

The struggle in Zimbabwe can only intensify as the world 
capitalist recession deepens, bringing to the fore the most 
glaring inequities and contradictions of this rapacious 
system.

- END -

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