Mugabe Gets the Milosevic Treatment

What’s Really Going On in Zimbabwe
Mugabe Gets the Milosevic Treatment
By STEPHEN GOWANS

Arthur Mutambara, the leader of one faction of Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the MDC, and one of the principals in the Save Zimbabwe Campaign that’s at the centre of a storm of controversy over the Mugabe government’s crackdown on opposition, boasted a year ago that he was “going to remove Robert Mugabe, I promise you, with every tool at my disposal.” (1)

Educated at Oxford, the former management consultant with McKinsey & Co. was asked in early 2006 whether “his plans might include a Ukrainian-style mass mobilization of opponents of Mugabe’s regime.” (2)

“We’re going to use every tool we can get to dislodge this regime,” he replied. “We’re not going to rule out or in anything the sky’s the limit.” (3)

Last year Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of an opposing MDC faction, and eight of his colleagues, were thrown out of Zambia after attending a meeting arranged by the US ambassador to Zimbabwe, Christopher Dell, with representatives of Freedom House, a US ruling class organization that promotes regime change in countries that aren’t sufficiently committed to free markets, free trade and free enterprise. (4)

Funded by the billionaire speculator George Soros, USAID, the US State Department and the US Congress’s National Endowment for Democracy (whose mission has been summed up as doing overtly what the CIA used to do covertly), Freedom House champions the rights of journalists, union leaders and democracy activists to organize openly to bring down governments whose economic policies are against the profit-making interests of US bankers, investors and corporations.

Headed by Wall St. investment banker Peter Ackerman, who produced a 2002 documentary, Bringing Down a Dictator, a follow-up to A Force More Powerful, which celebrates the ouster of Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, Freedom House features a rogues’ gallery of US ruling class activists on its board of directors: Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Otto Reich, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Zbigniew Brzezinski and Steve Forbes, among others.

The campaign to replace Mugabe with the neo-liberal standard bearers of the MDC is rotten with connections to the overthrow of Milosevic. Dell, the US ambassador, prides himself on being one of the architects of Milosevic’s ouster. (5) He held a senior diplomatic post in Kosovo when Milosevic was driven out of office in a US-UK engineered uprising.

Dell’s mission, it would seem, is to be as provocative as possible, sparing no effort to tarnish the image of the Mugabe government. In early November 2005, Dell declared that “neither drought nor sanctions are at the root of Zimbabwe’s decline,” an implausible conclusion given that drought has impaired economic performance in neighboring countries, and that sanctions bar Zimbabwe from access to economic and humanitarian aid, while disrupting trade and investment. “The Zimbabwe government’s own gross mismanagement of the economy and its corrupt rule has brought on the crisis,” Dell charged. (6)

When not disparaging Mugabe’s government, Dell can be counted on to be doling out largesse to the opposition (US$1 million, according to one source, to get the Save Zimbabwe Campaign off the ground earlier this year. (7))

Responding to Dell’s call for the opposition to unite, Mutambara has declared his new unity of purpose with MDC opponent, Tsvangirai. “Our core business,” he announced, after violent clashes with the police earlier this month, “is to drive Mugabe out of town. There is no going back. We are working together against Robert Mugabe and his surrogates.” (8)

While Mutambara is certainly working with Tsvangirai to drive Mugabe out of town, what he doesn’t explain is what he wants to replace Mugabe with. The opposition, and the powerful Western governments that back it, make it seem as if they’re offended by Mugabe’s qualities as a leader, not his policies, and that their aim is to restore good governance, not to impose their own program on Zimbabwe.

We should be clear about what the MDC is and what its policies are. While the word “democratic” in the opposition’s Movement for Democratic Change moniker evokes pleasant feelings, the party’s policies are rooted in the neo-liberal ideology of the Western ruling class. That is, the party’s policies are hardly democratic.

The MDC favors economic “liberalization”, privatization and a return to the glacial-paced willing buyer/willing seller land-redistribution regimen a status quo ante-friendly policy that would limit the state’s ability to redistribute land to only tracts purchased from white farmers who are willing to sell.

Compare that to the Zanu-PF government’s direction. Mugabe’s government is hardly socialist, but it has implemented social democratic policies that elevate the public interest at least a few notches above the basement level position it occupies under the neo-liberal tyranny favored by the MDC. A Mutambara or Tsvangirai government would jettison policies that demand something from foreign investors in return for doing business in Zimbabwe. Foreign banks, for example, are required to invest 40 percent of their profits in Zimbabwe government bonds. (9) What’s more, the MDC leaders would almost certainly end the Mugabe government’s policy of favoring foreign investors who partner with local investors to promote indigenous economic development. And Zimbabwe’s state-owned enterprises would be sold off to the highest bidder.

Moreover, the land redistribution program would be effectively shelved, delaying indefinitely the achievement of one of the principal goals of Zimbabwe’s national liberation struggle reversing the plunder of the indigenous population’s land by white settlers. Mugabe, it is sometimes grudgingly admitted in the Western press, is a hero in rural parts of southern Africa for his role in spearheading land reform, something other south African governments have lacked the courage to pursue vigorously. South African president Thabo Mbeki’s reluctance to join in the collective excoriation of Mugabe is often attributed to “respect for Mr. Mugabe as a revolutionary hero (he led the fight that ended white rule in Zimbabwe in 1980, and was a key opponent of apartheid) and because the issue of white ownership of land in South African is also sensitive.” (10)

Contrast respect for Mugabe with the thin layer of support the US-backed Save Zimbabwe Campaign has been able to muster. It “does not yet have widespread grassroots support,” (11) but it does have the overwhelming backing of the US, the UK, the Western media and US ruling class regime change organizations, like Freedom House. Is it any surprise that Zanu-PF regards the controversy swirling around its crackdown on the opposition’s latest provocation as an attempt by an oppressor to return to power by proxy through the MDC?

Stephen Gowans is a writer and political activist who lives in Ottawa, Canada. He can be reached at: sr.gowans@sympatico.ca

NOTES

1. Times Online March 5, 2006.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. The Sunday Mail, February 5, 2006.
5. The Herald, October 21, 2005.
6. The Herald, November 7, 2005.
7. The Herald, March 14, 2007.
8. The Observer, March 18, 2007.
9. The Observer, January 28, 2007.
10. Globe and Mail, March 22, 2004.
11. Ibid.

Zimbabwe and the Politics of Demons and Angels

By Stephen Gowans

Soon after I wrote an article titled “Mugabe gets the Milosevic Treatment,” posted at Counterpunch.org, I received an e-mail from a representative of SW Radio Africa, who said I should visit Zimbabwe before writing articles about the country. This was followed by a Patrick Bond reply to my article in Counterpunch, invoking the same argument, though in an indirect way. Gowans’ views are nonsense, Bond fumed, at least, as he saw them, sitting across the Limpopo river, where, he said, he had managed to establish a pretty good handle on what was going in Zimbabwe.

Had I been writing a travelogue both of my critics would have made a good point, but inasmuch as I was writing about Washington and London having dragooned civil society – and in some cases, having created it from the ground up – for the purpose of ousting the government of Robert Mugabe, their criticism was wide of the mark. You don’t have to travel to Zimbabwe to figure out that Mugabe is getting the Milosevic treatment.

Even Bond, in his characteristically haughty way, acknowledged the US intrigues in Zimbabwe with a dismissive “tell us something we don’t already know.”

For the record, the British newspaper The Guardian revealed as early as August 22, 2002 that, “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.”

Washington confirmed its own civil society-assisted regime change plans for Zimbabwe in an April 5, 2007 report, revealing that in 2006 “The U.S. government continued to support the efforts of the political opposition, the media and civil society,” including providing training and assistance to the kind of grassroots “pro-democracy” groups the US had used to bring down the government of Slobodan Milosevic, and that Bond had celebrated in his Counterpunch article as “the independent left.”

SW Radio Africa is a UK-based radio station, funded by the USAID Office of Transition Initiatives to broadcast anti-government propaganda into Zimbabwe. Violet Gonda, one of the station’s interviewers, has been sending me transcripts of her interviews ever since my Milosevic Treatment article appeared on the Counterpunch site. In an April 10 interview with Zimbabwe’s Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi, UK-based Gonda was challenged by Mohadi to “come to Zimbabwe and witness this for yourself and don’t be talking about things that you don’t know,” turning the argument Gonda’s colleague had made to me against her. Mohadi was referring to Gonda’s allegations that MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai had been beaten and that MDC supporters had been tortured.

Amusing as it was to see the same argument used against SW Radio Africa, the “come to Zimbabwe before you say anything” demand is based on the startlingly naïve view that someone else’s perspective must align with your own if only he visits the same piece of real estate. The view of the rural poor in Zimbabwe, or of veterans of the guerilla war for national liberation, can hardly be expected to be the same as those of white commercial farmers, even though they live in the same country. It is experience, race, which side of colonialism you’ve been on, and what opportunities imperialist countries offer you, that account for why the views of Zimbabwe’s rural poor and of Zanu-PF supporters are different from those of comfortable white professors ensconced in foundation-supported positions across the Limpopo river, and of young black Africans from Harare who travel to the US on US State Department sponsored trips to study civil disobedience techniques.

If my article resonated with anyone, it resonated with black Africans, members of the African Diaspora and anti-imperialists. White commercial farmers and anyone linked to the civil society apparatus deployed to unseat Mugabe’s government angrily dismissed it. But why? Why would opponents of Mugabe – including Bond, who acknowledges that the US is acting to drive Zanu-PF from power (that is, when he’s not arguing the exact opposite) — take exception to someone drawing attention to something that is a matter of public record?

The reason, I think, has everything to do what different groups of people value more: the thwarting of imperialist designs (and the land reform, redress of colonial injustices, and national sovereignty that are thereby given space to come to fruition), or ousting Mugabe. If you want Mugabe to go, you’ll oppose anything that reveals efforts to unseat him as being illegitimate. It won’t be enough to say, “Yes, you’re right, Washington and London are engaged in intrigues to topple the Mugabe government, but all the same I dislike him and his program and here’s why.” Instead, you’ll fulminate, “This is nonsense!”

You’ll probably also practice the politics of demons and angels – the division of the world into two camps: bad guys and good guys, black hats and white hats. The objective is to describe leaders, governments, movements and programs you want to see the end of as demons, and those who are acting to achieve this end as angels. However, because those that lean to the left of the political spectrum are unlikely to regard imperialist governments as angels (although this is far from being invariably true) civil society groups are recruited as proxies. They appear to be independent, to do good works, and they have a “socialism from below” feel that resonates with the Western left. Patrick Bond, who directs a center for civil society, is a master of invoking the kind of rhetoric about social movements being an “independent left” operating in spaces between neo-liberal Third World governments and neo-liberal First World governments that appeals to the Z-Net congregation.

The politics of demons and angels is terribly unsophisticated. That should be enough to keep 100 paces away from it. But it should also be eschewed for an even more compelling reason: because it’s used to build support for imperialist interventions in other countries — interventions that have nothing whatever to do with promoting human rights, building democracy, and keeping the peace, and everything to do with opening up space for the intervening countries’ corporations, banks and investors to make a profit.

Yugoslavia was transformed by Western intervention from a country with a large socially and publicly owned sector, whose government balked at IMF reforms, into a neo-liberal workshop of growing economic insecurity and domination by Western capital. Iraq, brutalized by sanctions, terrorized by war, and humiliated by occupation, may in time yield its prize of a bonanza of oil profits to British and US oil firms. These prizes could not have been won without campaigns of vilification to manufacture consent for intervention. The bases for these interventions – that Milosevic was orchestrating a genocide in Kosovo and that Saddam Hussein was hiding banned weapons – were lies.

In the real world there are three kinds of views on the struggle in Zimbabwe: those that demonize Mugabe; those that angelize him; and those that do neither. In the Manichean world of the politics of demons and angels there are only two: those that demonize Mugabe and those that angelize him. Anyone who expresses a view that neither demonizes nor angelizes Mugabe is accused, by those who demonize him, of angelizing him.

A person who notes, quite accurately, and with the weight of evidence behind him, that Washington, London and the EU have built and enlisted civil society in Zimbabwe to oust Mugabe, will be called by those who demonize him, a pro-Mugger, Mugophile, or practitioner of the basest enemy of my enemy is my friend politics. And yet there is no justification for making these accusations. Repeating what has been said over and over by the US State Department and in newspaper reports about US and British intrigues in Zimbabwe is hardly the same as saying Mugabe is my friend, Mugabe is my hero, or Mugabe is a great guy, let’s organize a celebration in his honor.

When demonizers of Mugabe accuse those who point out that what Washington and London admit to openly, as being Mugabe-angelizers, we have to ask why? Is it because their Manichean worldview allows them to see the world in no other way (if you don’t call him a demon you must think he’s an angel, because there are only angels and demons in my world), or is it because they’re so embittered toward Mugabe that they don’t care who gets rid of him or how or what follows him, just so long as he goes, and therefore anyone who would regard him as something other than a demon must be stopped from doing so in case he persuades other people?

To be sure, these are not mutually exclusive alternatives. Both may be true. But what’s significant is that both mesh nicely with the openly admitted plans of Washington and London to oust Mugabe’s government. If Mugabe is universally understood to be a demon, we can hardly marshal the energy to stop plans to oust him. Why bother? You’ll only soil yourself by association. And who wants to back a demon?

The claim made by Z Magazine’s Michael Albert, that human psychology isn’t this simple – that people recognize that a foreign leader’s being a demon doesn’t justify an intervention to remove him – reveals Albert to be either disingenuous or the last person on earth you would want to invite into an advertising firm as a human relations expert. You don’t have to talk to too many people, including readers of Z Magazine (especially readers of Z Magazine?) to hear it said: “Oh sure, maybe the bombing of Yugoslavia, the invasion of Afghanistan, and the war on Iraq, were done for the wrong reasons, but all the same, they served the useful function of ridding the world of monsters.”

Given a zeitgeist that favors a never-ending series of demons for people to vent their moral outrage on, it comes as no shock to find professed anti-imperialists combing their archives to dredge up whatever dirt they can find on Mugabe. One found an article that exposes Mugabe as a homophobe. But what have Mugabe’s views on homosexuals to do with the struggles in Zimbabwe that connect the rural poor, white commercial farmers, Zanu-PF, civil society, and the imperialist machinations of the US and the UK?

The answer, of course, is nothing. But there is a political function and also a psychological function to be served in good old-fashioned dirt-slinging. Politically, the object is to personify a movement to discredit it by drawing attention to the revolting features of the person the movement has been equated to. There’s a Pavlovian character to this. The pairing of the bell with food, eventually leads to the bell alone calling forth the dogs’ salivation. Likewise, the pairing of the person with the movement, or class, or nation, eventually leads to the negative features of the person being transferred to what he has been equated to. Were one to dredge up articles on Castro and Che being homophobes, Cuba-supporters would immediately recognize the political nature of the act. They don’t, however, seem to recognize the political nature of the act of visibly parading one individual’s failings about, under the guise of a making a significant contribution to understanding the struggle in Zimbabwe — or do, but go about doing it anyway because their commitment to anti-imperialism is fair-weather (strong when there’s no danger of being demonized by association, absent otherwise.)

The psychological as opposed to political function of dirt-slinging is to socially affirm oneself as a decent human being by denouncing those who express indecent values. This is particularly attractive to people on the far left, who are already mistrusted by the larger community for holding dangerous and unsettling views. How better to affirm one’s place in decent society than by leading the chorus in denouncing those vilified by conservative forces as leftist and anti-imperialist “monsters.” See, not all of us are monsters. We hate the monsters just as much as the rest of you do.

Let’s be clear. The very fact that I’m questioning the practice of personifying groups of people in order to demonize the individuals equated to them will be used to denounce me as a thug-hugger, apologist, and lionizer of monsters. In other words, if you’re not with us in vilifying the latest Satan, you’re against us. The great irony is that people who rail against those who refuse to participate in campaigns of vilifying those calumniated as left and anti-imperialist “monsters” accuse people like me, of practicing a with-us-or-against-us politics of the enemy of my enemy is my friend.

“Unhappy is the land that needs heroes,” remarked Brecht. He might have added, unhappy is the land that needs demons (but then, the land that needs heroes, must, per force, need demons as their heroes’ antithesis.) The movie The Motorcycle Diaries, about Che Guevera’s trip through South America with his friend Alberto Granado in the early 50s, has been justly criticized for angelizing the Argentine revolutionary. When those enchanted with Che the angel discover Che the human being, a man with warts – though, as is true of all larger-than-life figures, uglier than those of the rest of us – they become disillusioned, embittered and, if strongly committed to a Manichean view of the world, swing radically to the other pole, denouncing their fallen angel as Satan incarnate, rather than recognizing him as a human being.

The best that can be said about discussions of Zimbabwe, or north Korea, or Sudan, or Iran that reduce to a set of accusations about the demonic character of some leader is that they’re superficial and frivolous. What can also be said is that they’re products of manipulation by forces seeking to manufacture consent for interventions in other countries – interventions that have nothing to do with human rights and democracy and have everything to do with securing advantages for the intervening countries’ corporations, banks and investors. When we dissociate ourselves from “unsavory” regimes – and there’s not one government, Western or otherwise, free from unsavory features that would not allow any of them to be demonized – we isolate really-existing projects for national and class emancipation and thereby undermine the potential for the success of progressive struggles in the real world. It’s true that in behaving in this way we can avoid demonization by association and thereby splatter-proof our own vision – a strategy that may serve the purpose of making our vision more saleable to a skeptical public — but it cannot be safeguarded from vilification forever. The moment it too becomes a threat, it will be vilified as vigorously as all real-world threats to imperialism are. The idea that you can escape being vilified by those you oppose is true only so long as you don’t oppose them in any kind of serious or effective way. Utopian visions – and those whose left politics amount to nothing more than pious expressions of benevolence and goodwill to men – are no threat.

What’s more, the view that the success of the independent (which is to say, the US government and ruling class foundation supported) left in Zimbabwe in toppling the Zanu-PF government is something to be wished for, is naïve or (given the foundation-connections of those who express this view) disingenuous. A successful civil society-executed regime change operation will not produce a decentralized, participatory democracy committed to egalitarianism, but a neo-colonial regime headed by an Anglo-American puppet which will immediately handcuff land reform and abrogate every policy at odds with neo-liberalism and ownership of Zimbabwe’s assets by US and British capital.

The models are Poland and Yugoslavia (among others.) There, trade unions and civil society also managed to enchant the Western left while bringing down governments that were the only serious obstacle to the installation of comprador regimes — regimes whose agenda was one of shutting down shipyards, selling off socially and publicly owned enterprises, and ushering in an era of growing inequality and subservience to Western capital. You don’t hear much about these places anymore. You should. They’re what Zimbabwe will become if civil society topples another anti-imperialist government

Africa for Africans! The Long, Painful Death of Rhodesia and Birth of Zimbabwe

Africa for Africans! The Long, Painful Death of Rhodesia and Birth of Zimbabwe

It was only in 1980 that Africans in Rhodesia finally overcame the minority of whites in the country to reclaim the land for their own and rename it Zimbabwe. And it wasn’t until after a long and brutal war in which the whites did all they could to keep the Africans down, and just about as many Africans were killed by other Africans as by whites.

Africans in Zimbabwe were never happy about the European occupation of their lands. They tried a combination of resisting and compromising with the Europeans to keep as much control as they could. The first major uprising against the Europeans, known as the First Chimurenga (“War for Liberation” in the Shona language), occurred in the 1890’s, and was impressive because it saw the two major tribes of the area, the Shona and Ndebele, unite. Despite their unity, the rebellion ended with the capture and hanging of the leaders. One of them, Nehanda, predicted that “my bones will rise again” and that Africans would have justice one day.

After this defeat, the Africans tended to accept the European rule as a fact of life. But, as the name of the First Chimurenga implies, there was to be a Second Chimurenga, just as Nehanda predicted. Led primarily by Joseph Nkomo at first, it would last over 20 years and lead to an brutal war that ate at the country for almost 15 of those years.

So, why would the Africans fight among themselves?

They thought the white regime would disappear quickly. White power was falling all over Africa, and in Rhodesia African nationalists had pretty successfully led many protests, including a major boycott of the 1962 elections. It seemed freedom might be just around the corner. “The two factions, confident of an early African victory, behaved as if the white regime was going to vanish. The Government, which controlled all the levers of power, had no intention of vanishing…”

There were strong loyalties among the two major tribes of Rhodesia, the Ndebele and Shona, for the leaders of the two major groups that emerged. So these people focused on getting the biggest piece of the pie they thought would be theirs shortly and treated each other brutally.

Finally, there were just some powerful personality clashes that drew different support among different groups of people, and that caused people to sacrifice the most important common goal in order to get at the others.
The result? Most of the leaders spent many of the next ten years in some of the worst prisons Rhodesia had, and white people not only succeeded in holding power longer than they would have otherwise, but they were more confident than ever that they were right in doing so because the Africans were so brutal to each other.

“Zimbabwe” would have to wait a while to be born.

Joshua Nkomo and the Second Chimurenga

Joshua Nkomo and the Second Chimurenga

Today in Zimbabwe some mourn and some rejoice the death of Joshua Nkomo, a leader of the liberation struggle. The whole day on television there were specials about the history of Zimbabwe, as well as songs, dancing, and tributes to the man whom some called “the King of Matabeleland.” The Zimbabwean national anthem, Ngaikomborerwe Nyika Yezimbabwe, Blessed Be the Land of Zimbabwe, played constantly here in Bulawayo, as well as imbube pieces, a blend of Ndebele and English, by the a cappella group Black Umfolosi. Rachel and Dumy, who work at our hostel, both watched intently and said it was a real shame, and “people in town won’t be happy today — everyone will walk around with their heads down.” But the white owner, David, came in and raised his hands in the air, saying, “Finally, the opposition leader is dead!”

In Harare (then Salisbury), in 1955, some nationalist leaders, dissatisfied with the growing inequality between black Africans and white settlers (the descendants of Cecil Rhodes’ Pioneer Column), formed the City Youth League, which gradually became a new organization called the African National Congress (ANC). Of prime interest in everyone’s minds was the Land Husbandry Act of 1951, which had taken land away from Africans and given it to the minority whites. Elected president of the group, young Joshua Nkomo surprised the settler government by calling for majority rule. Banned in 1959, the ANC changed names and operated as a new National Democratic Party (NDP), retaliating with a series of demonstrations, strikes, and sabotage, called Zhii, or vengeful annihilation of the enemy.

In 1961, while Nkomo was out of the country, the government banned the NDP. In response, nationalists created yet another group, the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU), a primarily Ndebele organization. Joshua Nkomo again led this group, and was again banned by Sir Edgar Whitehead. The Rhodesian Front Party’s Winston Field was elected in 1962, and he instituted a series of crushing laws, outlawing black assemblies and political debates, and passing a mandatory death sentence for arson. Nkomo thought about fleeing to Mozambique to head up a government in exile, and around this time disagreements between Nkomo and Robert Mugabe (the current Zimbabwean head of state) led to Mugabe’s disgusted resignation. Mugabe went on to form the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), a primarily Shona group. Nkomo pressed on with the struggle as well, and most of the ZANU and ZAPU party leaders continued to be banned or imprisoned for their nationalistic actions.

Mounting tensions eventually led to civil war. (Less than a century earlier, in 1896, the Ndebele and Shona had joined to fight the British South Africa Company in the First Chimurenga, the “War of Liberation.” Squashed in 1897, one of the movement’s spiritualist leaders had prophesied, “My bones will rise again,” in a Second Chimurenga). This Second “War of Liberation” began on April 28th, 1966, now known as Chimurenga Day, with a day-long skirmish between Rhodesian Front soldiers and police against freedom fighters in the city of Chinhoyi: all died except one. In the years that followed, fortified by ZANU training camps in Mozambique and ZAPU bases in Zambia and Tanzania, armed conflict continued, with young women and men trained and fighting as scouts, messengers, spies, and soldiers.

Under the aegis of the Patriotic Front, Mugabe’s ZANU and Nkomo’s ZAPU managed to bring Ian Smith’s white government to its knees. On March 4th, 1980, in a carefully monitored election, Mugabe and ZANU won a majority of seats available to Blacks in the new parliament, while Nkomo and ZAPU won 20.

In town, I asked Evelyn High School students Tryphine, Nancy, Neoleen, and Dorothy, all 15 and in Form 3, if they discussed Nkomo at all in school today. Neoleen said that they just talked about it a little. “Anyway, he was very old. He celebrated his birthday during his illness.” Nkomo represents the past, a part of history almost unknown to this younger generation. What happens in the future is up to youth like these students.

Monica

The First Chimurenga (1896.1897)

Second Matabele War

Belligerents
United Kingdom,
British South Africa Police Ndebele (Matabele),
Shona
Commanders
Col R.S.S. Baden-Powell
Gen. Frederick Carrington
Cecil Rhodes Mlimo†
Sikombo
Inyanda
Casualties and losses
400+ settlers & soldiers ca. 2,000
The Second Matabele War, also known as the Matabeleland Rebellion and in Zimbabwe as , took place from 1896–97.

In March 1896, the Ndebele (Matabele) people revolted against the authority of the British South Africa Company in what is now celebrated in Zimbabwe as the First War of Independence. Mlimo, the Ndebele spiritual leader, is credited with fomenting much of the anger that led to this confrontation. He convinced the Ndebele and the Shona that the white settlers (almost 4,000 strong by then) were responsible for the drought, locust plagues and the cattle disease rinderpest ravaging the country at the time.

Mlimo’s call to battle was well-timed. Only a few months earlier, the British South Africa Company’s Administrator General for Matabeleland, Leander Starr Jameson, had sent most of his troops and armaments to fight the Transvaal Republic in the ill-fated Jameson Raid. This left the country nearly defenceless. The British would immediately send troops to suppress the Ndebele and the Shona, but it would cost the lives of many settlers, Ndebele, and Shona alike, take months before British forces would be adequate to break the sieges and defend the major settlements, and war would rage on until October of the following year.

The War in Matabeleland

Rebellion
Mlimo planned to wait until the night of March 29, the first full moon, to take Bulawayo by surprise immediately after a ceremony called the Big Dance. He promised, through his priests, that if the Ndebele went to war against the white settlers their bullets would change to water and their cannon shells would become eggs. His plan was to kill all of the settlers in Bulawayo first, but not to destroy the town itself as it would serve again as the royal kraal for the newly reincarnated King Lobengula. Mlimo decreed that the white settlers should be attacked and driven from the country through the Mangwe Pass on the Western edge of the Matobo Hills, which was to be left open and unguarded for this reason. Once the settlers were purged from Bulawayo, the Ndebele and Shona warriors would head out into the countryside and continue the slaughter until all the settlers were either killed or fled.

But several young Ndebele were overly anxious to go to war and the rebellion started prematurely. On March 20, Ndebele rebels shot and stabbed a native policeman. Over the next few days, other outlying settlers and prospectors were killed. Frederick Selous, the famous big-game hunter, had heard rumours of settlers in the countryside being killed, but he thought it was a localised problem. When news of the policeman’s murder reached Selous on March 23, he knew the Ndebele had started a massive uprising.

Nearly 2,000 Ndebele warriors began the rebellion in earnest on March 24. Many, although not all, of the young native police quickly deserted and joined the rebels. Armed with Martini-Henry rifles, Winchester repeaters, and Lee-Metfords, as well old and obsolete guns, assegais, knobkerries, and battle-axes, the Ndebele headed into the countryside. As news of the massive rebellion spread, and the Shona joined in the fighting, the settlers headed towards Bulawayo. Within a week, 141 white settlers were slain in Matabeleland, an additional 103 were killed in Mashonaland, and hundreds of settler homes, ranches and mines were burned.

Siege of Bulawayo
With few troops to support them, the settlers quickly built a laager in the centre of Bulawayo on their own. Oil-soaked fagots were arranged in strategic locations in case of attack at night. Blasting gelatin was secreted in outlying buildings that were beyond the defence perimeter, to be exploded in the event the enemy occupied them. Smashed glass bottles were spread around the front of the wagons. Barbed wire and a laager of sandbagged wagons was added to Bulawayo’s defenses. Except for hunting rifles, there were few weapons to be found in Bulawayo. But fortunately for settlers, there were a few working artillery pieces and a small assortment of machine guns.

Rather than wait passively the settlers immediately mounted patrols, called the Bulawayo Field Force, under legendary figures such as Selous and Frederick Russell Burnham who rode out to rescue any surviving settlers in the countryside and went on attack against the Ndebele. Selous raised a mounted troop of forty men to scout southward into the Matobo Hills. Maurice Gifford, along with 40 men, rode east along the Iniza River. Whenever settlers were found they were quickly loaded into their wagons and closely guarded on their way to Bulawayo. Within the first week of fighting, 20 men of the Bulawayo Field Force were killed and another 50 wounded.

In the First Matabele War, the Ndebele had experienced the effectiveness of the settler’s Maxim guns, so they never mounted a significant attack against Bulawayo even though over 10,000 Ndebele warriors could be seen near the town. Conditions inside Bulawayo, however, were quickly becoming unbearable. During the day, settlers could go to homes and buildings within the town, but at night they were forced to seek shelter in the much smaller laager. Nearly 1,000 women and children were crowded into the city and false alarms of attacks were common. But the Ndebele did make one critical error during the siege; they neglected to cut the telegraph lines connecting Bulawayo to Mafeking. This gave both the relief forces and the besieged Bulawayo Field Force far more information than they would otherwise have had.

Several relief columns were organized to break the siege, but the long trek through hostile countryside would take several months. Late in May, the first two relief columns would appear near Bulawayo on almost the same day but from opposite directions — Cecil Rhodes and Col. Beal arriving from Salisbury and Fort Victoria in Mashonaland 300 miles to the North; and Lord Grey and Col. Plumer (of the York and Lancaster Regiment) from Kimberley and Mafeking, 600 miles to the South. The Southern relief forces were nearly ambushed on their approach to Bulawayo, but Selous discovered the whereabouts of the Matabele and the maxim guns of the relief forces drove back the attackers. Not long after relief forces began arriving in Bulawayo, Gen. Carrington arrived to take overall command along with his Chief of Staff, Col Baden-Powell.

With the siege broken, an estimated 50,000 Matabele retreated into their stronghold of the Matobo Hills near Bulawayo. This region became the scene of the fiercest fighting between the white settler patrols and the Matabele. By June, the Shona kept their promise and joined the fighting on the side of the Ndebele. But lacking a clear leader similar to Mlimo, the Shonas mostly stayed behind their fortifications and conducted few raids.

Assassination of Mlimo
The turning point in the war came when a Zulu informant gave up information on the whereabouts of Mlimo. The scout Burnham and native commissioner Bonnar Armstrong were dispatched to find Mlimo’s sacred cave, which was used as a shrine, and to capture or kill the Ndebele spiritual leader. Burnham and Armstrong traveled by night through Matobo Hills and closed in on the sacred cave. Not far from the cave was a village of about 100 huts filled with many warriors. The two scouts tethered their horses to a thicket and crawled on their bellies, screening their slow and cautious movements with branches held before them. Once inside the cave, they waited until Mlimo entered.[1]

Burnham and Armstrong waited until Mlimo, entered the cave and started his dance of immunity. Burnham shot Mlimo just below the heart.[2] The two scouts then leapt over the dead Mlimo and ran down a trail towards their horses. Hundreds of warriors, encamped nearby, picked up their arms and started in pursuit. Burnham set fire to the village as a distraction. The two men hurried back to Bulawayo, with warriors in pursuit.

Upon learning of the death of Mlimo, Cecil Rhodes boldly walked unarmed into the Ndebele stronghold and persuaded the impi to lay down their arms.[3] The extension of the War in Mashonaland continued for another year, however.

The War in Mashonaland
War broke out in June 1896 at Mazowe with an attack on Alice Mine. This was followed by the medium Nehanda Nyakasikana capturing and executing Mazowe Native Commissioner Pollard.

Other religious figures who led the rebellion include Kaguvi Gumboreshumba, who was active in the Goromonzi area and Mukwati, a priest of the Mwari shrine4 who was active throughout Mashonaland5.

In addition to the mediums, traditional leaders played a major role in the rebellion, notably Chief Mashayamombe, who led resistance in his chieftancy in Mhondoro, south of Harare. He was amongst the first chiefs to rebel and the last to be defeated [6]. He was supplied by many of the surrounding districts, such as Chikomba (then Charter)[7]. Other chiefs who played an important role included Gwabayana, Makoni, Mapondera, Mangwende and Seke [8]

With the war in Matabeleland ending, the Gen. Carrington was able to concentrate his forces on Mashonaland and the rebels retreated into granite kopjes. With no central command to oppose him, Carrington was able to bring maxim guns against each stronhold in turn, until resistence ended. Nehanda Nyakasikana and Kaguvi Gumboreshumba were captured and executed in 1898, but Mukwati was never captured and died in Mutoko.[5]

Legacy
The rebellion failed completely and did not result in any major changes in BSAC policy, for example the hut tax was implemented. The territories of Matabeleland and Mashonaland became Rhodesia and both the Ndebele and Shona became subjects of the Rhodes administration. However, the legacy of leaders such as Kaguvi, Mapondera and Nehanda was to inspire future generations9.

Scouting
It was during the war in Matabeleland that Baden-Powell and Burnham first met and began their life-long friendship. In mid-June 1896, during a scouting patrol in Matobo Hills, Burnham first taught Baden-Powell woodcraft, the fundamentals of scouting. As a boy growing up in the American Old West during the Indian Wars, Burnham had learned scoutcraft from Indian trackers, frontiersmen, and cowboys, so as a scout in Africa he was simply practising the art and applying it as a soldier. So impressed was Baden-Powell by Burnham’s scouting spirit that he fondly told people he “sucked him dry” of all he could possibly tell. Scoutcraft was not generally practised outside of the American Old West, but it was vitally needed in places like colonial Africa, so Baden-Powell and Burnham discussed how this art might be taught to young boys. These young boy scouts envisioned by Baden-Powell and Burnham during those evenings camping in the Matobo Hills was one of fighters first whose business it was to face their enemies with both courage and good cheer, and as social workers afterwards. While Baden-Powell went on to refine the concept of scouting and eventually become the founder of the international scouting movement, Burnham can also be called one of the movement’s fathers.

1901 Mapondera Rebellion
In 1901 Chief Kadungure Mapondera, who had in 1894 proclaimed his independence of company rule6, led a rebellion in the Guruve and Mount Darwin areas of Mashonaland Central. He led a force of initially under 100 men, but had over 600 under his command by mid-1901. He was captured in 1903 and died in jail in 1904 after a hunger strike10

Monuments
Rhodes decreed in his will that he was to be buried in Matobo Hills, so when he died in the Cape in 1902 his body came up by train and wagon to Bulawayo. His burial was attended by Ndebele chiefs, who asked that the firing party should not discharge their rifles as this would disturb the spirits. Then, for the first and probably the only time, they gave the white man the Ndebele royal salute “Bayete”. Rhodes is buried alongside Jameson and the 34 white soldiers killed in the Shangani Patrol.

La barbita del Che

Por Juan José Dalton

SAN SALVADOR – Schafik Handal era todo un gran señor. Lo conocí desde que tengo uso de razón por reuniones en mi casa en San Miguelito, luego en Praga, luego en La Habana y luego en múltiples lugares. Varias veces lo entrevisté. Siempre me gustó la forma que tenía de reírse y de contar historias.

SAN SALVADOR – Schafik Handal era todo un gran señor. Lo conocí desde que tengo uso de razón por reuniones en mi casa en San Miguelito, luego en Praga, luego en La Habana y luego en múltiples lugares. Varias veces lo entrevisté. Siempre me gustó la forma que tenía de reírse y de contar historias.

Muchos lo tenían como el gran “ogro iracundo”, pero la verdad es que el tipo tenía un gran sentido del humor. Durante y después de la guerra tuvimos una relación de mucho respeto y siempre hablamos de amigos y de lugares comunes: Kiva Maidanik (latinoamericanista ruso), de mi padre y sus miles de historias, de su familia, de Tony su hermano asesinado… Nunca hablamos de las cosas que nos podrían separar y la verdad, así fue mejor.

Un día, allá por septiembre de 1989, en San José, Costa Rica, en el convento de las Monjas Clarisas y sede del que fuera uno de los primeros encuentros públicos de diálogo entre el gobierno de Alfredo Cristiani y el FMLN, en un momento de relax Schafik comenzó a contar historias, en medio de grandes carcajadas.

Uno de sus cuentos fue más o menos así: Después de la muerte del Ché en Bolivia, se vino una ola en los movimientos de izquierda por imitar la figura del guerrillero. Entonces, según Schafik, hubo un compañero en el PC que se había dejado crecer la barbita al estilo Ché y andaba con todo y boinita. Pues, resultó que un día a aquel imitador la Policía Nacional se lo llevó preso, sólo por eso: por andar haciéndose el Ché.

Ya en la cárcel –según contó la propia víctima- uno de los carceleros borracho llegaba a “joder” al Ché. Lo llamaba por los barrotes y le decía: “¡¡¡Vení para acá!!!”, le halaba la barbita y le decía: “¡Pero es que te parecés al Ché Guevara, hijeputa!”.

Esa cruel historia se repitió varias veces. Era dramático, pero Schafik imitaba al carcelero y se halaba su propia barba, que entonces estaba gris.

Y pues, finalmente como al preso no había de qué ni cómo acusarlo de algo, la policía lo soltó a los dos días. Schafik quedó en silencio. Pero alguien le preguntó: “¿Schafik y ese compañero qué hizo después de salir de la cárcel?”.

Entonces, entre una gran carcajada, respondió: “Puta, ¿y qué iba a ser?… ¡¡¡Se fue a quitar la barba inmediatamente!!!”.

El Salvador’s New Left

El Salvador’s New Left
Once a guerrilla movement, the FMLN has swapped revolutionary rhetoric for pragmatic politics.
By Jacob Wheeler December 10, 2008

SAN SALVADOR—Red banners, olive fatigues and Soviet-style marching music filled Parque Cuscatlán on Oct. 12, as hundreds of loyal members of El Salvador’s Faribundo Marti National Liberation (FMLN) party celebrated in the nation’s capital.
They were there on what would have been the 78th birthday of Jorge Schafik Handal, one of their movement’s founding fathers and the 2004 FMLN presidential candidate, who died two years ago.
Speakers drew applause upon mentioning the names of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, Bolivian President Evo Morales and late Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara. Teenage children of former rebels performed a play about the dangers of forgetting the massacres that the Salvadoran military perpetrated during the country’s bloody, 12-year civil war, which ended in 1992. A speech by Schafik Handal’s wife, Tanya, brought tears of nostalgia to many in the crowd. She concluded by placing a red rose at the base of the park’s Memory and Truth wall, which is inscribed with the names of roughly 35,000 civilians killed during the war.
Perhaps the showstopper was Alberto Lima, 14, who took the stage and, in a squeaky adolescent voice, threatened the demise of capitalists everywhere. He later picked a stick off the ground and cradled it like a machine gun.
Based on these scenes, one could be forgiven for thinking that Latin America’s Cold War-era conflicts were about to rage again. But a curious change is blowing through the FMLN party, dusting off the old guard or, perhaps, sweeping them into the dustbin of history.
A pragmatic approach
El Salvador will hold parliamentary elections in January and presidential elections in March, and el frente (or “the front”) — as the FMLN party is commonly called here — is poised to win the presidency for the first time since five rebel groups founded the party in 1980.
FMLN presidential candidate, Mauricio Funes, 49, only recently joined the party. He is well known in El Salvador as a political journalist and television host. Funes’ long-running morning show was one of the few national programs that consistently criticized the right-wing government of the Nationalist Republican Alliance party (ARENA), which has held power in El Salvador since 1988.
Key military players formed ARENA during the civil war, led by Maj. Roberto D’Aubuisson, a death-squad leader accused of masterminding the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero in 1980.
As of mid-October, Rodrigo Avila, ARENA’s presidential candidate and the director of the National Civilian Police, trailed Funes by 15 percentage points, according to a national poll by the San Salvador-based University of Central America.
Unlike the FMLN’s old guard and Schafik Handal, who lost the 2004 election in a landslide to current president, Antonio Saca, Funes doesn’t preach the rhetoric of communist revolution.
At official events in the capital, Funes wears a suit and tie. On the campaign trail, he typically sports a white guayabera shirt — instead of clothing with the red banner and white star that adorns the FMLN flag, as previous party candidates have done.
Funes’ rhetoric and policies are far more social democratic than socialist. He often emphasizes his friendships with left-of-center heads of state, such as Brazil’s Luiz Inácio Lula de Silva, Argentina’s Cristina Kirchner and Spain’s José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. He has made several trips to the United States to meet with Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemispheric Affairs Thomas Shannon, Rep. James McGovern (D-Mass.), and others.
Most importantly for his image as a pragmatist, Funes never fought in the civil war.
Neoliberal catastrophe
If el frente wins the presidency in March, it will inherit a desperate country.
In the 20 years of ARENA rule, El Salvador has suffered from neoliberal economic reforms that privatized social services and destroyed jobs, primarily in the agriculture sector. Paul D. Almeida, a professor of business at Georgetown University, writes in his 2006 book, Waves of Protest: Popular Struggle in El Salvador, 1925-2005, that the post-war generation of Salvadoran dissidents has fought not for land or to overthrow the government, but to oppose the privatization of key human needs like healthcare, education and water access. In return for the hundreds of millions of dollars the United States sent to the Salvadoran government during the war, Washington insisted on planting the seeds to liberalize the post-war economy.
The repression has continued. In July 2007, the Salvadoran police arrested 14 rural activists in the town of Suchitoto, who were protesting water privatization. They were tried under the government’s “Special Law Against Acts of Terrorism,” which was modeled after the U.S. Patriot Act.
Julia Evelyn Martinez, a progressive economist at the University of Central America, says that the privatization of social services, El Salvador’s adoption of the U.S. dollar in 2001, and free-trade agreements — such as the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) — have placed the country at the mercy of foreign corporations and made it too dependent on imports.
Remittances from Salvadorans living in the United States — which represent an astounding 20 percent of the country’s gross domestic product — are keeping the economy afloat, and as many as one-third of all Salvadorans live abroad.
Meanwhile, food and fuel prices have skyrocketed in El Salvador. A can of beans that cost 30 cents a couple years ago now sells for over $1. Gasoline prices topped $5 a gallon in mid-October. Those staple products cost more in El Salvador than they do in parts of the United States. An estimated 100,000 Salvadorans — approximately one out of every 60 — fell below the poverty line between September 2007 and June 2008, according to the World Food Program.
Martinez says the first thing the new government must do is to tear down all the neoliberal policies that were implemented in El Salvador since 1989. She suggests the new president and parliament put their focus on developing markets within the country: “That would stimulate businesses to produce for internal markets, and not just for certain groups of the population,” Martinez says. “Instead, all the opportunities for development are directed outside of the country, in the form of remittances, maquiladoras [that export cheap clothing] or the need for foreign investments.”
The U.N. Development Program reported recently that 62.4 percent of Salvadoran youth are underemployed — lacking work sufficient to sustain a dignified life — compared to half of the general population.
The lack of sustainable markets within El Salvador leaves many youth with two options: Scrounge up $9,000 — reportedly the going rate for a coyote to traffic a person into the United States — or join a gang.
Modern capitalism or road to socialism?
The incumbent ARENA party has filled the airwaves, the daily newspapers and the sympathetic ears within the Bush administration with rhetoric that an FMLN presidential victory would be akin to a communist takeover of El Salvador — or worse.
On Sept. 18, at the American Enterprise Institute — a conservative think tank in D.C. — Salvadoran Minister of Foreign Affairs Marisol Argueta appealed to the U.S. government to not let “dangerous populists” win the upcoming election.
El Salvador’s two nationally distributed newspapers, El Diario de Hoy and La Prensa Grafica, have run almost daily reports trying to link the FMLN to Chávez’s Venezuelan oil money, the Colombian FARC rebels’ arms- and drug-running activities, Cuban dictator Fidel Castro’s worldview, or Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s suppression of democracy.
ARENA’s Saca has all but called Funes a puppet of the FMLN, telling CNN’s Spanish-language network in February, “If it flies like a duck, swims like a duck and eats like a duck, it’s a duck … The FMLN is a communist party. Its ideas haven’t changed.”
A foreign nongovernmental organization worker told In These Times that a frightened, elderly peasant woman had recently asked her if it was true that if el frente won, the elderly would be “turned into soap.”
But is today’s FMLN truly a Cold War-era throwback? Would it overturn capitalism, kick out foreign corporations, cancel free-trade deals and expropriate land?
Hardly, says economist Martinez.
“If you read their government plan, you’ll see that it’s a plan to modernize capitalism in El Salvador,” she says. “It’s an economic plan with better opportunities to distribute wealth and social services among the population, and [it] insists on combating poverty and guaranteeing food security for sectors that have traditionally been excluded from the political process. … What we’re seeing is a return to pragmatism.”
The 96-page FMLN plan features a smiling young woman in a white dress on its cover. She is about to breastfeed her healthy baby. Behind her is the blue and white Salvadoran flag. The red text on the cover, above the party logo, reads: “Nace la Esperanza, Viene el Cambio” (“The Hope is Born, the Change Arrives”).
In it, el frente proposes to stimulate the economy on local levels, such as by offering micro-loans and credit and investments for small- and medium-sized businesses, though it stops short of explaining which corporations or members of the land-owning elite will pay more taxes to foot the bill.
Included in the manual are a two-page letter from Funes and a one-page letter from vice presidential candidate Salvador Sánchez Cerén, a member of the party’s old guard. Herein lies doubt as to whether the party has modernized, after all.
Cerén, 65, was known as Comandante Leonel González during the war, and took the party’s reins after Handal died. He was a founding father of the Popular Liberation Front, one of five opposition groups that merged to form the FMLN in 1980.
To former FMLN member Julio Hernandez, Cerén is proof that the party is still living in the past.
“This is a rare combination in which you have Funes, a fresh, modern figure, but [the influence on the party of] Hugo Chávez is very visible, especially his money,” Hernandez says. “The FMLN [must] open up the party, but they’re not doing so.”
Hernandez served in the guerrilla and reached the party’s upper echelons in 1992. He says he felt confident that el frente was growing more moderate — even as some of the rebels’ heroes, such as Joaquin Villalobos, refused to participate in the post-war FMLN. Hernandez resigned in 2005 after the old guard insisted on running Schafik Handal as its candidate — instead of a more pragmatic choice, like Funes. FMLN was subsequently trounced by ARENA.
Hernandez has since formed a new, left-of-center political party called the Revolutionary Democratic Front. He applauds FMLN’s decision to run Funes this time around, but he says the party is feeding the Salvadoran people a mixed message.
“The FMLN … gives Funes the title of presidential candidate, but that’s it,” Hernandez says. “All of the [congressional] candidates are from the hard line, the linea dura. The candidate frequently says one thing, but the party base says another. These aren’t mistakes, but ways to show Funes who’s in charge.”
Change, poco a poco
The ubiquitous photos of Guevara, and of Schafik Handal palling around with the three maestros of Latin American socialism — Castro, Chávez and Morales — still adorn the lobby of the FMLN’s unpretentious headquarters in San Salvador. The ceiling fan clanks more than it whirs, and the coffee inside the dispenser has long since gone cold. The little money el frente does have for the campaign is certainly not spent on office amenities.
When Sigfrido Reyes enters the room dressed in a partly unbuttoned, checkered shirt, it isn’t immediately obvious that he is the party’s chief of communications and one of its most influential members.
Called Joaquin during the war, Reyes, 48, has since earned a master’s degree in economic policy at Columbia University in New York. He attended the Democratic National Convention in Denver in August and met with President-elect Obama’s foreign policy advisers to help forge a relationship between the FMLN and Democrats.
“All political movements, all social bodies, change,” Reyes says. “For us, change isn’t bad. It’s a natural state of adapting. We don’t believe that the FMLN is a party that represents just the left in this society, but that it’s obligated to represent other sectors. We don’t just represent the workers, but also the national businesses that take the risk of investing in our country.” The FMLN, he says, is not “a monolithic body.”
CAFTA is an example of a topic that some FMLN officials have condemned outright on the campaign trail, yet Funes says he wouldn’t withdraw from the trade agreement as president.
Reyes concedes that, “El Salvador was told that CAFTA would create thousands of businesses, that it would create an inundation of foreign investment, a transfer of technology, and that the institutions of justice and labor would work better,” he says. “The reality is that hasn’t happened.”
Hato Hasbun, one of Funes’ closest personal advisers and his onetime sociology professor, refuses to suggest that the FMLN party would make any radical changes upon winning power.
“We need to respect the international agreements that have been signed,” Hasburn says, “but nothing is written in stone, and we’re not going to ideologize the discussion. We’ll make decisions based on the current reality. We want to be a responsible government, not a reactionary one.”
Unlike the late Schafik Handal and other hardliners within el frente, Funes enjoys some support within the Salvadoran business community. This support includes a wealthy fraternity of supporters with no ties to the FMLN, many of whom call themselves “amigos de Mauricio.”
“One interesting thing about Funes is that there are clearly business sectors that are willing to live with him,” says Geoff Thale of the Washington Office on Latin America, a coalition that promotes human rights, democracy, and social and economic justice in the region. “Though they may not be enthusiastic, they’re unhappy with the last 20 years of ARENA rule.”
Thale says he didn’t realize how much things had changed since the war until he recently ran into a former guerrilla commander, whom he knew, at a hotel in San Salvador. When asked what he was up to, the former commander replied that he was off to a business meeting at the chamber of commerce.
Appealing to the base
Where critics see mixed messages between Funes and the party’s hardliners, Martinez sees merely a difference in political approach.
“El frente is a social democratic party now, but a party that claims it’s developing toward a socialist revolution. They’re doing that for their base … people in rural areas who were combatants or families of ex-combatants. If el frente were to renounce their effort to build a socialist society, they would lose a big chunk of what they consider their solidarity vote, their voto duro.”
On a Sunday morning in mid-October, the voto duro was not hard to find. They often travel in a sea of red, singing songs and reciting poems about their fallen comandantes. Back in Parque Cuscatlán, a familiar song carried through the warm Central American air. At the opposite end of the park, a well-dressed crowd was seated under a white tent, listening to loudspeakers that crooned Frank Sinatra’s voice, and his ode to the city of world capitalism, “New York, New York.”
El Salvador remains a country living in the past and present — divided by ideological lines, between left and right, and with many of the same faces from the civil war, shouting toward anyone who will listen.
Whether Mauricio Funes will bridge that divide — or disappear into it — remains an open question. 
This reporting was made possible by a grant from Communitas.

«La izquierda ha perdido el miedo a los empresarios y éstos a la izquierda» Entrevista a Mauricio Funes

ENTREVISTA: MAURICIO FUNES. Candidato a la presidencia de El Salvador

“La izquierda ha perdido el miedo a los empresarios

y éstos a la izquierda”

JUAN JOSÉ DALTON – San Salvador – 08/12/2008

Mauricio Funes, candidato presidencial de lo que fuera la guerrilla salvadoreña del Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN), mantuvo la semana pasada trascendentales reuniones en Ciudad de México con Carlos Slim, considerado como uno de los magnates más ricos del mundo, así como con Ricardo Salinas Pliego, un poderoso empresario del país azteca.

Al regresar a El Salvador Funes concluyó, en entrevista con EL PAÍS, que “la izquierda le ha perdido el miedo a los empresarios y éstos a la izquierda”.

Funes, un destacado periodista televisivo y ex corresponsal de la cadena CNN en El Salvador, es el favorito de todas las encuestas realizadas hasta ahora para ganar las elecciones presidenciales del próximo 15 de marzo de 2009. “Si no fuera por ello, Slim no tendría por qué reunirse con Funes”, aseveró un analista local al comentar las expectativas que se han generado por la posibilidad del primer Gobierno de izquierda en la historia de esta nación centroamericana.

El temor mutuo entre empresa privada y el FMLN no sólo se debe a causas ideológicas, sino que tiene bases sólidas: en primer lugar, porque la guerra civil (1980-1992) tuvo fuerte origen en la injusticia social y en la represión de los gobiernos dictatoriales, que eran una amalgama de militares y terratenientes; estos últimos también financiaron los Escuadrones de la Muerte de la ultraderecha. Por otra parte, la guerrilla inicial se financió a través de los secuestros y extorsiones de grandes empresarios (fueron víctimas incluso algunos extranjeros); durante la contienda algunas empresas fueron consideradas objetivos militares.

Hoy la realidad es otra. “La izquierda ha tenido una evolución en el discurso y en su plataforma programática; hay un ajuste a las necesidades de El Salvador. Necesitamos la inversión nacional y extranjera para beneficio del país. Reconocer esto implica una madurez política y una comprensión exacta de las exigencias del momento”, aseveró Funes.

“Al igual que en otros países de Latinoamérica, la izquierda salvadoreña le ha perdido el miedo a la empresa privada y la empresa privada le ha comenzado a perder el miedo a la izquierda. Es decir, la empresa privada es consciente de que puede rentabilizar sus inversiones, independientemente del signo ideológico del partido que asuma el Gobierno”, reiteró Funes, al enfatizar que eso es lo que ocurre en Brasil, Argentina o Chile.

Según el político izquierdista, tanto Slim como Salinas han visto que el programa de gobierno del FMLN no afectará sus inversiones actuales, si llega al Gobierno, e incluso podrían acometer nuevas inversiones porque “ello generaría más empleos para los salvadoreños, pero también más rentabilidad para sus empresas”.

La reunión de Funes con los magnates mexicanos contradice la campaña de sus adversarios de la derechista Alianza Republicana Nacionalista (Arena), que lleva 19 años en el poder y afirma que de ganar el FMLN “la inversión extranjera huirá de El Salvador”.

Por el momento, Funes ha tenido una estrategia constante y eficaz para ganarse a los sectores moderados. Esta reunión con Slim y Salinas fortalece la idea que los asesores políticos del FMLN desean transmitir: Funes hará un gobierno moderado. De ahí también sus múltiples giras y sus encuentros con organismos financieros internacionales, así como sus reuniones con dignatarios latinoamericanos y europeos de centroizquierda, como Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (Brasil), Michelle Bachelet (Chile), Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (Argentina), Martín Torrijos (Panamá) y José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero (España).

La Declaración Universal de los Derechos Humanos: 60 años después Una Convocatoria Imprescindible

La Declaración Universal de los Derechos Humanos: 60 años después
Una Convocatoria Imprescindible

Han pasado seis décadas desde que la Declaración Universal de los
Derechos Humanos de la Organización de Naciones Unidas subrayara que la
libertad, la justicia y la paz tienen como base el reconocimiento de la
dignidad y de los derechos iguales e inalienables de todos los miembros
de la familia humana. Sin embargo, el mundo está en emergencia.

La lógica depredadora, excluyente, explotadora, racista y patriarcal del
capitalismo es incompatible con la afirmación y la reproducción de la
vida plena y la satisfacción de las necesidades humanas. Las
pretensiones de dominación, las guerras de conquista por el control de
los recursos naturales, la agresión contra la naturaleza y la
persistencia de un orden económico internacional profundamente injusto
ha colocado al planeta al borde de una catástrofe irreversible.

Los patrones de producción y consumo irracionales e insostenibles del
capitalismo, agravados hoy por la crisis, privilegian a unos pocos al
precio de la pobreza, el hambre, el analfabetismo y la desesperanza de
miles de millones de personas.

La militarización y la llamada guerra global contra el terrorismo han
conducido a las más flagrantes violaciones de los derechos humanos, del
derecho internacional y del derecho internacional humanitario. Las
guerras son responsabilidad de los estados y son practicadas tanto por
sus ejércitos regulares como por mercenarios que realizan la mayor parte
de las actividades ilícitas para evadir las sanciones jurídicas o
sociales. Se crean así zonas de vacío jurídico donde no se reconocen
derechos a los considerados sospechosos, ni culpabilidad de los
represores, que gozan de total impunidad.

Frente a esta realidad, los intelectuales, artistas, periodistas,
líderes sindicales, parlamentarios, religiosos y luchadores sociales,
reunidos en La Habana, en el Taller Internacional “LA DECLARACIÓN
UNIVERSAL DE LOS DERECHOS HUMANOS: 60 AÑOS DESPUÉS”, reafirmamos nuestro
compromiso con la lucha por conquistar y ampliar los derechos para todos
y todas y con el fortalecimiento de una cooperación internacional
genuina en la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas, en el Consejo de
Derechos Humanos y en todas las otras instancias que consideremos
apropiadas.

Ratificamos la interdependencia, indivisibilidad, universalidad,
objetividad y no selectividad de todos los derechos humanos de los
pueblos y de las personas. Defendemos por igual los derechos civiles,
culturales, económicos, políticos, sociales y sexuales; el derecho a la
soberanía, a la libre determinación de los pueblos, a la paz, a la
justicia, a un ambiente sano, a un orden internacional democrático y
justo, y a la solidaridad internacional.

Condenamos las guerras de agresión, la existencia de armas de
destrucción masiva, la ocupación militar de países y territorios, y el
colonialismo en pleno siglo XXI; la exclusión y criminalización de los
pueblos originarios, las prácticas de tortura, las desapariciones
forzadas, las ejecuciones extrajudiciales, el encarcelamiento y el
asesinato de luchadores sociales y políticos, y otras violaciones que se
han cometido y cometen en varias partes del mundo, y rechazamos toda
forma de impunidad para sus responsables.

Reafirmamos el derecho de todos y todas al acceso sin discriminación a
la salud, al empleo digno, la educación, la vivienda, la alimentación
sana, la tierra, el agua y otros bienes esenciales.

Ratificamos los derechos de la naturaleza y de los territorios de los
pueblos ante la embestida de empresas transnacionales saqueadoras y
denunciamos la acción de agencias de contrainsurgencia encubiertas, como
la USAID y la NED.

Demandamos la auditoría y anulación de las deudas ilegítimas, ya pagadas
varias veces con la sangre y el sudor de los pueblos, y destinar esos
recursos a saldar la enorme deuda social y ecológica contraída con las
mayorías excluidas.

Exigimos que se juzgue a George W. Bush, a sus cómplices y a todo lo que
representan por crímenes de lesa humanidad en los tribunales
internacionales y populares.

Reclamamos el cierre inmediato de la Escuela de las Américas, de los
centros de detención clandestinos y del campo de concentración y
torturas que Estados Unidos mantiene en la base naval que ocupa en el
territorio cubano de Guantánamo y que se reconozca la soberanía del
pueblo de Cuba sobre esa porción de su suelo.

Junto con la exigencia de libertad para todos los activistas sociales
presos por mandato del capital, demandamos la inmediata liberación de
los cinco luchadores cubanos contra el terrorismo, que han cumplido ya
más de una década de injusto y cruel encierro en cárceles
norteamericanas, y de los tres portorriqueños presos por defender la
independencia de su país.

Reivindicamos nuestro derecho al acceso y a la producción de la
información, así como a un flujo informativo verdaderamente democrático,
responsable y objetivo frente al control monopólico de la industria de
comunicación. El acceso a la verdad constituye un derecho irrenunciable.

En el 50 Aniversario de la Revolución Cubana, nos sumamos al
reconocimiento por los esfuerzos y la lucha de este pueblo que construye
una vida digna, bajo la agresión y la hostilidad permanentes. Exigimos
el levantamiento del criminal bloqueo económico, comercial y financiero
del gobierno de Estados Unidos contra Cuba. Manifestamos nuestra
admiración por la obra de solidaridad de cubanos y cubanas con millones
de seres humanos de todo el planeta.

Ratificamos nuestra solidaridad con los pueblos y gobiernos empeñados en
procesos de cambio social, por la independencia, autodeterminación y una
vida más justa. Apoyamos el derecho del pueblo de Puerto Rico a su
independencia.

Trabajaremos juntos en la reconceptualización de los derechos humanos
como parte de los derechos de todas las formas de vida y nos
comprometemos con un programa de lucha que no se limite al legado de la
declaración de la ONU, sino que incorpore como sujetos de derecho a las
comunidades, a los pueblos originarios y afrodescendientes, a los
movimientos sociales y a la propia naturaleza. Luchar hoy por derechos
humanos, implica una defensa integral de la vida, de las historias,
territorios, cosmovisiones y culturas de los pueblos y de sus modos de
hacer y vivir. Implica superar el capitalismo.

Convocamos a todas las personas de buena voluntad a defender juntos un
mundo en el que prevalezcan la justicia, el humanismo, la paz, el
respeto a la dignidad, la solidaridad y la igualdad de todos los pueblos
y de todos los seres humanos en armonía con la naturaleza.

La Habana, 10 de diciembre de 2008.

ILPES en homenaje a jóvenes mártires de Ayutuxtepeque

AYUTUXTEPEQUE, 6 de diciembre de 2008 (SIEP) “La sangre que ustedes derramaron no fue en vano, aquí estamos para decirles que seguimos avanzando en nuestra lucha por la justicia…”expresó el Rev. Roberto Pineda, de la Iglesia Luterana Popular en Acto en Memoria de ocho jóvenes asesinados el 3 de diciembre de 1980.

Desde hace cinco años, los jóvenes del FMLN de la Comunidad San Francisco, de este municipio conmemoran el sacrificio de ocho jóvenes, entre estos a Jorge Castaneda, que fueron sacados de sus casas y ejecutados fríamente por efectivos de los cuerpos de seguridad, llamados escuadrones de la Muerte.

Agregó el pastor luterano que “Jorge, te decimos que luego de tu muerte hubo una larga guerra de doce años, y fuimos capaces de forjar un poderosos ejercito popular, y los jóvenes como tu, como ustedes, se fueron para las montañas de Guazapa, de Chalatenango, de Morazán, y hasta este volcán allí enfrente, se convirtió en frente guerrillero.”

“Y Jorge, con mucha alegría, con mucho orgullo, te contamos que logramos en 1992 disolver a la Guardia Nacional, a la Policía de Hacienda y a la Policía Nacional, para que ya no continuaran asesinando jóvenes, logramos un gran acuerdo nacional que modificó el sistema político, y a diferencia de 1932, esta vez no nos fusilaron…”

“Incluso, Jorge, compañeros, les cuento que desde hace once años, como FMLN, que ese fue el nombre que adoptamos, desde hace once años dirigimos este municipio, si, somos las autoridades locales, y la derecha, que tiene un partido llamado ARENA cuando pasa por tu comunidad lee un cartel que dice: territorio liberado…prohibido el ingreso de areneros…”

Concluyó el pastor agradeciendo a “los organizadores de este acto, jóvenes que no los conocieron, pero que los respetan mucho, ustedes son su ejemplo, su inspiración, incluso uno de ellos va de candidato para concejal…nuestra candidata Alcaldesa es Blanca Flor Bonilla… nunca los vamos a olvidar, porque el color de la sangre jamás se olvida, y vamos hacia la victoria en el 2009, a ganar la presidencia con un periodista honesto de nombre Mauricio Funes…vamos hacia la victoria…”