Readers, here is the blog I promised you a few days back from Ian Scoones, a Professorial Fellow at IDS--amongst other things he says it is time for the UK to reengage with Zimbabwe.
By Ian Scoones
Britain’s relationship with Africa has always been a tricky
one; and this is particularly so for a former settler colony like Zimbabwe.
Robert Mugabe’s recent win in the contested election in Zimbabwe has been seen
by some as a victory for independent, sovereign Africa over the former colonial
power and its imperial ambitions. As Richard Dowden commented in a recent issue
of Prospect
Magazine, this was “the biggest
defeat for the United Kingdom’s policy in Africa in 60 years”.
In his recent speeches, Mugabe has not been able to
constrain his glee. The deep animosity that developed between Zimbabwe and Tony
Blair in particular is still a recurrent refrain. Britain has misjudged its
diplomatic relationships with Zimbabwe many times, but the most extreme
incident was Clare
Short’s ill-judged letter in 1997 arguing that Britain had no special
responsibility for the land issue, and Short’s Irish ancestry showed that she
was not on the side of the coloniser. This of course infuriated Mugabe and many
others. As nationalist leaders who fought a liberation war against Ian Smith’s
Rhodesia regime, the denial of responsibility for colonialism was outrageous.
Yet today Britain is a declining power, with decreasing
economic and political clout. Zimbabwe, as other African states, has turned to
others for support, where the baggage of colonialism and the strings of aid and
investment conditionality do not apply. Zimbabwe’s ‘Look
East’ policy focuses on China, but also Malaysia, India and others. Chinese
investments in Zimbabwe have accelerated, particularly in the period from 2000
when Western nations boycotted the country, and investment and credit lines
were curtailed, due to Western reaction to Zimbabwe’s radical land reform.
The land reform
saw a major restructuring of the agricultural sector and the wider economy. A
transfer of nearly 10 million hectares benefitted over 170,000 households,
around a million people. But at the same time it removed 4000 mostly white
farmers from their land, and considerable numbers of farm workers lost their
jobs. The consequences have been far-reaching, as we outlined in our book, and debates continue
about the pros and cons, means and ends.
The sanctions imposed by the West were aimed at punishing
the Mugabe regime, and were particularly focused on the President himself and
his immediate coterie. The withdrawal of Western capital and credit had an even
bigger impact, and helped precipitate a collapse in the economy. From 2009, and
the establishment of a unity government with the opposition, the economy
recovered to some extent, especially following the abandonment of the local
currency. This put an end to hyperinflation that had increased in some
estimates to 230 million percent, and encouraged investment again.
In the agricultural sector, tobacco
and cotton production boomed. Chinese and Indian companies in particular have
been important players. For example, the Chinese company Tian Ze has
contracting arrangements with over 250 farms, mostly in the new resettlement
areas. Smallholder farmers who gained land through the reform are now the major
producers of such cash crops, and contribute significantly to the national
economy. Chinese led outgrower arrangements provide support in terms of finance,
inputs and advice. British companies that had been important as buyers of
tobacco from the previous white commercial farmers have looked on, and are now
trying to get back into the game.
Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF, has certainly exploited the land
reform to gain political advantage. The land reform, they argue, is evidence of
the struggle for liberation having reached a final phase. Shedding commercial
links with Western companies shows in turn that sovereign countries like
Zimbabwe now have a choice, both in economic and political affairs. No longer
will they be pushed around, condescended or demeaned. Of course this rhetoric
must be taken with a very large pinch of salt, as the
political-security-business elite associated with ZANU-PF have benefitted from these
reconfigurations of land and economy, alongside considerable numbers of
ordinary people.
Indeed, the electoral
calculus of 2013 suggests that land reform beneficiaries, along with other
rural people, backed ZANU-PF, reversing the major wobble in 2008, when ZANU-PF
lost both parliamentary and presidential polls. It is impossible to know for
certain what the real results were, as there was most definitely fiddling going
on. This included bussing in voters to swing constituencies, changing
constituency lists and obstructing registration for young and urban voters, as
well as various forms of intimidation.
However many commentators believe that the results were
probably pitched in favour of ZANU-PF and the opposition MDC lost, if not by
the margin announced. Certainly the opposition offered very little in the way
of a campaign, and failed to articulate a convincing vision
for land, agriculture and rural development. Independent assessments prior
to the elections indicated a major disillusionment with the MDC, due in large
part to their mixed performance in the unity government, with a major swing to
ZANU-PF predicted.
Will Britain and other Western nations reengage with
Zimbabwe? This is not the result that they wanted, nor the one that most
expected. They had been convinced that the violence, corruption and neglect of
human rights and the rule of law that has characterised the ZANU-PF regime (in
fact for most the period since Independence in 1980) would put an end to Mugabe’s
rule. The diplomatic social milieu in Harare is of course very different to the
rural areas or the townships and squatter settlements on the urban fringe where
most voters live. It is not difficult to see why the result was so incorrectly
called.
The question arises, should the West support presidents and
parties with an electoral mandate but who are involved in clearly highly
reprehensible, possibly criminal, practices? Where does an ‘ethical’ foreign
policy fit in? And what about the role of the West in upholding international
standards and human rights? Opinion is highly divided on this topic, in Africa
and elsewhere.
This has been brought to a head by the on-going prosecution of the Kenyan
president, Uhuru Kenyatta and his vice-president, William Ruto by the
International Criminal Court. The African Union, irked by the seeming emphasis
of the ICC on African abuses and not others (Blair and Bush are of course
mentioned as those who have got away), has proposed that sitting presidents
should not be prosecuted. Others have called for
withdrawal from the ICC, arguing, like the US, that international meddling
in sovereign power is problematic and biased. Mugabe – of course – has joined
in the chorus.
The double standards of the West are of course plain to see.
Mugabe, Morsi, Museveni, or Meles? Who is/was acceptable, and who deserves to
be cast out? And on what basis? There are no clear rules, and the interests and
biases of Western foreign policy and associated commercial and political
interests quickly become exposed. Is it perhaps easier to go the Chinese route,
and proclaim a position of ‘non-interference’, based on ‘solidarity’ and
‘mutual interest’, while at the same time promoting a highly interested
commercial relationship through development cooperation?
The UK’s Secretary for State for International Development,
Justine Greening, hinted at such a shift in UK policy recently in a speech
at the London Stock Exchange. Some
observed that she sounded more like a Chinese official, acknowledging the
importance of aid relationships for UK business; a contrast to her predecessors
who only emphasised human rights, good governance and Western liberal
democratic values.
As African states become more assertive in international
affairs, buoyed by economic growth and a sense that in the post-colonial world
order they do not have to be behoven only to the West and their former colonial
masters, there is a greater level of what some have termed ‘state
agency’ – the ability to negotiate,
manoeuvre and make choices. Yet, with the West unable to dictate through
aid conditionalities, there are even greater obligations on citizens, as part
of civil society organisations, social movements, political parties and
electorates, to hold states to account.
In places like Zimbabwe this is not easy, given the
obstructive and sometimes violent and oppressive politics of the ruling party.
As the opposition rebuilds itself it has some serious thinking to do. Avoiding
getting perceived as a puppet of the West, and broadening its focus to
encompass economic and social rights and freedoms at the centre of a
redistributive agenda will be essential. Meanwhile, Britain needs to reengage,
supporting investment in the productive sectors, including agriculture and
belatedly backing the successes of the land reform, and join Zimbabwe as a
partner in economic development, alongside China and others, avoiding at all
costs the misplaced, patronising stance of the past.
Ian Scoones is a Professorial Fellow at IDS, he blogs at www.zimbabweland.wordpress.com,
and is co-author of Zimbabwe’s
Land Reform: Myths and Realities.
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