/ 4 June 2003

Hundreds held in Zimbabwe strike

Zimbabwe’s anti-government strike kept the country at a standstill for the third day on Wednesday with fewer reports of public demonstrations in the face of a massive show of force by army and police.

The strike and protests against President Mugabe are expected effectively to shut down the country all week. Opposition party officials vowed to mount more protests despite a crackdown by security forces. Police and troops have moved quickly to crush demonstrations, arresting hundreds of protesters and opposition leaders under draconian security laws.

”By the end of this week Zimbabweans will have driven a message home to Mugabe that they are fed up with the state of affairs in this country,” said Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).

He said the protests were to press Mugabe to negotiate a return to democracy. Tear gas was fired by police in the western Harare township of Warren Park as people gathered in the streets, according to the the MDC.

As part of a government crackdown on opposition-aligned businesses, state television reported that teams from the country’s security agencies have begun investigating businesses for allegedly locking out workers in support of the anti-government strike. The government will withdraw trading licenses and the work permits of foreign managers and employees of companies that stopped work during strikes and protests it has declared illegal, the television reported.

Police representative Wayne Bvudzijena told state television that at least 300 opposition officials, activists and supporters have been arrested since the mass action began on Monday.

Streets were mostly deserted in the major cities yesterday except for patrols by security forces.

The government asked the Harare high court on Tuesday to gag Tsvangirai from continuing his call for strikes and protests.

Tsvangirai’s lawyer George Bizos said it was ”an inadmissible way to gag” the opposition leaders.

Tsvangirai is on trial for treason with two senior opposition officials for allegedly plotting to assassinate Mugabe.

Meanwhile, the economic situation in Zimbabwe would eventually force a settlement to the ongoing crisis in that country, the Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS) heard in Johannesburg on Tuesday.

Brian Kagoro, chief executive of the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, told a GIBS forum on ”Problems and Prospects for Zimbabwe”, that the current round of mass action would not succeed.

He added that President Robert Mugabe could not live forever and would not be able to rule through force indefinitely.

”Compromises will have to be made, and they may not be popular at street level,” Kagoro said.

Supporters of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change have mounted a week of mass action this week, calling workers out on strike and leading street marches in protest at Mugabe’s policies.

Kagoro said the best way forward was for Mugabe to end state-sponsored violence and open political space so that Zimbabweans could debate solutions to their problems.

Kagoro said it was time to thank Mugabe for the good he had done and ask him to step down.

Institute director Nick Binedell agreed that the Mugabe era started well, with a focus on rural service delivery and education. But then the rot set in.

He blamed much of Mugabe’s accumulation of power on a failure of leadership in both Zimbabwe and abroad.

”Democracy is more complex than voting and a constitution. If there are not restraining mechanisms you may find yourself on the road to authoritarianism, to use a polite word.”

Binedell said there had been a failure of leadership not only in the ruling Zanu-PF party but also within the business community, the union movement, and broader civil society. In addition the international community, in Africa and beyond, could have done more in the last decade to reinforce democracy and bring about transformation within Zimbabwe, he said.

Binedell also criticised many whites in Zimbabwe for having remained ”Rhodesians” and for failing to become Zimbabweans.

As a result the vast chasm in outlook that existed between the white-owned, white-run economy and the aspirations of black Zimbabweans before 1980 continued after independence — and up to today.

Binedell said he and a small business delegation had visited the country about four weeks ago.

”It requires no insight to say they are facing a major structural crisis. What shocked me, however, was the rapid deterioration in the political economy. It is extraordinary to see how changed the economy is structurally,” Binedell said of his most recent visit.

He said the situation in Zimbabwe was strongly reminiscent of South Africa in 1986 with visible repression, censorship of the media and the reality on the street versus the denial that there was anything wrong in government circles.

”If the average South African understood to what extent civil rights had been eroded, South Africa in general would change its view on Zimbabwe and what we should do.” – Guardian Unlimited Â