How liberators turn into oppressors - a study of southern African states
Henning Melber | 12 April, 2016 12:14

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace. Mugabe has been in
power since 1980.

Since coming to political power, the anticolonial movements of Angola,
Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa have remained in control of
the former settler colonies’ societies.
At best their track record of running the countries they helped liberate is
mixed. From the “oiligarchy” in Angola under José Eduardo dos Santos and
his family clan and the autocratic “Zanufication” under Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe to the presidential successions in Mozambique,
Namibia and South Africa, all movements embarked on what could be termed
“state capture”.
This is true of all five: the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola
(MPLA) , the Mozambique Liberation Front
(Frelimo) , the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU PF), Namibia’s South
West Africa People’s Organisation (SWAPO) and the African National Congress
(ANC) in South Africa.
During the years of organised resistance, activists in the liberation
movements often internalised a “we-they” divide that categorised people as
comrades or enemies. This was true in exile politics and armed struggle, as
well as militant internal underground mobilisation.
The repressive regimes the liberation movements opposed were based on human
rights violations as an integral component of minority rule. To have a
chance of success against them, the struggle mainly operated along the
lines of command and obedience. Operating in exile or for a banned
organisation at home left no room for complacency. Suspicion was required
for survival. It is normal for resistance movements to adopt rough survival
strategies and techniques while fighting an oppressive regime.
Unfortunately that culture takes root and is permanently nurtured. Such
confrontational mentality has become entrenched in an authoritarian
political culture that is based on the claim that liberators have an
entitlement to rule within a new elite project. This has happened much to
the frustration of those who believed that the struggle against settler
colonialism was also a struggle against a range of other things. These
include economic exploitation, redistribution of wealth, plural democracy
and respect for human dignity, rights and civil liberties.
This happened in societies in transition almost everywhere. Those who
sacrificed during the resistance felt in many cases entitled to new
privileges as a kind of compensation and reward. As a new elite, they also
often mimicked the lifestyles of those they replaced. Mugabe’s cultivation
of Oxford English is as much a case in point as the new Indian elite
culture analysed by Ashis Nandy in “The Intimate Enemy” .
There is also nothing new about militant movements that are supposedly
justified in ethical and moral terms losing their legitimacy quickly when
obtaining power. Since the French Revolution, liberators have often turned
into oppressors, victims into perpetrators. New regimes often resemble
features of the old one.

Wounds old and new

Armed resistance was in different degrees part of the liberation struggles
in the southern African settler colonies. While liberation did not come
from the barrel of a gun, the military component accelerated the process
towards self-determination. In the cases of Zimbabwe, Namibia and, to a
lesser extent, South Africa, it was a contributing factor for a negotiated
transition towards majority rule.
The compromises required from all sides were part of a wider appeasement
strategy tantamount to elite pacts. Negotiated transfer of political power
did not abandon the settler colonial structures of society.
It bears repetition that the unscrupulously violent character of the
Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) regime had already revealed itself
in the early to mid-1980s. Already during the exile years internal power
struggles led to assassinations and showed the brute force inherent in
liberation struggles, even within their own ranks. This willingness to
resort to violence was seen on a massive scale after independence as it was
turned against political opponents and their support base.
A special unit killed an estimated 20,000 people through Operation
Gukurahundi , where the opposition Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU)
had most support. Atrocities bordering on genocide did not stop until ZAPU
agreed to sign a pact. ZANU basically took ZAPU over.
When the Movement for Democratic Change as a new opposition party turned
into a serious competitor, the
Chimurenga , or revolutionary struggle, became a permanent institution.
Violence was the customary response to political protest. And as political
power shifted away from Mugabe after the lost referendum in 2000 , his
regime became more violent.
Swapo’s human rights violations have also been downplayed. In the 1980s the
organisation imprisoned thousands of its members in dungeons in southern
Angola, accusing them of spying on behalf of South Africa. These people
lost their liberty and often their lives in spite of never having been
proven guilty. Indeed, they were not even brought to trial. Most did not
survive the torture. Those released are scorned even today.
While political leaders of these movements might not have practised such
acts of violence themselves, they were accomplices and knew of them.
South Africa’s trajectory is sobering too. Given the country’s vibrant
political culture pre-democracy, the prospects for democracy were more
encouraging.
But the horrific degree of violence displayed by those executing “law and
order” on behalf of the South African state in Marikana was a reminder that
Sharpeville was not past.
The 2012 Marikana massacre brought bitter memories of the apartheid-era
killings of protesters in Sharpeville. Reuters/Siphiwe Sibeko
As early as 1990, veteran underground activist and later constitutional
judge Albie Sachs expressed doubts that ANC activists were ready for
freedom. He worried about the habits they had cultivated. While the culture
and discipline of resistance may have served as a survival strategy in the
underground, these skills were not those of free citizens.
Raymond Suttner’s work, based on his view from the inside, points out that
ANC ideology and rhetoric do not distinguish between the liberation
movement and the people. The liberation movement is a prototype of a state
within the state – one that sees itself as the only legitimate source of
power.
He also explains how during the struggle there was a general suppression of
“the personal” in favour of “the collective”. Individual judgment, and
thereby autonomy, was substituted by a collective decision from the
leadership. Such a “warrior culture” included heroic acts, but also the
abuse of power.
As in many instances, women – as mothers, wives and daughters, but also as
objects for satisfying sexual desires – paid the highest price and made the
greatest sacrifices.
South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, institutionalised by
the government, also talked about human rights violations committed by the
ANC. Although the final official report containing these findings was never
published in its original form, President Nelson Mandela did not shy away
from earlier offering a public apology to the victims of the ANC’s failures
to respect basic human rights.

Beyond the ‘end of history’

As we now know, postcolonial life looks for far too many people very much
like that of the colonial era in respect to day-to-day living. One reason
for this is that socialisation and attitudes from the struggle have shaped
the new political leaders’ understanding of politics – and their idea of
how to wield power.
In office, liberation movements tend to mark “the end of history”. Their
party machineries – as sociologist Roger Southall describes it – promote
the equation that the party is the government and the government is the
state. Any political alternative that does not emerge from within will not
be acceptable.
This attitude explains the strong sense of camaraderie between the Mugabe
regime and the governments of Angola, Mozambique, Namibia and South Africa.
Typically, any political alternative will be discredited as being part of
an imperialist conspiracy that is designed to sabotage national
independence and is seeking “regime change”.
The relevant categories of thought are winners and losers. But democracy is
about something completely different: compromise, and even a search for
consensus, in pursuit of the public good. To achieve that, one does not
need mindsets in combat mode, but rather a broad political debate.
Looking at the history of the liberation struggles in southern Africa can,
therefore, also open our eyes and sharpen our sensibility, awareness and
understanding of forms of rule that show clear limitations for genuine
emancipation and liberation.
We should also critically reflect on those – within the countries and
globally – who rendered those movements support. How have they positioned
themselves vis-à-vis the new power structures? How are they practising the
notion of solidarity in the context of inequalities and injustices?
We should return to the mindsets, values, norms and expectations of those
who supported these struggles. The notion of solidarity might then live on
with a similar uncompromising meaning and practice.
“A luta continua” as a popular slogan during the struggle days would then
not translate into “the looting continues” but return to its true meaning.
If implemented accordingly, it underlines that there is no end of history
when it comes to social struggles for true emancipation, equality, liberty
and justice.

Henning Melber: Extraordinary Professor, Department of Political Sciences,
University of Pretoria

timeslive.co.za/africa/2016/04/12/How-liberators-turn-into-oppressors---a-study-of-southern-African-states
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