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On Zimbabwe, Western left follows agenda set by capitalist elite

brian | 17.06.2008 03:01 | Social Struggles | World

AS shown by commentators on Indymedia!

On Zimbabwe, Western left follows agenda set by capitalist elite
Filed under: Imperialism, NGOs, Non-Violent Direct Action, Ruling class, Zimbabwe — gowans @ 10:47 pm

By Stephen Gowans

While the Western media loudly demonizes the government of Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe, it is fairly silent on the repressions of the US client regime of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt.

Outdoing each other in the quest for the William Randolph Hearst prize for excellence in yellow journalism, Western newspapers slam Mugabe as the “Monster” and “Hitler of Africa .” At the same time, civil society hagiographers compromise with imperialist forces to help oust the “dictator” in Harare, but on Egypt, have little to say.

Meanwhile, wave after wave of strikes rock Egypt, sparked by rising food prices, inadequate incomes, political repression, and the government’s gutting of the social safety net.

Virtually absent in a country which receives $1.3 billion in US military aid every year are democracy promotion NGOs helping to organize a people’s revolution. Indeed, it might be hypothesized that the amount of democracy promotion funding a country receives is inversely proportional to the amount of US military aid it receives.

Egypt is not even a limited democracy. It is a de facto dictatorship. You might, then, expect to find Stephen Zunes’ International Center for Nonviolent Conflict training nonviolent democracy activists to overthrow the Mubarak regime. You might expect the Voice of America to be broadcasting “independent” news and opinion into Egypt, urging Egyptians to declare” enough is enough!” Predictably, this isn’t happening.

A year and a half ago, Hosni Mubarak – seen in Egypt as “Washington’s lackey” (1) — reversed the country’s social security gains of the 50s and 60s. The changes, he said, would “not only aim to rid Egypt of socialist principles launched in the 60s, but also seek a more favorable atmosphere for foreign investment” (2) – the same goal the opposition seeks in Zimbabwe.

Elections held last June to select members of the upper house of Parliament were described by election monitors “as manipulated to ensure that the governing party won a majority of seats.” (3)

Still, in the West, few have heard of vote-rigging in Egypt. Most, however, are familiar with vote-rigging allegations against Mugabe. Few too know that in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood, “the only opposition group with a broad network and a core constituency,” is banned. (4) At the same time, Zimbabwe’s opposition MDC has never been banned, despite its conspicuous connections to foreign governments that have adopted regime change as their official policy.

The Brotherhood’s “popularity is based on a reputation for not being corrupt and extensive solidarity work in clinics, nurseries and after-school tutoring.” Its volunteers “fill the gaps left by a state system that has seen illiteracy rise and services fail as liberal economic reforms enrich businesses close to the regime.’ (5) Zimbabwe’s opposition, by comparison, seeks to privatize, slash government spending and give the country’s prized farm land back to European settlers and their descendants to restore the confidence of foreign investors.

In recent years, “Egyptian officials have stepped up repression as a means to blunt the rising popularity of the Muslim Brotherhood, locking up its leaders without charge. There is also talk of amending the constitution for president, but in such a way as to prohibit any independent candidate aligned with the Brotherhood.” (6)

As in Zimbabwe, a vast majority live in deep poverty, but unlike in Zimbabwe, “Egyptian authorities have cancelled elections, prohibited the creation of new parties and locked up political opponents.” (7)

Last June, “President Bush lavished praise on President Hosni Mubarak…while publicly avoiding mention of the government’s actions in jailing or exiling opposition leaders and its severe restrictions on opposition political activities.” ( 8) Bush’s silence contrasts sharply with his accusations against President Mugabe, who hasn’t jailed or exiled opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai or banned his party.

So, how is it that a regime that “arrests political opposition figures, beats street demonstrators, locks up bloggers, and blocks creation of new political parties” (9) gets so little attention in the West, while Zimbabwe gets so much?

And why is there a liberal-progressive-left affinity with opposition forces in Zimbabwe, when those forces are funded by a billionaire financier, capitalist foundations and Western governments, while if there’s any solidarity movement with the people of Egypt, it is virtually invisible?

The answer, I would suggest, lies in the failure of the greater part of the Western left to understand how corporate officers, corporate lawyers, and investment bankers set the agenda through their ownership of the media, domination of government, and control of high-profile foundations and think tanks.

Mubarak’s pro-investment policies and repression of the Arab street serve
the bottom-line interests of the US corporate class. Accordingly, the media and foundation agenda steers clear. What foundation grants are distributed, are handed out to groups that eschew confrontation, and seek to work within the system, rather than against it, to change it.
etc
 http://gowans.wordpress.com/2008/04/07/on-zimbabwe-western-left-follows-agenda-set-by-capitalist-elite/

brian

Comments

Display the following 30 comments

  1. elephant in the room — kw
  2. Answer please — Simon
  3. Thanks KW — brian
  4. Brian, you are a hopeless moronic, apologist for barbarity and repression — Mark
  5. Mark — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  6. Africa liberate Zimbabwe — Mark
  7. Not brian — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  8. Talking about Rocks...... — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  9. Emancipate yourself from mental ineptitude — Mark
  10. Acolytes? — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  11. 'Women Of Zimbabwe Arise' detained by State police — Mark
  12. The blame game — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  13. ZanuPF socialism = state bureaucracy, military power-share + crony capitalism — Mark
  14. Mark 2 — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  15. Emancipate Yourself from Mental Ineptitude 2 — Mark
  16. You're so clever. — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  17. Emancipate Yourself from Mental Ineptitude2 — Mark
  18. Hard to take it seriously now — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  19. Mubarak — Jason
  20. Muburak — Jason
  21. you do the left a disservice — Mark
  22. Emancipate yrself from mental Ineptitude3 — Mark
  23. Thanks for proving my view, Mark — brian
  24. Why is the US breaking its own laws? — brian
  25. Mascara and cogent argument — Emancipate yourself from mental slavery
  26. Read, free yrself of dogma and you might learn something — Mark
  27. Brian & Emancipate - you've made a laughing stock out of yrselves - for all 2c! — Mark
  28. NEWSFLASH, Mark, Zimbabwe was asked to send troops to Congo — brian
  29. Wake-Up Brian — Mark
  30. Mugabe — 2%Human