Black Londoners in solidarity with Zim
Simon | 28.06.2008 14:14
It was a complete role reversal in that those who were jamming the (radio) phones with their enthusiasm to express their views were not the anti-Zanu-PF and anti-Mugabe brigade, at least the part of the broadcast that I listened to.
Black Londoners in solidarity with Zim
Peter Mavunga (28/04/08)
Those who fought in Zimbabwe’s war of liberation taught us never to give up in the face of adversity. For when the struggle appears so tough that giving up is the only option, it is then that rallying round in unity to the cause is crucial.
The massacres at Nyadzonia and Chimoio in Mozambique, for instance, were of such a grand scale that the squeamish would have quit the struggle. The Thomas Nhari rebellion was another huge setback to the struggle, but the fighting cadres and their leaders never gave up.
They might have reached the depth of their despair. The world around them might have seemed so hostile; but their pledge to hang on in there meant they survived to see some glimmer of hope when they scored successes, however modest, in the future.
Imagine their relief when they achieved some victories against the enemy soon after such tragedies! It would have given them hope that the struggle that seemed so meaningless and futile only recently, was suddenly worthwhile.
Imagine their joy at hearing, for instance, words of support from other progressive forces. It would have lifted their spirits in a big way.
It is the lifting of the spirit of a people under attack that was ringing in my head when I was listening to Radio Gallaxy last Sunday afternoon.
Radio Gallaxy is unique in two respects. First, it is a small broadcasting service targeting Black people who live in London. Second, its name, the "de-brainwashing radio station", is probably the antidote Zimbabweans need in light of the propaganda machine that is working for regime change.
Last Sunday between 1pm and 4pm, there was a "phone-in" and the subject was Zimbabwe. As you can imagine, the phones never stopped ringing. What was surprising to me, I hasten to add, is the strength of solidarity expressed by the callers, especially Black women.
It was a complete role reversal in that those who were jamming the phones with their enthusiasm to express their views were not the anti-Zanu-PF and anti-Mugabe brigade, at least the part of the broadcast that I listened to.
I heard a woman ring to ask the presenter, Bongo Tete, what natural resources Zimbabwe had. When she was given a list, the caller then pointed out that these natural resources were the reason why Gordon Brown, on behalf of Britain, was interfering in the affairs of the country.
Another Black woman was so appalled by the prospect of seeing Zimbabwe’s gains lost through the elections of March 29.
"Since Mugabe is out of the Commonwealth, why did he bother with elections? Castro handed over to his brother; and they cannot tell Putin what to do. Yet they still go to Africa and point a finger. Why did Mugabe bother to have these elections," she asked?
It was a rhetorical question put forward for effect. And the effect was that yet another Black sister phoned to complain about the distorted image of Zimbabwe and Black people generally that is portrayed in the mainstream media while white people were presented as whiter than white.
This elicited an interjection from the co-presenter who asked: was it not Bill Clinton, former US President, who said he had not had sex "with that woman!" Was he not the one again who reported smoking drugs but not inhaling?
The message the caller was making was that "these people are liars". The problem, she said, was that we Black people tend to buy into these lies, which was a shame.
But she went on to say that Black people tended to fight among themselves but that they were generally not war mongers who went out to conquer other nations.
Then the caller asked why so many Zimbabweans had fled their country to come and live in the Diaspora? Again this question was asked, not in the way mainstream media would have asked the question, basically to show how bad and corrupt Mugabe was but rather to urge all Zimbabweans to "go home and rebuild your country — now."
"Don’t allow people who do not have the interests of Zimbabwe at heart to dominate you," she said whilst at the same time commenting that she did not even know what Tsvangirai’s policies were.
The uniqueness of the show was that most of the callers were non-Zimbabweans though not exclusively so. For instance, the only male Zimbabwean I heard on the show was scathing in his criticism of the mainstream news media which he said had taken over our issues.
Tigere was also mildly critical of President Mugabe for being too lenient with the white people in Zimbabwe. He said from independence, the president was keen on reconciliation, a policy that ensured the erstwhile privileged class continued to enjoy those privileges.
"We have relatives who died during this period, we do not even have their bones to bury them properly, yet the thrust of the policy at independence was not to redress the imbalance," he said.
The presenter, a Jamaican man who never the less sees his real home as being in Africa, went a bit further in criticising President Mugabe.
"He did not do enough to defend our people," he said in agreement with Tigere. He is the leader, he should have used troops to remove the whites from the farms by force.
But Tigere continued to explain that the war vets invaded the farms in 1999 of their own free will and not on the president’s instructions as some would like us to believe. The West in fact urged President Mugabe to send in army troops to remove them. The President had a choice to have them removed but to his credit, he supported them.
This drew a comparison of Presidents Mugabe and Museveni where, in a similar situation, the latter put his weight against the struggling people.
Tigere, in conclusion, said it would be a shame if Zimbabweans lost through elections what they gained through their revolutionary struggles.
The commentator agreed.
The next caller let it be known that her preference was to let the African come first in matters relating to African development, not puppets, she said.
Another caller referred to the President’s Independence speech from which she drew the inference that he was doing no harm to his people. How could he when he was challenging his people appropriately: "do not let the white man steal our land."
A second Black man after Tigere called to express his concern about Zimbabwe and wondered whether the southern African state belonged to the UK? He suggested that if the British are so keen on repossessing their former colonies, they should try to re-acquire Hong Kong
His point was that the British would not dare do this for fear that all hell would let loose from the Chinese. The man expressed his passion for Zimbabwe and said that the west "should leave Zimbabwe alone."
Another caller said what Black people the world over are going to do about Zimbabwe was important. As this phone-in programme showed, it was likely to be no more than "hot air" unless we were prepared to act on it.
Referring to the "Isis Papers", she said Black people usually did nothing about their situation because of their failure to critically analyse their situation.
This prompted another caller to say that she was ready to go and demonstrate, not at the Zimbabwe Embassy as do the anti-Zimbabwe brigade every week, but at Downing Street to tell the occupant to stop interfering with Zimbabwe and to stop the sanctions.
A London-based Ghanaian woman also called to say she had studied Advertising. She said this was a discipline concerned not with truth but about image. The main issue for them was to convey their message to you and their message about Zimbabwe, whether true or not, is that there should be regime change.
This is a taste of what I heard on Radio Galaxy last Sunday. The De-Brainwashing station has been providing this service to Londoners for the past 28 years. It was formed by Bongo Tete, a Jamaican man with a military background. When he left the army in 1982, he realised there was no community radio serving the Black community in London.
Having first joined a hospital community radio station in south London, he decided he could run his own community radio station. The station is funded by the people who give voluntarily.
He has been to Ghana four times and hopes one day to be in Zimbabwe. He is very keen to link up with people in Zimbabwe so that they can speak to Londoners directly through his de-brainwashing station.
Peter Mavunga (28/04/08)
Those who fought in Zimbabwe’s war of liberation taught us never to give up in the face of adversity. For when the struggle appears so tough that giving up is the only option, it is then that rallying round in unity to the cause is crucial.
The massacres at Nyadzonia and Chimoio in Mozambique, for instance, were of such a grand scale that the squeamish would have quit the struggle. The Thomas Nhari rebellion was another huge setback to the struggle, but the fighting cadres and their leaders never gave up.
They might have reached the depth of their despair. The world around them might have seemed so hostile; but their pledge to hang on in there meant they survived to see some glimmer of hope when they scored successes, however modest, in the future.
Imagine their relief when they achieved some victories against the enemy soon after such tragedies! It would have given them hope that the struggle that seemed so meaningless and futile only recently, was suddenly worthwhile.
Imagine their joy at hearing, for instance, words of support from other progressive forces. It would have lifted their spirits in a big way.
It is the lifting of the spirit of a people under attack that was ringing in my head when I was listening to Radio Gallaxy last Sunday afternoon.
Radio Gallaxy is unique in two respects. First, it is a small broadcasting service targeting Black people who live in London. Second, its name, the "de-brainwashing radio station", is probably the antidote Zimbabweans need in light of the propaganda machine that is working for regime change.
Last Sunday between 1pm and 4pm, there was a "phone-in" and the subject was Zimbabwe. As you can imagine, the phones never stopped ringing. What was surprising to me, I hasten to add, is the strength of solidarity expressed by the callers, especially Black women.
It was a complete role reversal in that those who were jamming the phones with their enthusiasm to express their views were not the anti-Zanu-PF and anti-Mugabe brigade, at least the part of the broadcast that I listened to.
I heard a woman ring to ask the presenter, Bongo Tete, what natural resources Zimbabwe had. When she was given a list, the caller then pointed out that these natural resources were the reason why Gordon Brown, on behalf of Britain, was interfering in the affairs of the country.
Another Black woman was so appalled by the prospect of seeing Zimbabwe’s gains lost through the elections of March 29.
"Since Mugabe is out of the Commonwealth, why did he bother with elections? Castro handed over to his brother; and they cannot tell Putin what to do. Yet they still go to Africa and point a finger. Why did Mugabe bother to have these elections," she asked?
It was a rhetorical question put forward for effect. And the effect was that yet another Black sister phoned to complain about the distorted image of Zimbabwe and Black people generally that is portrayed in the mainstream media while white people were presented as whiter than white.
This elicited an interjection from the co-presenter who asked: was it not Bill Clinton, former US President, who said he had not had sex "with that woman!" Was he not the one again who reported smoking drugs but not inhaling?
The message the caller was making was that "these people are liars". The problem, she said, was that we Black people tend to buy into these lies, which was a shame.
But she went on to say that Black people tended to fight among themselves but that they were generally not war mongers who went out to conquer other nations.
Then the caller asked why so many Zimbabweans had fled their country to come and live in the Diaspora? Again this question was asked, not in the way mainstream media would have asked the question, basically to show how bad and corrupt Mugabe was but rather to urge all Zimbabweans to "go home and rebuild your country — now."
"Don’t allow people who do not have the interests of Zimbabwe at heart to dominate you," she said whilst at the same time commenting that she did not even know what Tsvangirai’s policies were.
The uniqueness of the show was that most of the callers were non-Zimbabweans though not exclusively so. For instance, the only male Zimbabwean I heard on the show was scathing in his criticism of the mainstream news media which he said had taken over our issues.
Tigere was also mildly critical of President Mugabe for being too lenient with the white people in Zimbabwe. He said from independence, the president was keen on reconciliation, a policy that ensured the erstwhile privileged class continued to enjoy those privileges.
"We have relatives who died during this period, we do not even have their bones to bury them properly, yet the thrust of the policy at independence was not to redress the imbalance," he said.
The presenter, a Jamaican man who never the less sees his real home as being in Africa, went a bit further in criticising President Mugabe.
"He did not do enough to defend our people," he said in agreement with Tigere. He is the leader, he should have used troops to remove the whites from the farms by force.
But Tigere continued to explain that the war vets invaded the farms in 1999 of their own free will and not on the president’s instructions as some would like us to believe. The West in fact urged President Mugabe to send in army troops to remove them. The President had a choice to have them removed but to his credit, he supported them.
This drew a comparison of Presidents Mugabe and Museveni where, in a similar situation, the latter put his weight against the struggling people.
Tigere, in conclusion, said it would be a shame if Zimbabweans lost through elections what they gained through their revolutionary struggles.
The commentator agreed.
The next caller let it be known that her preference was to let the African come first in matters relating to African development, not puppets, she said.
Another caller referred to the President’s Independence speech from which she drew the inference that he was doing no harm to his people. How could he when he was challenging his people appropriately: "do not let the white man steal our land."
A second Black man after Tigere called to express his concern about Zimbabwe and wondered whether the southern African state belonged to the UK? He suggested that if the British are so keen on repossessing their former colonies, they should try to re-acquire Hong Kong
His point was that the British would not dare do this for fear that all hell would let loose from the Chinese. The man expressed his passion for Zimbabwe and said that the west "should leave Zimbabwe alone."
Another caller said what Black people the world over are going to do about Zimbabwe was important. As this phone-in programme showed, it was likely to be no more than "hot air" unless we were prepared to act on it.
Referring to the "Isis Papers", she said Black people usually did nothing about their situation because of their failure to critically analyse their situation.
This prompted another caller to say that she was ready to go and demonstrate, not at the Zimbabwe Embassy as do the anti-Zimbabwe brigade every week, but at Downing Street to tell the occupant to stop interfering with Zimbabwe and to stop the sanctions.
A London-based Ghanaian woman also called to say she had studied Advertising. She said this was a discipline concerned not with truth but about image. The main issue for them was to convey their message to you and their message about Zimbabwe, whether true or not, is that there should be regime change.
This is a taste of what I heard on Radio Galaxy last Sunday. The De-Brainwashing station has been providing this service to Londoners for the past 28 years. It was formed by Bongo Tete, a Jamaican man with a military background. When he left the army in 1982, he realised there was no community radio serving the Black community in London.
Having first joined a hospital community radio station in south London, he decided he could run his own community radio station. The station is funded by the people who give voluntarily.
He has been to Ghana four times and hopes one day to be in Zimbabwe. He is very keen to link up with people in Zimbabwe so that they can speak to Londoners directly through his de-brainwashing station.
Simon
Comments
Hide the following 9 comments
wtf even is that?
28.06.2008 15:25
you 'article' makes fuck all sense either way.
L&S
Pesky!
28.06.2008 15:48
Ian Smith
Worrying.
28.06.2008 15:53
"Mr Mugabe's feared security force, the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), is waging a highly-organised campaign to terrify the 4,000 MDC members living in the UK. It involves surveillance, threats against family members in Zimbabwe, menacing late-night phone calls and bogus messages saying that fundraising activities are cancelled or disrupted."
It may be, as is common with security services, that they are bombarding radio call-ins, TV chat shows, Indy sites, etc, with their own propaganda.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/mugabes-secret-war--in-britain-856068.html
Bob-a-Job
the history of black community radio is utterly wrong.
28.06.2008 17:58
Alex Pascal MBE one of the founding fathers of the Notting Hill Carnival, political activist/campaigner, also part of the team behind the birth of Britain's most popular black newspapers "The Voice". In 1974 Pascal was amongst one of the first regular Black radio voices, presenting Black Londoners on BBC Radio London. It went from a monthly slot to a weekly show of several hours.
http://www.blackinbritain.co.uk/AlexPascal.htm
wireless head
The comments above don't appear to understand the context
28.06.2008 21:23
chimp23
Homepage: http://www.325collective.com
ZANU propaganda bad - Independent propaganda good
29.06.2008 01:33
The BBC, The Independent they always tell us what's going on don't they? Oh aye.
So why was that Canadian ex Mossad guy springing Israeli citizens out of Zimbabwe for being found out "supporting the opposition" hmmn Of course its all Mugabe's fault because he's very obviously a bad man, the BBC says so - and we in the west are all good guys we just want some fruit and veg - produced in a "Market" economy
Oh aye
Classic western mucking about with other people's affairs if you ask me.
2%Human
Wot no hidden comments?
29.06.2008 13:40
Moral League For Decency
chimp23 has something there. Let me help ye recall - "Popes & doggies"
29.06.2008 15:25
Just before the 2005 election (which everyone said was rigged) Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change had had something quite the opposite of endearing to say at a supporter rally in Highfield township in Harare. He told a jubilant crowd of 25 000 on the 27th of March 2005 that he would jail the corrupt elite surrounding President Robert Mugabe. Oh well.... fighting words....."I will have the keys," said the then 52-year-old opposition leader. "I will throw them away." He meant the key to the kennel. He was talking like a mean doggie. Tsvangirai vowed then that full investigations would be carried out into acts of violence and human rights abuses and the culprits would be punished.
He next appeared in our newspapers with a cracked skull.He had a run in with a Zanu doggie.
That election was about a fortnight before Mugabe as a RC sidestepped his travel embargo to Europe and attended the funeral of the polish pontiff John Paul 2 in April 2005. The heads of state at that funeral (which looked like the best televised example of a global mafia sendoff I've ever seen) were arranged in alphabetical order according to the French name of their state and order of relations with the Vatican. Prince Charles of the UK represented United Kollectives land. You may remember he had to change the date of popular wedding because the polish pontiff had died. He sat in the french "R" row as head of state, and was thus just a bit forward of "Z". There came this wonderful moment when Ratzinger asked them all to "turn and exchange a sign of peace". This didn't mean they give each other doves it meant just a handshake between the top doggies. Prince Charles gave Mugabe a handshake. there's a photo of it here:-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,2763,1455382,00.html
The excuse from the British a day later was that Charles was surrounded by Africans and he had difficulty recognising them but is good at shaking hands. All those handshakes occured less than six months after Tsvangirai had said he would win the election.
Dictators or Autocrats are dangerous old doggies. They die that way, very few of them have managed to die gracefully out of power. Pinochet and Stroessner were hounded. So every dangerous doggie belongs to a pack of other bad doggies. That's the doggie way. Franco (the local historical doggie for my home of Catalonia - Spanish state) not only surrounded himself with mean doggies but had the foresight to divide up his power structure so it would continue. Alas for him the bad doggie Carerro Blanco was blown up and so a transition to democracy is credited to one of the doggies (the royal doggie) he had chosen for constitutional veneer. basically without waffling more -
Mugabe has no replacement doggie. It's a problem which historically occurs lots. There are loads of doggies around him, but none are capable of being top doggie, Tsvangirai has few local doggies and none of Mugabe's doggies are willing to take a slap on the snout anyday soon.
If it were any other way, I'm pretty sure by now a mad Pit Bull terrier or American Staffordshire Terrier would have done its work.
ipsiphi .:.
Hypocrissy
01.07.2008 20:53
Simon
I know a lot of people are criticising the article you have posted, but lets be fair, it does make some good points. And the west does interfere too much in African affairs, and the sanctions are extreamly unhelpful. However, I wouldn't consider Mugabe's procastonation a mild criticism! Have ever hear the saying 'you become what you oppose'. This applies to the west as much as it does Mugabe! How ironic that Mugabe has become the African Ian Smith! Zimbawe's 'Gini-index' has barely budged, however, Cuba(despite sanctions, western interference), is able to export doctors to help out third world countries! Hugo Chavez's Venuzuela(Hugo Chavez has faced western iinterfernce, even been overthrown), his policies have just started to make an impact on the gini-index! What's MugBETA'S excuse? The blame game.
Jason
Jason