Social engineering alive and well in Zimbabwe

via Social engineering alive and well in Zimbabwe | The Zimbabwean 27 August 2014 by Eddie Cross

Down through the ages authoritarian states have attempted to socially engineer their societies. The practise is on-going in Zimbabwe and the scars can last for centuries, writes EDDIE CROSS.

In Nazi Germany the Third Reich attempted to wipe out the Jews and other groups (Gypsies) as well as many with disabilities. Some 12 million deaths followed with unspeakable suffering and cruelty. In the 30’s Stalin tackled the continued opposition of the small independent farmers (Kulaks) who were fiercely resisting the “Sovietisation” of Russian society. He wiped them out – men, women and children.

In the Red Revolution in China up to the death of Mau Tse Tung in 1979, he attempted to eliminate the elitist elements in Chinese society – those with a western education, wealthy individuals and those perceived as being opposed to the emergence of a truly socialist Chinese society. 30 million people died in the campaign. In Cambodia in 1975, a small group of intellectuals trained in Paris sought to eliminate a similar sector of their society in the name of the Khmer Revolution and they killed 3 million people under conditions of terrible cruelty.

In Rwanda, in a frenzy of tribally motivated killings 80 000 people a day were massacred for months. Inspired by a small regional radio station, the killings were exacerbated by centuries of tribal and cultural conflict. In South Africa under apartheid, the regime attempted to divide the population along tribal and racial lines, in the process destroying family life for the majority and inflicting decades of almost indescribable suffering.

Now we are seeing the same thing happening in Iraq and Syria on the back of the long ignored genocide of Kurds in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Moments of madness

The deaths from these “moments of madness” (Robert Mugabe speaking of the Gukurahundi genocide from 1983 to 1987) have resulted in more deaths than all the wars combined in the past few centuries. They have all been deliberate, considered and popularly supported.

In Zimbabwe we have seen several large scale attempts at social engineering in support of the efforts of Zanu (PF) to entrench its grip on power at all costs. After Independence, when the only significant opposition was located in Zapu, the Gukurahundi campaign from 1983 to 1987 was mounted using all the resources of the state.

The real number of those affected will never be known but in my own opinion, based on listening to those affected and reading what little research has been done, I estimate that the number of deaths ran to many tens of thousands – perhaps as many as 80,000 people, with probably five times that number displaced and driven into exile – mainly in South Africa.

Burnt alive

The cruelty and suffering was indescribable – whole families burnt alive in their homes, armed men shooting people and throwing their bodies into mass graves and mine shafts, bayoneting women and using rape as a political tool. Mass deprivation of food and other basic essentials and services was commonplace and involved whole regions.

The obvious objective was to crush Zapu and subjugate the Ndebele people. When finally Joshua Nkomo conceded defeat and allowed his Party to be absorbed into Zanu (PF) in 1987, the campaign was halted but the affected communities have never been allowed to bury their dead or mourn their loss.

The campaign had a profound effect on the south western regions of the country and Zanu (PF) has been unable to re-establish its hegemony in these Districts since then despite its absorption of the Zapu leadership into their structures.

1,2 million displaced

In 2005, after five years of struggle with the MDC which was largely urban based, the state again used its overwhelming power to attempt mass social engineering in the urban areas. Operation Murambatsvina was mounted and in a period of three months 1,2 million urban residents were displaced and forced back into the rural areas. 300 000 homes were destroyed and over 700 000 small informal sector businesses were destroyed.

The UN called this campaign a crime against humanity but no action has been taken by anyone against the perpetrators. A study done in the Bulawayo region of the displaced families showed that nearly half the men affected by the programme died within two years, women seemed to be more resilient.

In 2000 when Zanu (PF) was almost defeated by the MDC, the party and its state functionaries conducted a detailed review of the electoral dynamics. They concluded that the population on the commercial farms – 2,2 million people and 600 000 voters, held the balance of power between the Communal Areas and the Urban Areas. Like Stalin in the 30’s they concluded that this group should be eliminated or neutralized.

The campaign began immediately and over the next five years some 6 000 farmers and their staff and their families were displaced. 8 million hectares of land was taken by force from the owners, 80 per cent of whom had bought their properties after Independence with a certificate of “no interest” from the State.

$20 billion lost

Perhaps $15 billion in assets were taken from their rightful owners – many leaving their farms with their clothes in a suitcase. The subsequent losses in terms of agricultural output I value at $20 billion over the past 14 years. But the effect was to transfer nearly 30 per cent of all seats in the House of Assembly from the control and influence of the MDC to near total control by the Zanu (PF). Even physical access to these areas is tightly controlled and monitored. No farmer can operate in these areas without the express approval of the Zanu (PF) authorities in the area. The goal was achieved, but at vast cost in both financial and human terms.

Urban gangs

In the period up to 2008, Zanu (PF) experimented with urban gangs of thugs (Chipangano) and informal sector housing. The former proved to be highly effective and when they saw the opportunity to rebuild and control the informal sector in selected urban areas they took action. As a result the markets in Mbare township and in a number of other centers have come under the control of local criminal gangs who extort funds from the operators and act as enforcers both for the rent collection activities and political allegiance.

Having suppressed the development of shack dwellings and slums in urban areas since Independence and at the same time failed to build significant numbers of new low cost houses and then in 2005 having destroyed a quarter of the available formal sector housing, they suddenly spotted the opportunity to use the demand for housing to drive the development of large informal sector housing estates that could be controlled and directed politically. In four years they settled nearly 300 000 families in shacks on land controlled by Zanu (PF) through the “Land Reform Programme”.

The Zimbabwe form of social engineering has all the characteristics of historical events of a similar nature. In addition, they have the new feature of providing tools for manipulating the democratic process and directing the outcome in targeted constituencies.

What we have to recognise is that state-driven attempts at social engineering are never in the interest of the people they target or their countries. The scars can last for centuries and can cripple affected societies, Zimbabwe is no different.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 8
  • comment-avatar

    what this article fails to comment on are the thousands who died under the so-called liberation war. Innocent villagers in Mashonaland were massacred by all protagonists who were fighting for control of the country, now called Zimbabwe. Those who claim to be innocent of genocide during the war from the early to late seventies in this country will face true justice in the future. The figures of the dead during that period should be collected for the sake of our correct understanding of genocide in Zimbabwe. Gukurahundi of Matabeland and the Midlands had a fore-runner disguised as a war of liberation.

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    Mugabe tries to rule through promoting racist thinking.the future of Zimbabwe is very bleak because of Mugabe , now the people in the west will not buy zim products for many years.

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    avenger/revenger 10 years ago

    And the west remains as naive gullible as they were in 1979

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    John Thomas 10 years ago

    It is easy to give Mugabe too much credit. These actions are not part of a well thought out plan. They do not qualify as engineering. Mugabe and ZANU react based on their essential brutish criminality and savagery. They certainly do not think of the consequences of their actions.

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    harper 10 years ago

    Eddy mentions the genocide starting in 1983 but before that many hundreds of influential people (teachers, kraal heads, store owners etc.) in rural Matabeleland had simply disappeared. A headmaster known to me was taken off a bus at a road block near Figtree and never seen again.

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    Straight Shooter 10 years ago

    There are issues Gukurahundi ZANU PF, Mugabe must explain:

    1. Who wrote the ZANU 1979 GRAND PLAN and for what purpose?

    2. Why much of ZANU PF politics since ZANU came into being appears to have been driven along Shona tribal interests, instead of national interests?

    3. The very reason for Gukurahundi should be explained? Dissidents were certainly not the reason since less than 300 are said to have surrendered after the 1987 unity deal, after which peace was restored?

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    Das Reich 10 years ago

    well explained by Eddie Cross

  • comment-avatar

    Tragic but excellent article. Will history every be written showing the truth of this barbaric and evil regime?