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08 March 2012 By Reason Wafawarova The politics of Africa have shifted from the
liberation and empowerment ethos of the black power
movement era and from that of the anti-colonialism
legacy. Today's young African political activists
largely style themselves as advocates for democracy,
elections, and good governance — with the concept of
democracy elevated through aphoristic and vatic prose
imported straight from the Western lexicon — itself
exalted as the language of enlightenment. During the 8th Ordinary Session of the African
Union (AU) Assembly, held in Addis Ababa on January
30, 2007; George Soros' Open Society Institute
prepared for the African Union something the
organisation called The African Charter on Democracy,
Elections and Governance (ACDEG). The document submitted to the AU was a modified
version of a peer document submitted to the
Organisation of American States (OAS), the
Inter-American Democratic Charter (IADC) at Lima, Peru
on September 11, 2001 — again by OSI. In a report
prepared by Edward R McMahon in May 2007, the AU 8th
Ordinary Session adopted the OSI document and the hope
then was that the document would be ratified by at
least 15 African countries before it became law. It has taken five years of campaigning and
arm-twisting of governments to get the first 15
countries to ratify George Soros' Charter (ACDEG).
First to ratify the imposed Charter was Mauritania,
the poorest country on the African continent, and that
happened on 28 July, 2008, a year after the document
had been adopted by the AU, and of course the
ratification was more out of enticement and less to do
with values. To follow suit was Melesi Zenawi's Ethiopia in
January 2009, followed by Ernest Bai Koroma's Sierra
Leone in December the same year, with Burkina Faso,
Lesotho, Rwanda and Ghana joining in 2010. Jacob Zuma's South Africa followed suit in 2011,
together with Zambia under Rupiah Banda, Guinea, Niger
and Chad. In January 2012 we saw Guinea Bissau,
Nigeria and finally Cameroon depositing their
instruments of ratification. This effectively means
the Charter can be considered to have come into force
in February 2012. Just like colonialism before it, the
Charter is expanding its tentacles from South America
to the jungles of Africa, with OSI boasting of the
progress of this project so far. Wrote Edward R McMahon: "In recent decades the OAS
has devoted considerable attention to the question of
how it can help promote democratic governance in
member states. Its policies in this regard have
evolved considerably, especially as the number of
democracies in the OAS has increased over the past
three decades. As such, it can be instructive to the
African Union, which could be said to be at an earlier
stage of a potentially similar trajectory." The assumption here is that democracy by its very
nature is extraneous to the African culture, and as
such must be imported from the enlightened
civilisations of Europe. The slow pace at which
African countries have been ratifying the OSI document
speaks volumes about the political status of the
African Union at the moment. Essentially the body simply allowed a document to
be smuggled in for adoption, without really bothering
to debate about it, let alone develop it to suit the
context of Africa, only to chicken out of ratifying
the same document. The adoption was more to avoid
disappointing the donor community than it was about
the document itself. For a year there was zero
commitment to identify with this Western initiative
brought to the table of unthinking African leaders
seen as incapable of defining democracy and developing
a road map leading to credible elections and good
governance. The Charter has the usual fawned clauses on
democracy itself, defining the concept for Africa the
Western way, and prescribing how Africa must strive to
do what the South American States are praised for
doing by the West, of course praised in the name of
the nobility of democracy. The democracy in question
here is not the rule of the people, by the people and
for the people, as defined by the founding fathers of
this nobility we all are keen to embrace. Rather it is
the rule of Soros' Charter for the Africans, by
African puppet leaders pliant to the Western cause,
for the unsuspecting African masses. So this democracy does not and cannot redistribute
the stolen farmlands in South Africa, especially when
Zuma signs the Soros document while at the same time
he committedly cracks down on Julius Malema for
advocating land reclamation without compensation.
Reclamation and compensation are of course terms in
contradiction, and must not logically be used in the
same sentence. Soros' Charter is not about Africans gaining full
control of their vast natural resources and developing
themselves into an industrialised community. Neither
is it about Africans having sovereign control of their
economies. It is a Charter about well written
newspapers, many radio stations, independent electoral
commissions, and such other paramount issues like
respect for homosexuality — issues we are told are the
cornerstones of the West's brand of exported
democracy. There is nothing in Soros' Charter about the right
to education, food, shelter, water, clothing, and land
for every African person. These are trivial rights not
very consistent with the simple lives of uncivilised
Africans, who ostensibly would rather have many
well-written newspapers than food on the table, or
more homosexuals than clean water sources for the
ever-perishing populations. There is a lot of emphasis on the rule of law
doctrine in the document. But such law must be law for
the protection of the foreign investor and powerful
corporations, together with their surrogates occupying
political offices in Africa, not exactly for the
interests of the poverty-stricken African — the kind
of property rights laws like those that protected
colonially settled farmers in Zimbabwe. It is the kind of law that criminalises
anti-imperialism resistance as hate politics or
terrorism, while legitimising Western-executed
genocides as "Responsibility to Protect
interventions," the way the murderous NATO bombings in
Libya have been heroically portrayed as "protecting
civilians". Only the West can invade a country and
protect it from itself by killing 50 000 of the
country's civilians — arrogantly demanding to be
applauded for it all. Of course OSI has leveraged so much on the doctrine
of human rights to make noble its illicit intentions
wrapped in the niceties of ACDEG. The young African
has been made to wail for rights to do with everything
on this planet except the right to decide the destiny
of his own continent. So you have young Zimbabweans
preferring to fight for the right to carry out protest
marches aimed at protesting against the new farmers
occupying land formerly occupied by colonial settlers.
How ironic! Puppetry is quite ferocious when targeted
at poor people. Now some of these corrupted young minds vilify the
indigenisation of the Zimbabwe economy, voraciously
denouncing the few indigenous people that have
ventured into controlling industry ahead of the
traditional masters from the West. These are daily
condemned as the corrupt cronies of political elites,
not pioneers of African economic empowerment. A Charter that promotes a democracy that will
perpetuate Africa's economic dependency on the West
pushes for a corrupted democracy, and those ratifying
such a Charter are simply trading birth right for aid. No amount of aid will ever create a democracy, just
like no amount of civil liberties will ever create a
democracy for a people deprived of their natural
resources and source of livelihood. The much preached
about secondary rights cannot in themselves create a
democracy, not unless such rights are enjoyed by
people in control of their own economic, social and
political destiny. The culture of democracy and peace
has to be manufactured in the African context, and
those trying to import democracy from Western capitals
are as delusional as those who believe that supremacy
is ancestral to white people, while poverty is the
same to Africans. Democratic institutions are not and cannot be a
creation of George Soros and his organisations. They
have to be initiated in Africa by Africans, not those
hired to work for Soros' organisations, but those with
a political calling to develop Africa into an economic
rival of its former colonial masters. Democratic
elections as envisaged in the Charter ratified so far
by 15 African countries are not exactly about electing
peoples' governments, but about electing governments
that are pliant to Western powers. The Charter
advocates for economic sanctions "in cases of
unconstitutional changes of government," limited in
this case to acts of armed rebels, coup plotters, and
losers who refuse to vacate office; expectedly silent
on illegal military interventions by foreign powers,
as we recently saw NATO doing in Libya. The democracy advocated by OSI is a canon that has
already become a dead hand on creativity and
initiative, relegating our people to peddling the
ideas of Western funders and other Western charlatans
brought to our continent via the noble route of
philanthropy, like George Soros himself. The Western-initiated democratisation process does
not allow African creativity, innovation, fresh
thinking, independent thought, or a critical mind. A
Zimbabwean friend and homeboy of this writer was
pushed out of an organisation styling itself as the
Media Institute of Southern Africa for daring to take
an African initiative, a personal ideological stance,
and to disagree with some of the tenets of those that
funded the organisation that employed him. He is a
Thomas Sankara addict and that is a contradiction to
the goals and objectives of MISA — a 100 percent
imperialist media charity. Those who fought and brought Zimbabwe's
independence have in their own way corrupted
democracy, just like the imperialists have done, only
differently. There has to be oxygen in any culture,
not just dust-laden stale air. Breathing is
present-continuous and not past. There is no logic
whatsoever in the reasoning that says the past cannot
be consistent with what is both new and good. A
liberation history adulterated to create entitlement
for those with past achievements is a corrupted
history, and as such its product is corrupt by
extrapolation. Those who kill initiative and creativity within the
liberation movement in order to thwart political
competition from the young generation must be reminded
that whenever canons lie too heavily across the path
of endeavour, it is always the canon that faces the
real danger of being dynamited wholesale out of the
way, sometimes to general loss. This writer has engaged both the bitter and
deprived youth denied the opportunity for creativity,
initiative, innovation and fresh thinking; and also
the overconfident and power-blinded veteran
politician, obliviously misguided by an overrated
glamour of past heroics in the revolution. There is nothing revolutionary or educative about
stale conformism to the past, but everything inimical
to celebration of the best of the past while facing
the worst of the future. Patriotism is an important
aspect of any revolution, but patriotism is not a mere
addiction to the past. The veteran politician's
eloquent restatement of the familiar but valid point
of patriotism must merit notice, just like the zeal of
the young revolutionary must be merited with respect
and support. By every means this writer is a political activist,
and as such he has suffered greatly for the revolution
he defends, many times going through the fangs and
claws of imperialism — itself a renowned force at
fighting back. It is these continuing revolutionary
battles in the belly of the beast that have helped
this writer to identify how corrupted the Zimbabwean
revolution has become. When enemies outnumber comrades
within a revolution there is need to be concerned. A revolution must not fell its own cadres. It must
not abandon its own fighters. That is the cry of the
young revolutionaries who today stand as the only hope
to save Africa from the corrupted democracy as
promoted by Western powers today, elevated to
fashionability among some of our emerging youths, but
also corrupted by our own political elites. Zimbabwe we are one and together we will overcome.
It is homeland or death! Reason Wafawarova is a political writer based in
SYDNEY, Australia |