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15 March 2012 By Reason Wafawarova When you are an anti-imperialist and you are in the
habit of attacking imperialism's economic
libertarianism it is quite easy to find allies among
Western leftists and it could even be achievable to
end up with centre-right allies of the likes of author
AC Grayling. It is when one attacks Western capitalism as having
certainly benefited from the regime of civil
liberties, more precisely from the faηade of the
doctrine of human rights, that one starts to get fewer
and fewer allies from the West. This writer has on numerous occasions been accused
of confusing civil liberties with economic
libertarianism, often being reminded to look at China,
defined in the West as practising the later and
intolerant of the former. Often this writer has been
reminded that his own Zimbabwe lacks both economic
libertarianism and civil liberties, and that he is
"lucky" to be in Australia. At one time this writer was billed to debate South
Africa's Patrick Bond at a place in Sydney. The
invitation was unceremoniously cancelled after the
organisers came across articles authored by this
writer and attacking Western imperialism's pretexts
premised on human rights and civil liberties,
especially with such attacks citing some examples from
native Zimbabwe something that was interpreted as
tacit support for President Mugabe's alleged
"oppressive regime." It is quite easy to be applauded when one points an
accusing finger at the power of imperialist interests
for harming innocent civilians in countries militarily
ravaged by the West's illegal capitalist wars like the
one waged against the Iraqis in 2003, or the recent
murderous war on Libya. Equally it is quite attractive for Western critics
of capitalism to see a non-Westerner pointing an
accusing finger at capitalism for the harm it does to
individuals, to the environment, to developing
nations, and for causing economic disasters like the
2008 credit collapse. Slovenian born Slavoj Zizek lost a large chunk of
his Western allies after his attacks on the West's
disguises, especially those wrapped in the doctrine of
civil liberties. That was seen as a blanket "attack on
the hard-won dispensation of civil liberties and
rights that define Western societies," to quote A C
Grayling. The idea of protecting civilians from genocide is
not and cannot be derided by any sane person. It would
be fatuous for anyone to do that. However, describing
UN Resolution 1973 and its subsequent abuse in the
brutal bombardment of Libyan cities by the devilish
trio of France, Britain and the US as "protection of
civilians" is imbecilic at its best. The only thing protected by Libya's invasion was
the West's oil interest, otherwise everything else was
destroyed, the civilians and the country included. The cogitative diktats of political reason would be
incomplete if we as political writers were to fail to
criticise the fronting of aid by predatory
imperialists simply because we fear to be labelled
critics of philanthropy itself. We cannot shy away
from criticising the illegal and callous murder of
Gaddafi for fear of being labelled "undemocratic". Liberal democracies themselves may to a large
extend be premised on liberal ideas that culminate in
the human rights and civil liberties regimes, but that
alone does not mean we must pay a blind eye to the
fact that the same human rights and civil liberties
are the most used of imperialism's masks, apart from
philanthropy. Indeed the liberal ideals enshrined in civil
liberties must be allopathic to the deadly
exploitations created by economic libertarianism, and
one would from this perspective naively assume that
civil liberties and the excesses of imperialism cannot
be complimentary that they are inherently not
mixable. Imperialism has successfully portrayed its
opponents as authoritarian arrangements hostile to
variety, free speech, free Press, multiplicity,
consent, and institutionalised protections of civil
liberties. Often imperialism will seek to prop up
rebellion and obnoxiousness so as to entice
authorities in enemy states to crack down on the
sponsored rebellion. Once this happens imperialism
will stick the label of despotism and tyranny on its
nemesis and from then on we are told civil liberties
are under attack. In the Western lexicon civil liberties can stretch
to treason and armed rebellion, for as long as the
context is some anti-imperialist enemy state standing
in the way of Western expansionism. This is why
Zimbabwe was once expected to watch and escort Morgan
Tsvangirai and his supporters doing a "Final Push"
march to dislodge President Mugabe right from State
House. It was then opined that we all needed to abide
by "the rule of law," allowing protesters to march
into the State House unabated. It was all part of free speech for Tsvangirai to
declare that President Mugabe had "to go peacefully,
or we will remove you violently." Arresting him was to
the imperialist powers a violation of Tsvangirai's
civil liberties. For brooking no nonsense on these machinations
President Mugabe earned himself demeaning accolades
from the Western media and their political masters. By
extrapolation anyone who criticised Tsvangirai and his
MDC for fronting Western interests became a "Mugabe
crony," and this writer was vastly persecuted by both
the Australian media and the state smeared and
slandered, and threatened with expulsion. It is seen as a paradox of liberalism that it
allows "illiberal" critics like this writer to
flourish under its protection. "Why do you write from
Sydney, Australia if the West is so bad?" That is the
question always asked in the comments section of
almost each of this writer's pieces. We are told Western societies denote pluralistic
societies characterised by limitless freedoms,
individual autonomy, free speech and the rest of the
niceties of democracy. So good is Western democracy
that its principles grant freedom of expression to its
own underminers and opponents. The likes of this writer are widely believed to be
enjoying impunity and celebrity offered by those they
deride and scorn, right from within the safety of the
derided ones. Safety is always the word of emphasis. It is quite revealing that the safety in question
meant for this writer a stinging campaign to halt his
studies at an Australian University in 2007, and of
late efforts to have the University rescind the
qualification awarded. It is a safety that resulted in a prolonged legal
battle between this writer and Australia's immigration
department after the authorities in that part of
government bought into a slanderous and malicious "dob
in" by amateurish political activists. Four times this
writer has been detained and body searched at two of
Australia's international airports because his name is
flagged as a "person of concern" most probably
flagged by the same department that once
unsuccessfully tried to effect an eviction. Twice the detentions took several hours and
included torturous interrogation and a rather
obnoxious attitude to all responses. The common accusation is that the views this writer
expresses at the lenience and mercy of his hosts would
result in imprisonment or death in his own home
country, Zimbabwe. If this were true, then there is
not much difference because the Australian immigration
department furnished this writer with a thick copy of
the Rome Statute in January 2009, advising in red ink
that the document was to be read "with the assistance
of a lawyer" because there were "reasonable grounds"
to send this writer to The Hague for trial. The views of this writer perhaps attract
imprisonment in both liberal and illiberal regimes,
and the myth of "safety" in a Western democracy is as
flattering as telling newlyweds that they will "live
happily ever after." Yes, Western societies do not generally see
themselves as entitled to stop those who criticise
their political systems, but that does not mean the
critics of Western imperialism pass their views in
luxury. The absence of a sense of entitlement to
silence dissent does not mean there are no efforts to
silence such dissent. It is easy for Westerners to criticise their
governments for becoming less liberal and more
authoritarian in the name of anti-terror laws.
Ironically, the same critics believe that the
political elites who mask their oppressive and
intrusive tendencies as national security are better
devils abroad, arguing that their pretexting behind
human rights and civil liberties is in fact genuine
and must be universally accepted. Australia runs international affairs on a "me too"
foreign policy where it imitates the US and Britain in
almost everything related to capitalism. Its sanctions
regime on Zimbabwe is an imitation of ZDERA sanctions,
just like the partial relaxation of the same sanctions
is. The undeniable fact is that imperialism is a
monster with unquenchable appetite, and it has no
concern whatsoever with the harm it causes its
victims, especially the poor masses from the
developing world. We cannot blithely ignore this threatening reality
simply because we cannot separate our obsession for
freedoms and liberties from the tragedy of those
abusing our plight in order to pursue self-interests. It is not philanthropy that should be blamed for
Soros' misdemeanours. Attacking philanthropic
imperialists does not amount to denouncing
philanthropy itself, just like criticising civic
imperialists does not equate to attacking civil
liberties or human rights. Western propagandists love to portray the likes of
this writer and authors like Slavoj Zizek as
rejectionists of notions of rights and liberties
misleadingly claiming that attacking imperialism for
abusing the plight of those in search of civil
liberties and human rights is the same as asserting
that rights and liberties are in themselves a
conspiracy by imperialists to disguise their true
objectives. There is a huge difference between
attacking civil liberties and attacking imperialists. There is a strong belief in the West that one is
entitled to vociferously complain against the harm and
wrongs of imperialism, but criticising imperialism
itself as a concept is seen as unpragmatic, archaic
and even communist. The regardant resolve to indigenise the economy of
Zimbabwe must not be vilified as an attack on civil
liberties and or human rights. It must be seen as the
foundation for a true concept of civil liberties and
human rights especially in view of the fact that
individual autonomy is defined by economic
independence. Free speech on an empty stomach is an
insult to humanity, just like political pluralism with
no economic independence is an illusion leading to
perdition. We cannot allow politicians and political activists
to misapply the nobility of liberties and human rights
for ends that interfere with the destiny of the nation
for treacherous endeavours inspired by the enticing
temptation of donor power. Equally we cannot condone pseudo-revolutionaries
who dismiss every mentioning of human rights and civil
liberties as insidious lexicon at the service of
quisling opponent politicians pursuing regime change
agendas. Africa we are one and together we will overcome. It
is homeland or death! Reason Wafawarova is a political writer based in
SYDNEY, Australia |