By Stephen Gowans, Global Research
July 10, 2007
When
Africa scholar Mahmoud Mandani looks at the slaughter and
displacement of civilians in Darfur he notices something odd.
The mass death of civilians in Darfur has been called a
genocide, but slaughters of civilians of similar magnitude in
Iraq and on a larger scale in Congo have not.
According to the World Food Program, about 200,000 civilians
have died in Darfur, 80 percent from starvation and disease, and
20 percent from violence. Close to 700,000 have been
displaced(1). This, the US government, calls a genocide.
But 600,000 Iraqis have died since 2003 as a result of
violence related to the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq (2) and
3.7 million have either fled to neighboring countries or are
internally displaced (3).
“I read about all sorts of violence against civilians,” says
Mamdani, “and there are two places that I read about – one is
Iraq, and one is Darfur … And I’m struck by the fact that the
largest political movement against mass violence on US campuses
is on Darfur and not on Iraq.” (4)
If Darfur is modest in comparison to Iraq, both are
pipsqueeks compared to Congo. There, some four million civilians
have been slaughtered over several years, largely as a result of
intervention by US proxies, Uganda and Rwanda.
In Somalia, 460,000 civilians have been displaced by fighting
sparked by a US-backed and assisted invasion by Ethiopia (5).
That invasion was aimed at ousting the popularly-backed Islamic
Courts Union, which had brought a measure of stability to
Somalia. “In the six months the Islamic courts (governed
Somalia), less than 20 people lost their lives through violence.
Now, that many die in 10 minutes,” observes Hussein Adow, a
Mogadishu businessman (6).
Why is there is a Save Darfur Campaign, but no Save Congo
Campaign and no Save Somalia Campaign?
Mamdani says that people in the West don’t react to the mass
slaughter of civilians but to the labels their governments and
media attach to them.
“Genocide is being instrumentalized by … the United States,”
he explains. “It is being instrumentalized in a way that mass
slaughters which implicate its adversaries are being named as
genocide and those which implicate its friends or its proxies
are not being named as genocide.”
Mandani calls this “the politics of naming.”
The politics of naming isn’t limited to the question of which
slaughters are named genocide and which aren’t. It applies too
to the question of which regimes are called dictatorial,
repressive and brutal (and so must be changed), and which are
not (and so should be left in peace.)
Take the case of Ethiopia and Zimbabwe. Tons of printer’s ink
have been consumed by Western newspapers denouncing Zimbabwe’s
president, Robert Mugabe. According to the Western narrative, he
is as a dictator who steals elections, represses the opposition
and cracks heads to stay in power.
But Mugabe’s government, in view of concerted efforts from
outside and within to overthrow it, is remarkably restrained.
Archbishop Pious Ncube, one of the government’s most vociferous
critics, recently called on Zimbabwe’s former colonial master,
Britain, to remove Mugabe through military means. “We should do
it ourselves,” he added, “but there’s too much fear. I’m ready
to lead the people, guns blazing, but the people are not ready.”
(7) (Imagine Noam Chomsky calling for a coalition of Russia,
China, Venezuela, Iran and north Korea to invade the US to force
Washington to end its occupation of Iraq. “I’m ready to lead the
people, guns blazing,” he might say, “but the people are not
ready.” How long would it be before Chomsky was hustled off to
jail?)
Ncube isn’t the first government opponent to threaten a
campaign of violence to oust Mugabe. And yet Ncube and others
remain at liberty to call for sanctions, outside military
intervention and insurrection to depose the government.
Ethiopia, on the other hand, is a cipher. It receives little
coverage from the Western media, and even less attention from
people who routinely denounce the Sudanese and Zimbabwean
governments from the left.
That’s odd, for the Ethiopian government has all the flaws
the Zimbabwean government is said to have that arouse so much
moral indignation.
Ethiopia “jails it citizens without reason or trial, tortures
many of them, and habitually violates its own laws.
“The government was … severely criticized for a 2005
crackdown in which tens of thousands of opposition members were
jailed and nearly 200 people killed after elections in which the
opposition made major gains.
“Ethiopian officials … have expelled many foreign journalists
and representatives of human rights groups such as Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch.” (9)
Disputed elections, crackdowns on the opposition, expulsion
of journalists: this resembles the charge sheet against Mugabe.
So why isn’t Melawi as thoroughly excoriated as Mugabe is?
A July 9th Reuters’ report says, “Ethiopian prosecutors
demanded the death penalty for 38 opposition officials convicted
of trying to overthrow the government, treason and inciting
violence.
“The officials were convicted last month of charges relating
to violent protests over disputed elections in 2005 that the
opposition says were rigged.
“Nearly 200 people were killed in clashes between protestors
and security forces over the vote.
“Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said he regretted the post-poll
violence, but blamed it on opportunistic rioters and an
opposition conspiracy to topple him by force.”
I read the Reuters’ article to a friend, but replaced
Ethiopia with Zimbabwe and Zenawi with Mugabe. There seemed
nothing out of the ordinary to her. And indeed, it’s likely that
most people in the West would not have detected the deception.
It meshes with the Western narrative on Zimbabwe. If you’ve been
reading Western press accounts, you would expect Mugabe to round
up the opposition (whose leaders have long threatened the
violent overthrow of the government), charge them with treason,
and seek their execution. But hehasn’t.
Had he, a storm of indignation would have swept the Western
world. Yet Zenawi does the same, and no politician works himself
up into high moral dudgeon, no calls are made for sanctions or
Western military intervention, and no emergency meeting of the
UN Security Council is convoked. Just a solitary Reuters’
dispatch. Why?
The answer is that Ethiopia is fully within Washington’s
orbit, acting as a reliable proxy enforcing US geopolitical
interests in the resource-rich Horn of Africa. Zimbabwe, by
contrast, pursues the opposite tact, implementing policies that
seek to free itself from Western domination and to frustrate US
imperial designs on the continent.
Zimbabwe indigenizes its agriculture and economy; Ethiopia
intervenes militarily in Somalia at the behest of Washington, to
restore a US-puppet government.
Weeks before Ethiopia invaded Somalia, US General John P.
Abizaid flew to Addis Ababa to arrange for Zenawi to unleash the
US-trained Ethiopian military on Somalia. Washington even went
so far as to shelter Ethiopia, whose military relies on
equipment made in north Korea, from penalty for violating
UN-sanctions against north Korean arms sales. Ethiopia needed to
import replacement parts from north Korea if the invasion was to
go ahead without a hitch. Washington, which championed the
sanctions, said “go ahead.” (9)
Numberless people are being manipulated by Western
governments and media, their outrage harnessed to achieve
geopolitical goals that have nothing whatever to do with human
rights and democracy, and everything to do with the question of
who gets to control the oil spigot, mining concessions and vast
tracts of fertile land.
Mamdani calls those caught up in the Save Darfur Campaign
innocents. The same could be said of those caught up in the dump
Mugabe campaign.
Notes
- UN High Commissioner for Refugees’ estimate, cited in
The Guardian, June 20, 2007.
- Johns Hopkins study, published online by The Lancet,
cited in The Guardian October 12, 2006.
- UN High Commissioner for Refugees, cited in Workers
World, February 15, 2007.
- Interview with Mahmoud Mandani, Democracy Now! June 4,
2007.
- According to the UN High Commission for Refugees
(Guardian, June 20, 2007).
- Quoted in the The London Times, cited in Party for
Socialism and Liberation, July 3, 2007.
- The Sunday Times, July 1, 2007.
- The Globe and Mail, May 29, 2007.
- The New York Times, April 8, 2007.
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