Introduction
This
year the celebration of African Liberation Day of May 25 took place
with the energy of the new Pan African force that emerged in all
parts of the world that simply stated that, “Black Lives
matter.” From Bahia in Brazil to Mogadishu in Somalia and
Chibok in Nigeria to Chicago in the United States there are new forms
of political organizing to register the need to protect Black life.
These new forms of organizing have brought to the forefront new
militants for liberation and emancipation and new sites of struggles.
The old battles for liberation involved the struggles for state power
and the new push for freedom requires not just state power but also
the struggles for bread, freedom and social justice. Some liberators
of yesterday have become oppressors. Others pay lip service to the
idea of African independence while stealing billions which should be
put to work for the health and safety of the working peoples. In
principle, most of the governments in the Pan African world do not
work to free the peoples from threats to life and livelihood. At the
same time they remain silent with the rise of petty fascism as
manifest in the emergence of Donald Trump in the United States and
the forces of the National Front of France.
When
the idea of the celebration of one day to mark African liberation was
first mooted, it was in recognition of the intense
struggles for
dignity that had inspired the African ancestors. The freedom fighters
of yesterday started with the understanding that “all great
achievements and changes begin with a vision.” The vision of a
self-determination and a free Africa, that is, the aspirations
African people’s everywhere for a prosperous, integrated,
peaceful and secular Africa driven by its own citizens and
representing a dynamic force in repairing the planet earth and
securing the lives of Africans at home and abroad. This vision of
securing the lives of Africans has been co-opted by leaders who have
turned the African Union into a talking shop about how to protect the
careers of dictators as we have recently seen in the case of the
massacres in Burundi.
It
was not possible in 2016 to celebrate African Liberation Day without
remembering the committed energies of Tajudeen Abdul Raheem who
dedicated his earthly life to the cause of human freedom and African
dignity. It is now seven years since Tajudeen joined the ancestors on
May 25, 2009 and one cannot go through the minutes of the day of May
25 without remembering the major contributions made by Tajudeen Abdul
Raheem to the cause of Pan African Liberation. Tajudeen is now a
historical figure joining the ranks of the thousands of African
freedom fighters who continue to inspire us. This article is also an
effort to remember his contribution.
Origins of African Liberation Day
When
the compromise for the formation of the Organization of African Unity
had cemented itself in 1963, May 25 had been designated as Africa
Day. The idea of Africa day was to make one day a moment to celebrate
and support the struggles for dignity. This idea was first mooted at
the All African Peoples Conference that was held in Ghana in 1958.The
highlight of the total opposition to colonialism and apartheid was
the observation of African Liberation Day on May 25 of every year. At
the All African Peoples Conference in 1958, hosted by the peoples of
Ghana under the leadership of Kwame Nkrumah, it was agreed that
one-day would be set aside as a national day of remembrance for
African freedom fighters. The Conference spearheaded the start of
African Freedom Day, a day to “mark each year the onward
progress of the liberation movement, and to symbolize the
determination of the People of Africa to free themselves from foreign
domination and exploitation.”
This
celebration of freedom had begun by ex Garveyites living in the
Harlem neighbourhood of New York in the United States. These
Garveyites had carried forward a tradition of Black Internationalism
that inspired Kwame Nkrumah when he was a student in the period of
the last great capitalist depression in the United States. Up to 1994
the dynamic anti-racist momentum that propelled the spirits of Pan
Africanism were driven by the desire to end white supremacist rule in
Southern Africa. It was significant that it was in those states that
supported African liberation with moral, material and political
support that this day of May 25 was observed at the national level.
The military defeat of the South African army in the Battle of Cuito
Cuanavale leading to the formal ending of the apartheid in 1994,
combined with the Third World Conference against Racism and the
formation of the African Union were four elements in the
revitalization of the forces of African freedom. However, at the dawn
of the century many of the leaders of Africa reneged on the
principles of reparative justice just when the African descendants of
the Americas were looking to link with the victories over apartheid
to turn a corner internationally.
Liberators
have Become Reactionaries
South Africa was the society that
was at the center of the struggles for African freedom after 1948
when the minority white regime embarked on a policy of apartheid. For
many in the African liberation process the coming to power of the ANC
led government of Nelson Mandela was supposed to be a new era in the
revitalization of Africa. Twenty years later the working poor of
South Africa have been faced with increased exploitation as the ANC
government has turned its back on the principles of freedom. The book
No Easy Victories: African Liberation and American Activists
over a Half Century, 1950-2000 used biographical data to show
the different movements that had been organized for half a century to
support African freedom. 1
As
the former freedom fighters turned into crude accumulators and
embraced the forms of exploitation of the exploiters, the idea of
African Liberation day lost its resonance to the poor and exploited
in Africa. Jacob Zuma of South Africa and Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe
are two of the best examples of how the idea of liberation has been
turned against the people. Every day the people seek new ways to
register their claims for life and health and the most recent victory
of gold miners in South Africa remind Pan Africanists of the
conditions of work for millions of workers in all parts of the Pan
African world. Mine workers who suffered from silicosis or
tuberculosis brought a class action suit against the top gold
producers of South Africa. This class action suit reminded the other
African workers that there are multiple fronts of struggle for
liberation. As Tajudeen always said, one struggle, many fronts.
Tajudeen spoke out clearly about liberation and emancipation for the
oppressed and had exposed the liberators who had become
reactionaries. In one of his postcard now reproduced in the book,
Speaking Truth to Power,
Tajudeen had this to say of the former liberators
“'What
happens to revolutionaries when they get into power? … They
have stayed so long in power that they have all forgotten their
previous jobs, values and visions. From heralding "fundamental
change" they have become apostles of "no change". They
have become reactionaries, tired revolutionaries exhausting the
country they claim they have liberated. The challenge now facing
Ugandans is similar to what is facing Zimbabweans, Ethiopians,
Eritreans and other post-liberation societies: how to liberate
themselves from their liberators. 'The liberators have become
establishment reactionaries blocking future changes.'”:2
The Pan African World and the
Global Capitalist Crisis
All
around the continent there are death tendencies. Former liberators
such as Yoweri Museveni (of Uganda) has turned the army of Uganda
into an instrument of oppression and as a mercenary force in the
service of the imperial masters. After coming to power through armed
struggles in 1986, Museveni continues to hold on to power in Uganda
in the quest to build an indigenous capitalist class reaping surplus
from turning Uganda into a Petro-state. Yoweri Museveni and Pierre
Nkurunziza of Burundi are two misleaders who project themselves as
peace makers in Somalia while oppressing people in their own
societies. The Security Council of the United Nations perpetuate the
farce of the Burundi and Ugandan leaders acting as peacekeepers
because the so-called ‘war on terror’ diverts attention
from the real economic terror and insecurity facing the peoples
because of the global capitalist crisis.
Both
the Ugandan and Burundi people are reeling from the genocidal
economic relations that have spawned in the region of central Africa
for the past fifty years. The specific form of capitalism in Africa
requires force and violence on a day to day basis. This has been the
reality from the era of King Leopold and Cecil Rhodes down to the
present moment of state repression in Egypt, Ethiopia, The Democratic
Republic of the Congo and Kenya. These repressive tendencies are all
of the indices of the destructive nature of capitalism are present
before humanity. From the dawn of capitalism the forms of relations
for the majority of the African peoples were always based on the
brutal and primitive forms of accumulation. Africans did not have to
await the current financial meltdown to grasp the realities of
capitalist exploitation.
The
evidence of global capitalist crisis is disguised with rosy forecasts
about ‘global recovery’ but the impoverished of the world
are witnessing one of the greatest transfers of wealth from the poor
to the rich. This transfer to the top 1 per cent is being carried out
under the political and military leadership of the United States
where the financial wizards seek new ways to extract wealth and roll
back the limited sovereignty that had been won with political
independence. For over thirty years the oppressed in Africa had
opposed the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the devaluation of
their lives. Under the mantra of Structural Adjustment, the IMF and
World Bank bullied countries to attract ‘foreign investors’
by weakening their labor laws and supressing the organization of
workers and small farmers. 3
Together with local comprador elements the IMF worked with the states
to eliminate collective bargaining laws and suppress wages. The IMF's
mantra of "labor flexibility" empowered corporations to
fire workers at whim and move where wages are cheapest. While
weakening the organized workers the IMF collaborated with governments
to slash spending on social services such as health, education and
environmental clean-up. User fees at public clinics and hospitals
made healthcare unaffordable to those who need it most, especially in
the period of bio- economic warfare. As capitalist relations of
plunder intensified in Africa working class women have become more
exploited as government workplace regulations are rolled back and
sweatshops abuses increased. With the rollback of services urban
spaces increasing look like garbage dumps in areas where the working
peoples eke out a living.
Today
the working peoples of Greece are seeing concretely how the
international bankers use organizations like the IMF and the European
Central Bank to erode independence. Their ports, water supply
entities, shipping companies, public utilities and even islands are
now open for privatization for the people of Greece to save German
and French bankers. The operations of Wall Street now dictate that
there is a new focus on liberation from financial warfare and the
role of the bankers who have established the numerous mechanisms to
loot billions of dollars from Africa. Figures published by The
Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) point to the fact that
approximately US $1.4 trillion has left Africa in illicit financial
flows between 1980 and 2009. These figures on illicit financial flows
on monies earned from criminal activities do not cover the other
figures of the 15 ways that Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) rob
Africa of its vital surpluses. 4African
public officials have no shame when it comes to stealing from their
own people and some are now concerned that they did not steal enough
so that their names could have appeared in the Panama Papers
highlighting the names of those who have been looting the resources
of Africa.5
The task of Liberation today involves the strengthening of the ideas
of returning stolen assets to Africa.
Through
the policies of liberalization and privatization the Bretton Woods
Institution and their associated allies have been able to direct the
attention of the African youth towards ideas about the establishment
of capital markets and markets for financial securities. But because
most of Africa remain outside the debt trap of the international
financial institutions it is necessary to use brute force to seize
African assets as the NATO intervention demonstrated in Libya. The
crudity of Nicholas Sarkozy who justified the destruction in Libya in
the name of saving the Euro is only surpassed by the complicity of
the African ruling elements who have refused to mount even the
minimal diplomatic offensive in the ranks of the nonaligned movement
to expose the recolonization and destruction of Libya.
Economists
such as Samir Amin and Michael Hudson have been writing about Finance
as a new form of warfare and the reality that the financial moguls of
New York, London, Frankfurt, Paris and Tokyo perpetuate the same
objective as “military conquest: to gain control over land and
basic infrastructure, and collect tribute. It is not necessary to
conquer a country or even own its land, natural resources and
infrastructure, if its economic surplus can be taken financially.
What formerly took blood and arms is now obtained by debt leverage.”
6
Because
Africans have not been completely seduced into debt leverage there
are military interventions such as in Libya, Somalia and Nigeria to
destabilize the peoples of Africa. This destabilization is carried
out under the banner of fighting terror and terrorists in Africa.
Hence, institutions such as the US African Command (AFRICOM) and the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) are now seen clearly as
obstacles to African liberation.
The
revival of racism, chauvinism, jingoism in the context of the
capitalist crisis
On
African Liberation Day 2016 the entire world is looking askance at
the rise of racism and Islamophobia inside the United States. Since
the 2008 international financial crisis the white working classes of
the USA have been seeking ways of regaining white privilege instead
of directing their focus on the bankers and financial predators who
have deepened their impoverishment. The rise in inequality has now
reached the white working class and it was into this fray that Donald
Trump entered inciting anti-immigrant, nativist and Islamophobic
animosities. Of the two mainstream political parties in the USA, the
Republican Party since 1968 prospered in disenfranchising black
people and promoting racist policies. These were most overtly spelt
out in the Southern Strategy. After the election of Obama in 2008 the
Republicans reared a new racist formation called the Tea party with
neo conservatives such as Ted Cruz emerging as Senators. Out of this
counter revolution emerged a field of 17 contenders for the candidate
of the Republican Party for the Presidency. Out of these seventeen
emerged the real estate billionaire, Donald Trump.
On
African Liberation Day Trump received enough votes to be nominated as
the official Republican candidate for the Presidency of the United
States at the upcoming convention. The career of Donald Trump has
been one of misogyny, racism and the celebration of white supremacy.
After the election of Barack Obama as the President of the United
States in 2008, Donald Trump fed the ideas of the Tea Party about
Obama not being an American citizen. Campaigning under the slogan,
‘Make America Great Again,’ Donald Trump is pushing
forward the impossible goal of Making America white again. The
celebration of white supremacy has now received a new lease of life
when the working class whites should be focused on the capitalist
classes who have gotten rich while expropriating millions from their
homes.
Many
in the Pan African world outside would not know the history of Donald
Trump beyond his foray as a reality TV star. This Donald Trump had
been the cheerleader in calling for the death penalty for five young
black men who had been wrongfully convicted of rape in New York City.
Donald Trump had whipped up a racial hysteria about Black rapists and
had taken out signed full-page newspaper advertisements explicitly
calling for the five teenage black boys to die for a crime they did
not commit. It took the painstaking work of Pan Africanists such as
Elomb Brath to work tirelessly to prove the innocence of these 5
youths – four African Americans and one Latino, all under age
18 –who had been framed by the New York Police Department for
the rape and brutalization of a white woman during the infamous
Central Park Jogger case in 1989. The NYPD forced confessions from
the youths amidst a racist campaign egged on by Donald Trump and the
corporate media. The men were finally exonerated in 2002, when a
convicted rapist confessed to the Central Park attack.
Elomb
Brath had been one of the foremost Pan Africanists in the New York
area and for over fifty years he had spearheaded the hosting of
African Liberation Day activities in the New York area. This
activity by Brath was part of a wider political mobilization where
the black and brown workers in the New York area had been at the
forefront of anti-imperialist work. Mention had been made earlier of
the ex Garveyites who had organized in the USA and Malcolm X had
emerged in the late fifties on the platforms of Black liberation. By
the time of the passing of Malcolm X in 1965 his work among the poor
not just blacks led the Socialist workers party to claim that Malcolm
X was a socialist. 7
The relevant point for African Liberation Day 2016 is that in the
anti-racist struggles in the USA revolutionaries such as Malcolm X
and James Boggs , Grace Boggs and others understood the vital role
of the black working peoples in the fight against capitalism. The
traditions of Malcolm X are still too strong in the New York area for
a Donald Trump to have emerged in that arena, it required the wider
base of the entire US society where the ideas of eugenics and racial
hierarchy have more prominence for Trump to merge as a leader.
Donald
Trump has gone on to take his racism national and international with
calls for the deportation of 11 million immigrant workers and for the
building of a Wall between the United States and Mexico. For two
hundred years the US society has been built on the super exploitation
of Black lives, and in the midst of this capitalist crisis the new
movement called Black Lives Matter has emerged to stand up against
the police killings and the deep racism of capitalism in the United
States.
The
Black Liberation Movement in the USA under the leadership of a new
cadre of revolutionaries in the Black Lives Matter Movement are
exposing the militarization of urban spaces in the United States that
had been covered over with talks about democracy and freedom in the
USA. Fascist ideas abound in the USA but the strategic location of
the black and brown working peoples inside the economy has weakened
the possibilities for the full-blown fascist party to emerge inside
the United States. The Occupy Wall Street Movement had delegitimized
the dominant liberal idea of the society that everyone could make it
if they only work hard. It is this latent alliance between the
Blacks and Latinos along with the alliance with the progressive
sections of the working classes, the progressive wing of the LBGT
movement, progressive sections of the women’s movement, the
peace movement and the environmental justice movement that makes it
difficult for the right wing to fully consolidate politically in the
United States.
As
in the last capitalist depression when fascism overtook Europe the
rise of racist ideas abound in Europe with parties aligned to the
same ideas of Donald Trump are receiving large support from the white
working class in Europe. The deeper the crisis the more outrageous
the positions of the right wing populism of political organs such as
that of Freedom Party of Austria, Danish Peoples Party of Denmark,
The National Front in France, United Kingdom Independence Party (in
Britain), the Party for Freedom of the Netherlands, Golden Dawn of
Greece, the National Alliance in Italy competing with the Northern
League, and the National Democratic Party of Germany.
The
European working classes have reached a crossroad where they have to
choose between supporting the racist ruling classes or fight for
their rights. African liberation Day 2016 coincided with the
occasion of mass actions by workers in France and Belgium when
hundreds of thousands took to the streets to protest austerity, mass
layoffs and war. The top three French Banks are heavily exposed in
the current financial crisis and for the past year the government had
been whipping up anti-Immigrant hysteria about terror in order to
divide black and white workers in Europe. 8
The European media used the refugee challenges presented by warfare
and destruction in East Asia as a diversion while the capitalist
classes carried out massive attacks on the rights of workers and
other basic rights such as the right to a living wage.
The
European ruling classes is especially fearful of an organized working
class force in France. For fifty years the political establishment in
France plundered Africa and France continues to mobilize the
resources of 14 African states to prop up its status as a major
power. After the NATO intervention in Libya and the interventions of
France in Mali and the Central African Republic the political rulers
in France had hoped that racism was enough to dampen the militancy of
the exploited French workers. May 2016 exposed the fact that the
State of Emergency introduced in France and Belgium shortly after the
‘terror attacks; of November 2015 were not aimed primarily at
Islamist terror networks, but on the potential mass mobilization of
workers. One of the current challenges will be for the reparative
justice movement to develop a clear alliance with the progressive
sections of the working class to blunt the rise of the National Front
while opposing French imperialism in Africa. African Liberation Day
2016 is also another occasion to bring forward the demand for France
to end colonial rule in Africa, the Caribbean and Oceania.
The Coup in Brazil and its
meaning for the African Liberation
From
Haiti to Venezuela and from Honduras to Bahia the struggles of the
African descendants demand solidarity from all parts of the Pan
African world. When the All African Peoples Conference had been
called in Accra in 1958 the question of the independence of Puerto
Rico had been high on the agenda of the Pan African movement. Today,
the peoples of Puerto Rico are calling for solidarity in the face of
the intensified oppression from the Wall Street bankers who want the
people to starve while the bond holders in New York are paid. The
peoples of Puerto Rico as well as the peoples of Martinique, Cayenne,
Guadeloupe and the 20 other colonies are calling for an end to the
outmoded concept of colonial over rule. This is a reminder to all
peoples that as long as one territory is under colonial rule all
peoples are threatened by foreign domination.
In
2016 the peoples of Haiti sought to deepen their engagement with the
African Union as one way to bring attention to the anti-haitianism in
the region, especially the successful efforts of the leaders of the
Dominican Republic in stripping citizenship from tens of thousands of
Dominicans of Haitian descent creating the largest stateless
population in the Western Hemisphere. Members of the African
communities all over the Americas are calling for solidarity in the
face of this intensified anti-black wave. While the Caribbean
community have called for this solidarity with the peoples of Haiti,
the African Union rejected the application of the peoples of Haiti to
join the African Union. The same leaders who decided to grace the
leaders of Rwanda with the hosting of the meeting of the African
Union in Kigali, Rwanda failed to openly support the Haitian peoples
in struggle. In this way the AU has entered into the murky debate as
to who is an African denying the platform that had been agreed upon
at the founding of the AU that the AU was founded to achieve greater
unity and solidarity between the African countries and the peoples of
Africa at home and abroad.
It
is in Brazil, however, where the white supremacists have come out
blazing by moving to remove the elected government of Dilma Rousseff
of the Workers Party. Brazil is the society of the Americas with the
largest African population outside of Africa. The population of
African descendants in Brazil number over 120 million out of a
population estimated at 204 million. For three hundred years the
capitalist classes practised the most perverted form of genocidal
economics which had been covered over by a concept of ‘racial
democracy.’ Afro-Brazilians have been fighting in many
different fronts for their basic rights and in this century they
began to gather international support after the Durban Conference on
Racism, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance. The Afro Brazilians had
thrown their weight behind the Workers Party of Lula in 2002 and
since that time the society embarked on minimal reforms to end the
most overt forms of racism and police killings. It is in the Americas
where the question of liberation is now linked to reparations and
reparative justice.
Despite
the massive diplomatic foray into Africa in the past twenty years by
Brazilian construction and energy corporations, the reality is that
millions of Black Brazilians live in the most wretched conditions in
the Favelas - slums. The national statistics of Brazil cannot reveal
the depth of the exploitation and state violence against black people
on a daily basis. The educational system is organized to repress
blacks with less than 4 per cent of the African Brazilians having
access to higher education. The media in Brazil is a vehicle for the
reproduction of eugenic ideas with the now famous Novelas carrying
forward images of whiteness and purity.
In
the past fourteen years the Workers Party (PT) had embarked on
limited reforms to better the conditions of the poorest Brazilians
(the black, brown and indigenous peoples). Real minimum wages rose by
70 per cent under the PT and the government sought to expand social
services with cash transfer programs such as Bolsa Familia –
(basically a social wage). The governments of Lula and Rousseff
embarked on a massive expansion of educational opportunities
including a targeted program of making higher education accessible
for Afro Brazilians. It was a real contradiction to hear of calls for
‘affirmative action’ in Brazil when what was needed was
for a complete overhaul and reconstruction of the society to serve
the needs of the majority of the peoples. Despite this contradiction,
the entrenched white capitalists were threatened by any motion
towards dismantling the legacies of the genocidal state structures of
Brazil.
The
Workers Party had come to Power in 2002 and had embarked on tinkering
with reforms while keeping the model of capital accumulation in
Brazil intact. These reforms were seen as a threat to the security
and power of the capitalist classes. The extremists of Brazil,
taking advantage of the capitalist depression in Brazil mobilized to
oust Dilma Rousseff who had been re-elected in 2014. (One of the most
telling images that was circulated on social media daring the
demonstrations against Rousseff was that of the white couple
demonstrating against the PT government while their black house
servant dressed in her uniform pushed their child in a prom behind
them). 9
The
PT government has been removed while the impeachment trials are
underway. The Brazilian coup is one of the clearest examples of the
need to mobilize for a new understanding of black alliances with
progressive sections of the organized workers in the fight against
capitalism in the 21st century. Slowly, it is becoming clear that it is only with the
massive mobilization of the Black Brazilians in alliance with the
wider working class that can roll back the neo fascist forces in
Brazil.
This
is also the case in Venezuela where the legacies of the Bolivarian
experiment are under threat from the entrenched conservative forces.
The Venezuelan social and economic crisis like the Brazilian struggle
point to the reality that capitalism in Latin America cannot be
seriously challenged without a frontal assault on white racism and
the ideas of settler colonialism that killed millions of Blacks and
Indigenous First Nation peoples.10
Educate the Youths on Past
Victories in order to mobilize for the transformation of the social
system
All
over the Pan African world the conscious Pan Africanist took the
occasion of African Liberation Day to remind the youths of the
victories of the Peoples of Africa over the Italian colonialist in
1896 at Adwa. It was significant that in the celebration of African
Liberation Day in South Africa by the progressive force the focus of
the discussion was on the importance of indigenous knowledge for the
transformation of Africa and the need to teach all peoples of the
importance of the 1896 battles between the Italians and Africans at
Adwa. This victory over the forces of colonialism in 1896 had been
repeated in the last depression in 1935 when the forces of Ethiopia
drove back the forces of Benito Mussolini in Abyssinia. This past
victory inspired the global Pan African movement and the Rastafari
movement emerged as a strong Pan African force.
The
Ethiopian victories had guaranteed the fact that the peoples of
Ethiopia enjoyed nominal independence throughout the era of overt
European colonialism. While these memories are being kindled it is
also appropriate to stand in solidarity with the Ethiopian workers
and poor farmers who are being expropriated from their land and
communities by the Ethiopian ruling elements. The poor workers and
small farmers of Oromia are feeling the brunt of the chauvinism of
the Ethiopian capitalist classes. In the absence of a vigorous
working class movement to mobilize the working peoples beyond
religious, ethnic and regional lines, the ruling elements use
religion and ethnic chauvinism to seek to blunt the righteous demands
of the workers in all sectors of the economy. Progressive Pan
Africanists in all parts of the world are being called upon by the
workers and small farmers of Ethiopia to expose these forms of
expropriation. The Ethiopian ruling class cannot boast the hosting of
the seat of the African Union while repressing its own people.
Ethiopian women like hundreds of others in Eastern Africa are sent to
the Arabian Peninsula to work in conditions of semi slavery. A
militaristic and patriarchal leadership in Ethiopia has done very
little to end this mini slave trade with Saudi Arabia and the
Emirates.
This
year the celebration of ALD took place meeting where the question of
Black lives took precedence over the future of political leaders. A
vibrant Pan African optimism is being pushed across the Pan African
world by cultural leaders while the states use educational system to
confuse the youth. I was recently in Abidjan and saw first-hand the
important revolutionary spirit of cultural leaders such as Tiken Jah.
Reggae artists across all parts of the Pan African world have
demonstrated creativity and the fact of what can be done with
technological innovation. As I sat in the stands at Abi Reggae
Festival listening to Tiken Jah Fakoly and Julian Marley I was
witnessing the new energies for liberation coming from those who are
not suborned by Francophonie. Julian Marley’s rendition of
Africa
Unite
cut through all of the Xenophobia and chauvinism that is now abroad
among the ruling elites in Africa. The initiative for wisdom in
action and for peace is taking place with people who do not have a
vested interest in power or political domination
Whether
in Burundi, Somalia, Sudan or the Central African Republic the
questions of peace and reconstruction have been smothered by petty
dictators who benefit from dividing the people.
The
discussion on liberation and peace in Africa has been dominated by
attempts to reconcile political forces who understand the peace
process as another way of consolidating the struggle for political
power. The Peace and Security Council of the African Union has tended
to treat the Africans people as victims who are silent, helpless who
do not have a role to play in reconstruction. The emphasis by the
international media and by governments has been to stress the
centrality of United Nations' agencies and international
non-governmental organizations.
There is always something to be
done
The
isolation of the peoples of Africa in the African Union on peace and
education for peace is manifest in many ways. There is a dearth of
information on the real meaning of external military interventions to
fight ‘terror’. This disinformation campaign on the real
roots of terror is only reinforced by the monies spent by the
international think tanks to cream off the brightest from among the
youths to seek employment in international non-governmental
organizations. Those who are not ensnared by employment by external
agencies gravitate towards the new forms of fundamentalism where
youths seek salvation by oppressing others. Tajudeen Abdul Raheem
whose mortal remains are interred in Funtua, Nigeria must be turning
over and admonishing all of us who have not been more forthright in
exposing and opposing elements such as Boko Haram. The rise of
fundamentalism in the world in many forms is an attempt by peoples to
develop new cultural and spiritual values. Unfortunately, in the
attempt to develop spiritual reference points there are some zealots
who develop religions and religious expressions to dominate and
exploit the spiritual values of the African peoples. These elements
develop extreme forms of bigotry in the process of celebrating
spirituality and spiritual values. We have the spectacle of
Christian, Islamic and Hindu fundamentalists, all who manifest
intolerance in the process of elaborating their spiritual values
African
women from the grassroots are at the forefront of developing new
theories of African liberation. They point out the reality that the
stress on state wars of political forces ignore the cause of even
greater violence, structural violence of exploitation, social
violence against the exploited and domestic violence against women.
In this sense African liberation day is taking place when new radical
forces such as Asma Mafhouz are emerging in every society of Africa
to develop new forms of self-organization and self-expression. There
are new forms of organizing emerging slowly and carefully. It is not
by accident that the leading forces within the Black lives movement
in the USA were the transgender forces who have made it clear that
homophobia is incompatible with African Liberation.
Tajudeen
like C. L. R James always said that. There is always something to be
done. This year, the capitalist crisis is calling forth new
techniques of rebellion and organizing as the youths proclaim that
fascism will not take hold in this period. The rise of Trump is a
backlash to Obama's election. What is becoming clearer from the
candidacy of Hilary Clinton is that the mainstream political
organizations such as the Democratic Party cannot be the vehicle for
respecting Black lives. Youths from the Black Lives Movement have
reminded the society that it was Bill and Hilary Clinton that termed
young blacks as violent predators. Thus, on African liberation day
2016 most young blacks had gotten over the euphoria that electoral
politics could change the social system. So in the USA, so in Africa
and Latin America. In 1963, most African and Latin American
countries were ruled by dictators. Today less so, but capital is
demonstrating the fact that they will resort to ruthless measures to
ensure the survival of capitalism.
The lessons of the Ebola Outbreak
The
issues of biological warfare and environmental destruction are not
usually addressed by the celebrations of African liberation. However,
the dramatic outbreak of Ebola in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone
dictate the need for a Pan African response to health crises. Ebola,
HIV AIDS, environmental destruction and gas flaring have exposed the
stark realities that Pan African solutions will be needed beyond the
Berlinist states that had been carved out of African communities in
1884. In the United States the black workers of Louisiana had taken
the lead in the struggles against environmental racism and brought
white communities in St. James Parish to the realization that the
Mississippi River Industrial Corridor (also known as Cancer Alley)
did not discriminate when the capitalists were destroying the natural
environment.11
The
global capitalist crisis has pointed out clearly that Africans cannot
restructure their economies without a fundamental shift of global
power. At present the African descendants have the moral authority to
oppose capitalism and through the Global Reparations movement they
are calling for reparative justice and for a restructuring of the
international economic system. This call for a New International
Economic Order had been embraced by leaders such as Julius Nyerere
who championed the cause of fighting against the odious debt of
Africa. It is in states such as Nigeria, South Africa, Egypt, DRC
and South Africa where there is a very large working class where
capitalism works hardest to divide the poor on regional, ethnic and
religious grounds. A new cadre of freedom fighters are needed to
oppose the current leaders in Africa who have proven to be
accomplices in the looting of Africa. There is need for new forms of
organizing to meet new conditions.
In
1959 when Malcolm X organized African Liberation Day in Harlem the
ruling class of the USA and the co-opted black leadership dismissed
the ideas of Malcolm X. Malcolm X was far ahead of his times and he
lived in a generation when he understood that the struggles for civil
Rights and voting rights in Mississippi could not be separated from
the struggles for freedom in the Congo. Elomb Brath understood that
the fight for the lives of the youths in the case of the Central Park
jogger could not be separate from the fight to free Nelson Mandela in
South Africa or showing solidarity with the Cuban people by hosting
Fidel Castro in Harlem,.
Whether
in Bahia- Brazil or in Ferguson- Missouri, the chant that Black Lives
Matter is carrying forward a new rallying call for opposition to
global destruction of black lives and black communities. Plans for
the organization of the world under US hegemony are found wanting
because the global Pan African Struggle continues expose the looting
and destruction of empire. The massive police killings of Blacks in
the USA makes it difficult for the US Africa Command to promote the
fiction that the US military is in Africa to protect Black lives.
In
the era of the consumer culture of the West and the debased values of
greed and corruption, African religious forms and other forms of
spirituality are now important forms of self-expression. Africans and
other oppressed want to identify with spiritual values which can
provide a base for emancipation and redemption. African customs,
values and traditions are being interpreted in a way which could
oppose the western cultural domination. However, in many cases there
are those who exploit the spiritual values to promote organized forms
of religious expressions which are also oppressive. African
fundamentalism exists and is manipulated by some forces, but as of
yet these forces do not have the material resources to create havoc
as other fundamentalists.
The
spiritual values of self-reliance, love, redemption and deliverance
are values which can unleash the creativity of the African to develop
new forms of organizing and conceptualizing society. The task is to
find new ways to harmonize the relations between human beings and
between humans and nature. Africa is a rich continent. Thus far the
conception of the African leaders have been to mobilize resources and
raw materials based on the vision and demands of Europe.
The
struggles for African Liberation in 2016 is part of the global
Struggle for a new social system beyond capitalism. It is important
to learn from the accomplishments in order to inspire a new
generation to carry forward the torch of freedom.
1
No Easy Victories: African
Liberation and American Activists over a Half Century, 1950-2000,
edited by William Minter, Gail Hovey, and Charles Cobb Jr. Africa
World Press, Trenton, New Jersey 2007.
2
Tajudeen Abdul Raheem, Speaking
Truth to Power Selected Pan-African Postcards,
Pambazuka Press, London, 2010
3
For an early critique of the
role of the IMF and World Bank in Africa see Samir Amin,
Maldevelopment: Anatomy of a Global Failure, United
Nations University, Tokyo 1990
4
After the IMF and the World Bank established the SAPS projects to
ensure tax evasion and control fraud in Africa the same Bretton
Woods Institutions organize studies to divert attention from the
real plunder of external flows from Africa. For one such IMF
inspired study see Draining development?: Controlling flows of
illicit funds from developing countries, edited by Peter
Reuter, published by the World Bank , Washington 2012. This was one
response to the information published by L�once Ndikumana and
James Boyce, Africa’s Odious Debt: How Foreign Loans and
Capital Flight Bled a Continent, Zed Books London, 2011
6
Michael
Hudson, Finance as Warfare: World Economic Association, London 2015
7
George Breitman, The Last Year
of Malcolm X: The Evolution of a Revolutionary, Pathfinder Books
9
This image was reproduced along
with the article by Glen Greenwald, Andrew Fishman and David
Miranda, “Brazil Is Engulfed by Ruling Class Corruption —
and a Dangerous Subversion of Democracy,” The Intercept, May
18.
10
Richard Gott,”Latin America as a White Settler Society,”
Bulletin of Latin American Research, Vol. 26, No. 2, pp. 269–289,
2007
|