African Globe
October 13, 2012
Africa rejoices in the victory of the Mau Mau victims of British
colonial brutalities after a London Court gave them the green light to
sue for damages, President Mugabe said yesterday.
Last week, the
High Court in London allowed three elderly Kenyans, Wambuga Wa Nyingi,
Jane Muthoni Mara and Paulo Muoka Nzili, to pursue damages for torture
during the Mau Mau rebellion against British rule.
Addressing the
Zanu-PF 90th Ordinary session of the Central Committee in Harare,
President Mugabe said Zanu-PF should not view the Mau Mau case as a
matter far removed from the revolutionary party.
“I want to
acknowledge a quiet yet significant victory which Africa has won against
British colonialism. As some of you may be aware, Mau Mau victims of
the British colonial savagery and brutalities in Kenya last week won the
right to sue the British government for atonement of the suffering they
underwent as they resisted British colonialism which, in comparable
circumstances, involved theft of huge swathes of land, a good part of
which remain in the hands of absentee landlords well ensconced in
Britain and larger Europe,” President Mugabe said.
He added: “We
who also bear the scars of British colonial atrocities can never view
this test case as a matter far away from us as a matter for Kenyans
alone. We see ourselves in those resilient Mau Mau fighters; we see in
their horrid injuries our very own un-repaid injuries and injustices
from that past of White savagery.”
President Mugabe said the Mau
case was a lesson not just for Africa but for victims of slavery,
colonialism and other de-humanising forms of imperialism suffered by
African peoples.
“Time may have come when the abused notion of
‘responsibility to protect’ may make better sense when revisited so we
incorporate within it, its long ignored correlative of ‘responsibility
to account’ for past offences and horrible Nazi-like human rights abuses
of indigenous peoples,” he said.
He said Africa must not allow a situation where history was recalled selectively, sparing the so-called mighty.
“We
know to be wrong and guilty of heinous crimes against humanity both in
the past and present. We should never allow a world order where might
buys right, while right succumbs to wrong,” President Mugabe said.
The
President and Zanu-PF First Secretary also saluted Hugo Chavez’s
victory in Venezuelan presidential elections describing it as sweet
victory against forces of global imperialism.
President Chavez, a socialist, was re-elected into office on Sunday after defeating Henrique Capriles.
“I
recall and recognise last weekend’s loud and resounding defeat of
global imperialism by the progressive people of Venezuela, led by their
revolutionary leader Hugo Chavez. It was sweet victory against forces of
global reaction and imperialism, indeed, a victory made sweeter by
defeating the false hopes imperialism had concocted for itself even
against the outward fact of the hugely popular Bolivarian revolution,”
President Mugabe said.
He said President Chavez’s victory was a victory for the ordinary Venezuelan and the Third World.
“The
people won, the poor won and as a revolutionary party, Zanu-PF, shares
in that victory, indeed regards it as its own, albeit vicariously.
“Any
gain for forces of global progress, wherever such may be registered, is
another great stride for the larger half of mankind, a gain for the
broad masses of the Third World for so long trampled upon by
imperialism,” President Mugabe said.
He said imperialism continued to make the world more dangerous daily.
“It
continues to corrupt institutions of democracy in our world,
principally the ballot box, in order to attack genuine national
leaderships in order to undermine national sovereignties and of course
to subvert the very notion of democracy in whose name it pitches its
claim to superiority,” President Mugabe said.
He said so heartless
were the imperialist forces that they not only interfered in other
countries’ internal affairs but went to the extent of invading them.
“We need to study the wiles which imperialism employed in Venezuela in a bid to defeat the will of the people.
“The
blatant aggression of imperialism in North Africa and the Middle East,
its continuing naked provocations in the Far East, and, as we saw not
too long ago, its attempts even to destabilise a powerful state like
Russia, clearly show a system experiencing a crisis, but one which will
not hesitate to make wars abroad in order to stave off its own problems
and challenges,” President Mugabe said.
He said the world has seen the limitations of neo-liberalism, an ideology of later-day imperialism.
“Hence when such alternatives, presenting fairer and more representative systems of Government triumph, we need to celebrate.
“We
must boldly express solidarity with kindred parties and movements
worldwide, so we continue to build a broad front against this new and
deadly strain of resource-hunting imperialism,” he said.
“We have
seen the enemy make repeated, rapacious attacks to suffocate our country
using even those we are meant to build the country in partnership with.
It does not work, it cannot work!” he said.
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