www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Lead article

Africans struggle to overcome slavery, AIDS, neocolonialism

by Bakary Tandia and Pauline Muchina

According to reports from the Special Session of the UN General Assembly, three quarters of the more than 36 million people currently living with AIDS/HIV are living in sub-Saharan Africa. The general secretary, Kofi Annan, has asked for $7 to 10 billion a year to fight AIDS and other killer diseases, but little has been raised for Africa. Don’t human rights and democracy promotion start with disease prevention and human life protection?

POLITICS OF AIDS

In the history of human disease, HIV/AIDS is unique because it raises many emotional issues about families, law, and access to health care. In Africa women and children are more vulnerable than men for many reasons, biological, social and economic. Their social status puts women at risk more than men. In some countries polygamy is practiced; one man is infected, but two women are at risk.

If a woman thinks that her husband or boyfriend is infected, she cannot force him to use a condom because of the power relationship within the family. Because of the economic situation, if she wants to challenge him, she will find herself outside without any resources. There is also the infection from mother to infant and the stress tied to this.

It has become urgent for Africa to find the means to appropriately deal with the HIV/AIDS crisis. Yet there are several stumbling blocks. African countries are dealing with financial crises with international financial institutions, specifically debts. Last year, the sub-Saharan African region paid $13.3 billion in debt repayments. How will those countries be able to deal with the HIV/AIDS crisis when they must pay such an amount?

Another stumbling block is landmines. It is a big issue and the U.S. has not signed the landmine treaty. In Africa we have 30 million landmines. In Mozambique alone there are 12 million. They cost maybe $3 per landmine, but in order to remove them, it costs about $300 each. If you multiply $300 by 30 million, think of how much it will cost for countries also trying to deal with the HIV health crisis.

The third stumbling block is the force of globalization. African countries are being forced into globalization without being ready. The G-8 leaders met in Canada in June to give aid to Africa, with strings attached. All the players must equally participate in setting the rules, but that is not the case with African countries.

The fourth stumbling block is neo-colonial leaders. Neo-colonialism is worse than colonialism because you don’t know that you are colonized, but things are getting worse day by day.

It is clear that Africa is expendable to the West. The focus away from Africa started shifting when, with the collapse of the Soviet Union, the post-Communist Eastern European nations were created and a lot of strife and economic crises took place. It was also on the non-governmental organization (NGO) level where funds were tied up in Eastern Europe. What can we do as Africans when we feel so left out in the global economy?

MAURITANIAN SLAVERY

We are in the 21st century and slavery still exists in this world and in Mauritania and Sudan specifically. In Mauritania slavery is not what people describe as modern forced labor. It is a classic slavery in modern times. It took place prior to the Atlantic slave trade, around the 13th century when the Arabs came from the Middle East to sub-Saharan Africa. Since then, it has been prevalent in Mauritania from generation to generation by birth. If you are a slave, your children will become slaves.

Slaves are used for agricultural and domestic work in Mauritania. They take care of the cattle and also produce dates. More importantly slavery is part of the culture. The more slaves a man has, the more powerful he is. What is amazing is that slaves vote. For the person who has 200 or 300 slaves, their voting power goes to somebody in a town who, for instance, wants to be mayor. Because slaves will follow the instructions from their master, this kind of democracy has created additional interests in having or keeping slaves. Of course, if slaves are free and have the freedom to vote, the Arab minority will lose the guarantee to keep power for themselves.

The Mauritanian population of 2.5 million is divided and subdivided. Among the two main groups, Arabs, who rule the country, represent 30% of the population. Black Mauritanians comprise the other 70%. They are divided into two groups. One subgroup, 40% of the population, are slaves or live in the same conditions as slavery. They are Black, but they speak Arabic, much the same way African Americans speak English. They live in their country, but they have no memory of their ethnic origin.

The rest, 30%, live in the South and are divided into four ethnic groups: Pulaar, Soninke, Wolof, and Bambara. They have their own cultures and their own languages. The government has designed policies to destroy the Black African culture in the South. As part of the implementation of that policy, in 1989 it deported more than 80,000 Black Mauritanians from their own country and sent them to Senegal and Mali. There they live in refugee camps. The international community, in particular the UN, is not doing anything to help them. The reason for the deportations was to destroy the Black African community in order to make the land vacant for the Arabs along the Senegal River valley.

Besides that, in 1990 the government of Mauritania arrested 500 Black military officers, made them political prisoners, and killed them while in detention. This was documented by Human Rights Watch and by Amnesty International. Before that, in 1989, they destroyed over 300 villages, which is also documented.

The worst is the game the government is playing with slavery. Legislation has supposedly abolished slavery three times. However the intent of the current Mauritanian government has not been to effect freedom, but rather to assuage and lull the international community--and aid donors--into a false belief that action has been taken.

The most recent abolition occurred Nov. 9, 1981 through Ordinance No. 81.234. The second article of that ordinance granted compensation to slave masters for the loss of their “property,” whereas no compensation was made to those slaves who were “freed.” There is no mention of slave owners being punished for disobeying the law.

For over 10 years, movement organizations have been struggling to put an end to the practice of slavery, but the government has refused to recognize them, and so they cannot operate legally, receive donations or obtain any resources. A member of an illegal organization can be arrested at any time, which often happens. And in January the main opposition political party struggling against slavery, the Action for Change Party, was banned by the government of Lt. Col. Taya.

The problem is not just the action of the government, but also the international support that regime is enjoying. In 1990 during the Gulf War, Mauritania sided with Iraq. The reports from the U.S. State Department were very critical. Since then Mauritania has cut off diplomatic relations with Iraq and signed a full diplomatic agreement with Israel as a member of the Arab League. The whole language from the State Department changed. Yet nothing has changed people’s lives.

AT THE MERCY OF FOREIGN POLICY

More recently the U.S. is forging alliances that will help it continue its war against terrorism. With the growth of Islam and Arabization of the continent, the U.S. is very afraid. The Arab nations are also paying a lot of attention to Africa right now, with aid for education and health. After September 11, one of Osama bin Laden’s close advisors was known to be in Mauritania, and many people were arrested in connection with Al Qaeda. President Bush was in touch with President Taya seeking secret cooperation. So the U.S. government is ready to develop some kind of close cooperation with any country where they can get help. It has even resumed discussions with Sudan.

Within Africa, when refugees from Mauritania started coming to Senegal in 1989 due to the deportations, Abdou Diouf, president of Senegal, stated, “If I didn’t allow apartheid in South Africa, there is no way to allow it next to my door,” but not long after, he shut his mouth because French interests were in jeopardy. For Mauritania and Senegal are former colonies of France, and if there were a conflict between them, it would put him in a very uncomfortable situation. That’s why the two countries were forced to resume diplomatic relations though nothing was done to change the situation with the deportations.

Even where victims of slavery find solidarity, religion and politics interfere. This can be seen in the differences between Sudan and Mauritania. In Sudan there is civil war. In Mauritania there is none. In Sudan women and children are taken into slavery. In Mauritania there is no such thing; slavery is passed from generation to generation. In the case of Sudan, because Christians are the victims, they have the strong support and attention of those in the U.S. and in Europe. In Mauritania since the population is all Muslim, the Americans and Europeans are silent. In terms of human suffering people should not be supported selectively based on religion.

PEOPLE AS ROOT OF CHANGE

Many looked with hope toward the World Conference Against Racism in Durban last year. The U.S. came with conditions, though, not to talk about reparations for the slave trade or about the crisis between Palestinians and the Israelis, nor about economic underdevelopment as a form of racism. Once the U.S. delegates realized that these conditions were missing, they walked out.  

They went back to poor African, Caribbean and Latin American governments and told them, “If you work for reparations or Palestinian statehood, we’ll cut you off.” So the African governments went back to their own NGOs and said, “Look, our hands are tied” and they were absent for votes on those issues. Clearly aid does not come from a human rights approach.

In South Africa itself, liberation is not complete. Although it had a very persistent movement that brought the fall of apartheid, it didn’t go far enough in terms of the poor people. And after apartheid, the truth and reconciliation movement didn’t transform the system.

Very few national movements today are viable. One movement that has shown itself to have a supposedly socialist perspective in Kenya is Mungiki. They follow the Mau Mau tradition that fought against colonialism. They’ve been arrested and there have been killings. But they are patriarchal, even requiring female circumcision for membership in their organization.

And then there is the South-South initiative which is a movement within the African continent, but also reaching out to other Southern hemisphere nations, trying to trade with one another. Unfortunately it is not entirely free of capitalism.

The movement, though, is real strong on the local level. You see it by the way people are appealing to their traditional way of relating to one another. Kenyans have a system, especially amongst women, where they farm together and share the resources amongst their communities.

In Mauritania there are two abolitionist organizations fighting for freedom and equal opportunity, El-Hor, which means “the free,” and SOS-Slaves. Both organizations educate slaves with the knowledge that they become aware of their rights. These organizations also fight for the criminalization of slavery and the adoption of socio-economic measures to translate the legal fictions of freedom into a lived reality.

In Africa in general, people have learned that they must take destiny into their own hands. Ending gender discrimination and ending poverty in Africa is one way of stopping the spread of HIV/AIDS. Also whenever a chance is given to African countries to organize themselves through the democratic process, they seek to truly do it in their best interests.

There are a lot of movements organized locally by grass roots organizations to fight corruption, to help people rejuvenate their economies, to make sure education is getting to people, and to make sure HIV/AIDS education is getting to people. The resources to do that are not available, but we have the human resources. That’s a very strong force.

When the people are trying to make their contribution, we know that diversity is positive and every person, every community has something different to bring. Africa did not have a revolution; it’s in the making.

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons