2015-07-14

Paul Johnson writes in his 1983 book Modern Times:

The great temptation of colonialism, the worm in its free-market

apple, was the itch to indulge in social engineering. It was so fatally

easy for the colonial administrator to persuade himself that he could

improve on the laws of supply and demand by treating his territory

as an ant-hill and its inhabitants as worker-ants who would benefit

from benevolent organizing. The Belgian Congo, where white settlers

were given no political powers at all for fear they would oppress the

natives, was a monument to well-meaning bossiness. The law

instructed firms to behave like *a good head of family’. As in Soviet

Russia, there were restrictions on native movement, especially in the

big cities, and in Elizabethville natives had to observe a curfew. The

notion was that the African could be shoved around for his own

good. Practice, of course, was much less benevolent than theory.

Until 1945, the French used social engineering on a huge scale in the

form of forced labour and native penal codes. It was infinitely less

savage and extensive than the Gulag Archipelago but it rested on

some of the same assumptions.

The most dedicated of the social engineers were the Portuguese,

who ran the first and the last of the empires. In Angola and

Mozambique they adopted slavery from the Africans, institutiona-

lized it and integrated it with their administrative system. The

slave-trade, especially to Brazil, was the economic mainstay of these

two territories for three hundred years. The treaties the Portuguese

signed with the African chiefs were for labour, not products (though

in Mozambique the Arabs acted as middlemen). The Portuguese

were the only primary producers of slaves among the European

powers. They defended the trade desperately and resisted its suppres-

sion, abolishing it only when compelled by the British, and replacing

it by a commercialized system of forced labour. This they maintained

to the end in the 1970s, still with the co-operation of the African

chiefs, who in the slave-days ran the labour-gangs or shabalos.

Cecil Rhodes wanted to absorb Angola and Mozambique in the

free British system, regarding Portuguese colonialism as an ana-

chronism: in his innocence he did not realize it was a portent of

twentieth-century totalitarianism. In the post- 1945 period the Portu-

guese provided every year 300,000 contracted labourers from Mo-

zambique and 100,000 from Angola, mainly for South Africa. Every

African who had not been assimilated and granted citizenship (the

Portuguese had no colour-bar as such) had to possess a caderneta or

pass-book with his work record. Bad workers were sent to the local

jefe de posto for corporal punishment on the hand with a palmatoria

or perforated ping-pong bat. The ultimate deterrent was hard labour

on ‘the islands’ (Sao Tome or Principe). Like the Belgians, the

Portuguese had a curfew, and Africans could not normally leave the

house after nine. 35

The Portuguese authorities hotly defended their methods on moral

grounds. They argued that in return for exporting labour, the two

colonies were getting ports and railways and other investment

unobtainable by any other means. They claimed they took their

civilizing mission seriously: Africans were not children but adults

who must be made to accept social responsibilities. This meant

taking the men out of idleness into work, and the women out of the

bondage of the fields into their proper role in the home. 36 But like

most forms of moralizing interference it had unforeseen side-effects.

In 1954 the Bishop of Beira complained that exporting labour was

totally destructive of family life since 80 per cent of the men in his

diocese were habitually away from home, either in Rhodesia and

South Africa or on work-projects within the territory. 37

Even the British-influenced territories used large-scale social en-

gineering in the form of land-apportionment to underpin racial

divisions. In Kenya the expulsion of the Kikuyu from the ‘White

Highlands’ between the wars (which we have noted in Chapter Four)

raised some of the same moral objections as Stalin’s collectivization

of the farms. It was the direct cause of the ferocious Mau Mau

outbreak in the 1950s. Land apportionment legislation in Southern

Rhodesia, a similar policy, was one of the underlying causes of the

guerrilla war there which dominated Rhodesian history in the 1970s

and was ended only with the change to black rule in 1979. But the

outstanding example was South Africa, where social engineering was

raised into the central principle (indeed philosophy) of government

in the form of apartheid.

In South Africa pass-laws (and books) as forms of social control

went back to the eighteenth century, being supposedly abolished in

1828 but creeping back in again, until in the 1970s arrests under

movement-restriction laws averaged more than 600,000 a year. 38

Their origins lay in Elizabethan regulations to control ‘sturdy

beggars’, themselves provoked by rapid population increase. But it is

ironic that South Africa’s first positive measures of social engineering were the work of Jan Christian Smuts, who was one of the principal architects both of the League of Nations and of the UN, and who personally at San Francisco in 1945 drafted the UN Declaration on

Human Rights.

Smuts was one of the Boer moderates who, in the liberal peace

settlement after the Boer War, were associated with the British in the

re-creation of the country. These men laid the legislative foundations

of a semi-totalitarian state based upon the principle of racial-

ordering. In 1911 strikes by contract workers (i.e. blacks) were made

illegal, while the Mines and Works Act reserved certain job-

categories for whites. In 1913 the Natives Land Act introduced the

principle of territorial segregation by skin-colour. This Act was the

key to all that followed, not least because it determined the nature of

the African response which was to create their own proliferating

varieties of Zionist religious sects. 40 In 1920 the Native Affairs Act

introduced segregated political institutions for Africans, setting up

the Native Conference of African leaders, nominated by government,

and guided by the all-white Native Affairs Commission of ‘experts’.

In 1922 an Act restricted skilled apprenticeships to those with

minimum educational qualifications (i.e. non-Africans). In 1923 the

Native (Urban Areas) Act created segregated African residential

areas in and near towns. In 1925 the Industrial Conciliation Act

denied collective bargaining rights to Africans. The 1925 Wages Act

and the 1926 Colour Bar Act were specifically designed to draw a

gulf between poor whites and the African masses. 41

It was Smuts, again, who moved South Africa in a directly

opposite direction to that followed by the government of India after

Amritsar. In 1921 he massacred an African ‘Israelite’ sect which

engaged in a mass-squat on forbidden land at Bulhoek, and the

following year he put down a black labour rebellion in the Rand with

700 casualties. This ruthless policy was reinforced with further

legislation. The 1927 Native Administration Act made the Gov-

ernor-General (i.e. the government) Supreme Chief over all Africans,

with authoritarian powers to appoint headmen, define tribal boun-

daries, move tribes and individuals, and control African courts and

land-ownership. Its Section 29 punished ‘any person who utters any

words or does any other act or thing whatever with intent to

promote any feeling of hostility between Natives and Europeans’.

Government police powers were further increased by the Mines and

Works Act and Riotous Assemblies Act of 1930. 42 This granitic

massing of totalitarian power took place at exactly the same time

Stalin was erecting his tyranny on the Leninist plinth, gave govern-

ment comparable powers and was designed to produce the same

results.

During the Second World War, Smuts, who had earlier destroyed

the hopes of the coloured and mixed races of securing political equality with white voters, extended social engineering to them. In 1943 he set up a Coloured Affairs Department to ‘administer’ the Cape

coloureds, and the same year he introduced the Pegging Act to stop

Indians moving into white areas. Far from making common cause

between the whites, Asians and coloureds, against the overwhelm-

ing majority of blacks, it was Smuts’s United Party which drove

both into the arms of the black nationalists (who hated them more

than whites), and the Indian element was vital in swinging Asian

and UN opinion against South Africa. 43 Hence all the structural

essentials of white supremacy and physical segregation existed

before the United Party lost power to the Boer Nationalists in May

1948.

What the Nationalists did was to transform segregation into a

quasi-religious philosophical doctrine, apartheid. In many ways

they were a similar development to African nationalism itself. Their

earliest slogan, Afrika voor de Afrikaaners, was identical with the

black ‘Africa for the Africans’ of the 1960s and 1970s. Their

religious sectarianism flourished at the same time as African Zion-

ism and for the same purpose: to bring together in collective

defence the oppressed, the unwanted and the discriminated against.

It was remarkably similar to Jewish Zionism too, in both its origins

and consequences. The Boers created their own Zion, which then

served as the focus of hatred and unifying force for the Africans, as

Israel did for the Arabs. The first Boer nationalist institutions,

1915—18, were created to provide help for poor whites through job

agencies, credit banks and trade unions. They were fiercely anti-

Semitic as well as anti-black and anti-British. The movement began

with the defence of the underdog, then broadened to promote the

political, economic and cultural interests of the Afrikaaners as a

whole, then in 1948 suddenly made itself overdog, with a ven-

geance. 44

Apartheid first appeared as a political programme in 1948,

treating the Reserves as the proper homeland for Africans where

their rights and citizenship were rooted, but its origins went back to

the foundation in 1935 of the Suid-Afrikaanse Bond vir Rasse-

studie. It was therefore directly influenced by Hitler’s racial ideas

and his plans for segregated settlement in Eastern Europe, though it

added a Biblical underpinning lacking in Hitler’s atheist panorama.

Beneath the surface, apartheid was a muddle, since it combined

incompatible elements. As pseudo-scientific racism, it derived, like

Hitlerism and Leninism, from social Darwinism; as a religious

racism, it derived from fundamentalist beliefs which denied Dar-

winism in any form. On the surface, however, it had a certain

clarity and simplicity; and the political system Smuts had created,

reinforced by the Separate Representation of Voters Act (1951),

which knocked the coloureds off the Common Roll, gave the

Nationalists a secure tenure of power which is now well into its

fourth decade. They have thus had the means to embark on a course

of social engineering which, for consistency and duration, is rivalled

only by Soviet Russia’s own.

The object of apartheid was to reverse the tide of integration and

create wholly separate communities. The Prohibition of Mixed

Marriages Act (1949) extended the ban from white-African to all

unions across the colour lines. The Immorality Act made extra-

marital sex illegal in any circumstances but more severely punished if

it involved miscegenation. The Population Registration Act (1950)

allocated everyone to a racial group, like the Nuremberg Laws. The

Group Areas Act, the same year, empowered the government to

designate residential and business areas for particular racial groups.

It began the process of shoving human beings around like loads of

earth and concrete, and flattening their homes and shops with

bulldozers. The first phase of apartheid was consolidated by the

security provisions of the Suppression of Communism Act (1950),

which defined Communism not only as Marxism-Leninism but ‘any

related form of that doctrine’ and any activity whatever which

sought to bring about ‘any political, industrial, social or economic

change within the Union by the promotion of disturbance or

disorder’. This turned the authoritarian elements of the state, for the

first time, against a significant portion of the white population.

The second phase followed the appointment of the ideologist

H.F.Verwoerd as Minister of Native Affairs in 1950. He was an

intellectual, Professor of Social Psychology at Stellenbosch, who

significantly was not an inward-looking old-style Boer but had been

born in Holland and educated in Germany. He gave the system a new

unity, especially after he became premier in 1958. 45 His Bantu

Education Act of 1954 imposed government control over all African

schools, brought the missions to heel, introduced differential sylla-

buses and an educational system specifically designed to prepare

Bantu-speakers for their place in society. At the same time, the

systematic creation of separate living areas, the ‘Bantustans’, was

begun. Segregation began to penetrate every aspect of life, including

sport, culture and, not least, church services; and by 1959 the

government had effectively segregated higher education.

During the years 1959-60, which in effect created the black

African continent, many observers believed apartheid was doomed

to collapse in the near future. That was Harold Macmillan’s view

when he gave his ‘Winds of Change’ speech in Pretoria on 3 February

1960, followed almost immediately by the Sharpeville shooting, in

which sixty-nine Africans were killed. 46 It was thought that an

Amritsar syndrome would now at last set in, that the tide of African

advance was irresistible, that the Boers would lose their will and their

nerve. There was a flight of capital. South Africa left the Common-

wealth. There was likewise a belief that apartheid, even on its own

terms, was unworkable. It conflicted with many of the demands of the

market economy, on which South Africa depended for survival. It

conflicted, too, with the ineluctable logic of demography. The central

blueprint for progressive apartheid was the so-called Tomlinson

Report of 1956, probably the most elaborate description of and

justification for large-scale social engineering ever put together. It

stated that ‘the dominant fact of the South African situation’ was that

there was ‘not the slightest ground for believing that the European

population, either now or in the future, would be willing to sacrifice its

character as a national entity and a European racial group’. And it

proceeded from there to knock the country into an appropriate shape. 47

The Report was criticized at the time for its absurd over-optimism, both

about the ease with which industry could be sited near Bantu areas and

about the growth of the black population. The accumulating evidence

of the 1960s appeared to confirm these caveats. In 1911, when race

policy started, Europeans were nearly a third of the black population

(1,276,242 whites against 4 million blacks, 500,000 coloureds and

150,000 Asians). In 1951, when apartheid had got going, there were

2,641,689 whites, 8,560,083 blacks, 1,103,016 coloureds and

366,664 Asians. By 1970 the whites had risen only to 3,752,528, the

blacks had jumped to 15,057,952, the coloureds to 2,018,453 and the

Asians to 620,436. It was calculated that, by the year 2000, Africans

and coloureds would outnumber whites by ten to one. 48 This made the

relative areas assigned to whites and blacks seem unrealistic, particu-

larly since the creation of industrial jobs near Bantu areas was

proceeding at only 8,000 a year against the Tomlinson projection of

50,000. The moral inequities of the system were gruesomely apparent.

By 1973 only 1,513 white families had been forced to move out of the

‘wrong’ race areas, while 44,885 coloured and 27,694 Indian families

had been engineered out of their homes, some of them occupied since

the days of the Dutch East India Company. 49 There was a constant

process of African squatting in forbidden areas, accompanied by

equally constant bulldozing, under heavily armed police and army

guard, horribly reminiscent of Russia, 1929-32. Presiding over this

exercise in perverted Utopianism were Boer intellectuals, trained in the

social sciences. Granted its internal contradictions and implausibilities,

and the fact that African, and increasingly, world opinion were

mobilized against it, the experiment seemed destined to collapse.

Yet the lesson of Soviet collectivization has been that such schemes,

however morally and economically indefensible, can endure, if pursued

with sufficient ruthlessness and brute physical power. Moreover, there

were certain factors working in favour of the regime. Like Russia,

South Africa is immensely rich in minerals: gold, coal, diamonds,

manganese and copper (in order of importance), plus antimony,

asbestos, chromium, fluor-spar, iron ore, manganese, mica, plati-

num, phosphates, tin, titanium, uranium, vanadium, zinc and many

others. 50 Far from declining, as had been predicted in 1960, the

South African economy flourished mightily from 1962 onwards,

throughout the boom of the 1960s and early 1970s. When the boom

ended in 1973—4, world inflation produced a price-revolution in gold

from which South Africa, the world’s largest producer (gold forms

more than half the total of her mineral wealth), was the principal

beneficiary. While incomes over virtually all the rest of Africa,

including those of her most dedicated and active enemies, fell, South

Africa’s rose. Between 1972 and 1980, for instance, a standard

sixty-pound gold ingot rose in retail value from $250,000 to $2.5

million, a tenfold increase. 51 The price-revolution benefited govern-

ment revenues by over $1 billion a year and also provided funds for a

huge rise in capital investments.

This steady growth in South Africa’s income in the two decades

after the ‘Winds of Change’ struck the continent enabled the regime

to construct shelters against it in the form of a self-contained arms

industry, which made South Africa virtually independent of reluctant

foreign suppliers, and a military nuclear-weapons programme. By

the early 1980s South Africa was spending $2.5 billion annually on

defence, but this was no more than 6 per cent of gnp, a tolerable

burden (by this point many black and Arab African countries were

spending 25-50 per cent of gnp on their armed forces). 52 South

African forces were periodically involved in maintaining security in

South- West Africa, a former German colony Smuts had failed to

secure outright at Versailles in 1919, South Africa being given it in

trusteeship, a formula which (by another irony) he had invented

himself. But in general South Africa survived with remarkably little

damage, either to the military power or to the morale of the white

ruling class, the decolonization by force of Angola, Mozambique and

Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) during the 1970s.

The Boer nationalists, as opposed to Smuts, had always criticized

his unrealized scheme to create a ‘great white dominion’ including

Rhodesia and Mozambique, and running from the Cape up to

Kenya. They argued in the 1920s that this would merely ‘engulf the

whites in a future black Africa. In the 1970s their caution was proved

justified, when the ratio of white to black even within South Africa

fell to 1:5. The South African regime refused to commit its own

fortunes to the preservation of the crumbling bastions of colonialism

to the north. When, in due course, they fell, the white laager

contracted. This brought triumphant, militant and armed black

nationalism to South Africa’s own frontiers, backed by overwhelm-

ing majorities in the UN, the Organization of African Unity and a

growing measure of Soviet-bloc physical support, chiefly in the form

of Cuban troops and advisers.

Yet the ‘confrontation’ between South African apartheid and

black nationalism was verbal and political rather than military, still

less economic. The nearer the African states were to South Africa, the

more they felt the pull of her immense and prosperous economy and

the less inclination did they display in carrying their resolve to

destroy apartheid further than words. Ordinary Africans voted with

their feet, not indeed in favour of apartheid but for the jobs the South

African economy provided. At the time of the boycott organized by

the auo in 1972, the South African Chamber of Miners employed

381,000 blacks, one-third of whom came from north of latitude 22

degrees S, and one-third from Mozambique. The number of blacks

coming to South Africa increased steadily in the 1970s, not least

because real wages for blacks in the Rand rose rapidly at a time when

they were falling in most of black Africa. The neighbouring regimes

called themselves ‘front line states’ and kept up the anti-apartheid

rhetoric, but in practice the governments of Zambia, Malawi,

Zimbabwe and, above all, Mozambique made themselves systematic

collaborators with the apartheid system by deliberately increasing

their exports of labour to the Rand. Malawi, Botswana and Zambia

pulled out of the auo boycott; other states simply broke it, as they

had earlier broken the boycott of Southern Rhodesia. South Africa

built Malawi’s new capital at Lilongwe and the Cabora Bassa dam in

Mozambique; and when one front-line president, Seretse Khama of

Botswana, fell ill, he was immediately flown to a ‘whites only’

hospital in Johannesburg. 53

It is significant that by the early 1980s the most active of South

Africa’s enemies was remote Nigeria, the only major black oil

producer. Its royalties, which exceeded $23 billion in 1980, pres-

erved it (as gold did South Africa) from the 1970s recession and gave

it the luxury of preserving an independent foreign-economic policy.

But states south of the Congo and the Great Lakes could not resist

the pull of the Rand magnet and, in practice, adjusted their ideologi-

cal policies accordingly.

In any case, differences between Pretoria’s policy and those of

most black African states were more theoretical than real. All

African states practised racist policies. In the 1950s and 1960s,

Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia expelled more than a

quarter of a million Jews and ghettoed the few thousand who

remained. In the 1960s the United Republic of Tanzania expelled its

Arabs or deprived them of equal rights. In the 1970s Asians were

expelled from most states in the Horn and East-Central Africa and

they were discriminated against everywhere; even in Kenya they were

threatened with expulsion in 1982. In most cases race-discrimination

was a deliberate act of government policy rather than a response to

popular demand. When the Uganda government expelled the Asians

in 1972 the motive was to provide its members and supporters with

free houses and shops, not to please ordinary black Ugandans, whose

relations with the Asians had been friendly. 54 Anti-Asian racism was

usually propagated by official or semi-official newspapers controlled

by governments. In the 1970s they regularly published racist mat-

erial: that Asian women had feelings of superiority, hence their

refusal to sleep with black men; that Asians smuggled currency out

of the country in suitcases; that Asian businessmen were monopolists

and exploiters; a typical headline read ‘Asian Doctors Kill their

Patients’. 55

From independence onwards, most black African states practised

anti-white discrimination as a matter of government policy. In the

second half of the 1970s Kenya and the Ivory Coast were virtually

the only exceptions. Houphouet-Boigny, President of the latter, drew

attention to anti-white racism at the oau, telling the other heads of

state:

“It is true, dear colleagues, that there are 40,000 Frenchmen in my country and that this is more than there were before Independence. But in ten years I hope the position will be different. I hope that then there will be 100,000 Frenchmen here. And I would like at that time for us to meet again and compare the economic strength of your countries with mine. But I fear, dear colleagues, that few of you will be in a position to attend.” 56

But the commonest, indeed the universal, form of racism in black

Africa was inter-tribal, and it was this form of racism, for which one

euphemism is social control, which led a growing number of African

states, in the 1960s and still more in the 1970s, to exercise forms of

social engineering not unlike apartheid. One of the merits of colonial

rule in Africa (except where white supremacy policies dictated

otherwise) was that it geared itself to tribal nomadic movements,

both cyclical and permanent. It permitted a high degree of freedom

of movement. As populations rose, and pressures on food resources

increased, this laissez-faire policy became more difficult to maintain.

But it was a tragedy that, when independence came in the early

1960s, the successor-states chose to imitate not colonial-style liberal-

ism but white-supremacist control. The Bandung— Leninist doctrine

of the big, omnicompetent state joined in unholy matrimony with

segregationism. But of course the Soviet state had always controlled

all internal movement and settlement, not least its own Asian tribes.

Leninist and South African practice fitted in comfortably together.

Throughout black Africa, the documentation of social control –

work permits, internal and external passports, visa requirements,

residence permits, expulsion orders — proliferated rapidly with

independence. And, as South African experience testified, once

documents appear, the bulldozer is never far behind. In the early

1970s it emerged in many places in West Africa, to shift squatters

from coastal towns back into the interior. 57

The great drought which struck a dozen Central African countries

near the desert-bush border in the 1970s increased nomadic

movement and so the practice of violent social control. There had

long been racial enmity along the desert line, since nomadic tribes

(especially Touregs) had seized southerners for slavery. One of the

first acts of independent Mali, which straddled the line, was to

massacre its northern Touregs. When drought-relief funds became

available, Mali (and other states) used them to finance control

systems. As the Secretary of the International Drought Relief Com-

mittee in Mali put it: ‘We have to discipline these people and to

control their grazing and their movements. Their liberty is too

expensive for us. This disaster is our opportunity.’ 58 Control of

movement, in Mali and elsewhere, was accompanied by other forms

of social engineering. In such states development plans were delib-

erately drawn up in the late 1960s and 1970s to force everyone,

nomads included, into the money economy by taxation. They did not

differ in essentials from the old forced-labour system devised by the

French, Spanish, Portuguese and Belgian colonizers. 59

The most suggestive case of a new African state moving towards

totalitarianism was provided by Tanzania. Its leader, Julius Nyerere,

was a professional politician of the Nkrumah generation. In the

1960s, when the politicians were bowled over by the soldiers, he

contrived to survive by militarizing his rhetoric and his regime. In

1960, in reaction to the Congo crisis, he said: There is not the

slightest chance that the forces of law and order in Tanganyika will

mutiny.’ 60 In January 1964 they did so, and Nyerere barely survived

with the help of white British troops who disarmed his black army.

He then disbanded it and recreated it from scratch as a party army: ‘I

call on all members of the Tanu Youth League, wherever they are, to

go to the local Tanu office and enrol themselves: from this group we

shall try to build the nucleus of a new army.’ 61 Four days later he

announced the appointment of a Political Commissar for the Tanza-

nia People’s Defence Forces.

This conscious imitation of Leninism was accompanied by the

erection of a one-party state. In 1961 Nyerere had said he would

welcome an opposition party to Tanu: ‘I would be the first to defend

its rights.’ 62 But in January 1964, with the party youth being

reorganized as an army, he appointed a commission to design what

he termed ‘a democratic one-party state’, observing that its job was

not ‘to consider whether Tanzania should be a one-party state. That

decision has already been taken. Their task is to say what kind of a

one-party state we should have.’ 63 At the subsequent election, there

was a choice of candidates, but under the same party label (meaning

they needed Nyerere’s approval to stand) and they were not free to

raise issues. 64

The way in which Nyerere, the former pacifist, used militaristic

terminology to further his authoritarian state was ingenious and

helped to explain his remarkable appeal to the Western intelligentsia,

which led one black sociologist to coin the term ‘Tanzaphilia’. 65

Defending his suppression of human rights, such as the freedom of

speech, of the press and of assembly, Nyerere observed: ‘Until our

war against poverty, ignorance and disease has been won, we should

not let our unity be destroyed by somebody else’s book of rules.’ But

of course such a ‘war’, by definition, could never be ‘won’.

Moreover, such a ‘war’ was easily extended from internal to external

opponents: Nyerere followed Sukarno’s advice to find an enemy.

From the post-mutiny period onwards he was in the forefront of the

African leaders who demanded a concerted politico-military cam-

paign against Rhodesia, the Portuguese territories and South Africa.

The philosophy of his new authoritarian state was summed up in the

‘Arusha Declaration’ of February 1967, which stated bluntly: ‘We

are at war’ and was full of militaristic imagery and sloganizing. 66

Of course Tanzania was not at war with anybody. But the fiction

was used to justify wartime restrictions and suspension of rights. The

Arusha Declaration was an updated and Africanized version of

Bandung, and similarly redolent of the higher humbug. Anything

‘inconsistent with the existence of a classless society’ was banned.

‘No one must be allowed to live off the work done by others': that

permitted widespread arrests of ‘capitalists’, especially Asians. The

government ‘must be chosen and led by peasants and workers': that

allowed Nyerere to exclude anyone he wished from political activity.

‘Laziness, drunkenness and idleness’ were condemned: a pretext for

forced labour. ‘It is necessary for us to be on guard against internal

stooges who could be used by external enemies who aim to destroy

us': a pretext for a permanent political witch-hunt. ‘Loitering’ was

specifically condemned: a pretext for the sweep-and-search opera-

tions beloved of all black African governments, slavishly copied from

the South African police-manuals. The machinery for control was

contained in the party structure: ‘the ten-house cell’ being the basic

unit, moving up through the ward, the district, the region to the

nation. The philosophy behind Arusha was termed by Nyerere

ujamaa, ‘familyhood’, based upon a mythic past: ‘In our traditional

African society, we were individuals within a community. We took

care of the community and the community took care of us. We

neither needed nor wished to exploit our fellow men.’ 67 Ujamaa was

designed to recapture that spirit. Yet in practice it was as anti-family as any other totalitarian doctrine. Offenders were brought before

‘ten-house cell’ courts. ‘Political education officers’ handed out tracts

which, for example, stated:

The cell leader has to keep a close watch so as to detect any new faces in his

ten houses. When he sees a stranger, he must make enquiries and find out

who he is, where he came from, where he is going, how long he will remain

in the area and so on. Usually the host reports to the cell leader about his

guests and gives all the necessary information. If the leader doubts the

stories of these strangers, he must report the matter to the branch officials

or to the police. 68

Cell-leaders were given the right to detain anyone classified as

‘runaway’ (usually from forced labour) and to order ’round-ups’ of

‘miscreants’. A favourite phrase was e serikali yeze kuyesula, ‘the

government know how to unearth’. Indeed, after the 1964 mutinies

Nyerere seems not only to have flung off his British democratic

trappings but to have descended into the colony’s Prussian past. His

party militia learned the goose-step. He introduced sumptuary

legislation and sartorial uniformity. In 1968 he decided that the

Masai could not be allowed into Arusha wearing ‘limited skin

clothing or a loose blanket’ or indeed any kind of clothing termed

‘awkward’ or ‘soiled pigtailed hair’. 69 But having banned the tradi-

tional African garb, he switched the attack eight months later to

‘remnants of foreign culture’, authorizing the Tanu Youth League to

manhandle and strip African girls wearing mini-skirts, wigs and tight

trousers. 70 So girls were forbidden to wear trousers while men had to

put them on: more or less the old white missionary standard. When

the Masai complained, they were told God had forced Adam and Eve

to dress before he drove them out of Eden. 71 But the missionaries had

not set political spies in everyone’s house.

Nyerere’s ujamaa was merely the most elaborate and sanctimoni-

ous of the new authoritarian philosophies developed by the charis-

matic petty tyrants of black Africa. At the village level it was merely a

euphemism for forced collectivization. In Zambia, the same process

was termed ‘village regrouping’. Its one-party dictator, Kenneth

Kaunda, termed the national philosophy ‘humanism’. This was

derived, he said, from the truth that all people are ‘human under the

skin’. But some turned out to be more human than others. ‘Zambian

humanism’, he declared, ‘aims at eradicating all evil tendencies in

Man . . . the attainment of human perfection’, by ridding society of

‘negative human inclinations such as selfishness, greed, hypocrisy,

individualism, laziness, racism, tribalism, provincialism, national-

ism, colonialism, neo-colonialism, fascism, poverty, diseases, igno-

rance and exploitation of man by man’. 72 The list gave the state

endless scope for authoritarian action. Elsewhere, other ‘isms’ ap-

peared. Ghana produced ‘Consciencism’, Senegal ‘Negritude’. In the

Congo, President Mobutu was at a loss until he hit upon the ideal

ideology: ‘Mobutuism’.

Once the tyrannies began to appear in the early 1960s, they swiftly

graduated from the comparatively sophisticated (and bloodless)

despotisms of Nyerere’s Tanzania to resurrected horrors from

Africa’s darkest past. The gruesome comedy Evelyn Waugh had

fabricated in Black Mischief became fact. On ‘Kenyatta Day’,

October 1965, the President of Kenya, once termed by the British

governor ‘the leader of darkness and death’, now called by relieved

white settlers ‘the old man’, held a ‘Last Supper’, to commemorate

the meal before his arrest as a Mau Mau terrorist. 73 In Malawi, Dr

Hastings Banda, known as ‘Conqueror’ and ‘Saviour’, used witch-

craft to sacralize his rule. In Zaire, Joseph Mobutu banned Christian

names and re-named himself Monutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu Wa

Za Banga, freely translated as ‘the cock that leaves no hens alone’. 74

President Bongo of Gabon banned the word pygmy (he was under

five feet tall) but kept a bodyguard of giant German ex-Foreign

Legionaries, whose delight was to sing the Horst Wessel Lied at the

main hotel. 75 As the 1960s progressed, violence struck the new

African elites with increasing frequency. Two Prime Ministers of

Burundi were murdered in quick succession. The 1966 Nigerian

coup cost the lives of the Federal Prime Minister and two of the three

regional premiers. Would-be Caudillos died too: in the Congo

People’s Republic an executed brass-hat was displayed dead on TV,

his mouth crammed with dollars. Rulers showed an inclination to

carry out retribution personally. The President of Benin (formerly

Dahomey) murdered his Foreign Minister when he found him in bed

with the Presidential wife. Another Foreign Minister, this time

in Equatorial Guinea, was clubbed to death by his own head of

state.

This last incident was one of the innumerable crimes committed by

President Francisco Macias Nguema. In the poorer African states, of

which there are nearly thirty, rulers set up one-party states and in

theory disposed of absolute authority. But in practice they tended to

have little power to influence intractable events or even to arbitrate

tribal quarrels. All they could do was to tyrannize, usually by

personal violence. Macias was a case in point. He was born in the

Spanish colony in 1924, served in the administration, became

President on independence in 1968 and made himself President for

life in 1972. During the next seven years he turned the country into a

virtual prison-camp; many of its inhabitants simply fled for their

lives. A Spanish-mounted coup overthrew him on 3 August 1979,

and he was tried for ‘genocide, treason, embezzlement and systema-

tic violation of human rights’. His execution was carried out by a

Moroccan firing-squad flown in when local troops complained his

spirit was too strong for mere bullets and would return ‘as a tiger’. 76

The case of President (later Emperor) Bokassa of the Central

African Republic was similar. When the French gave the colony

independence they put in a hand-picked professional politician,

David Dako, as president. Ineffectually he tried to balance the head

of the police, Izamo, against Bokassa, who led the army, and Bokassa

proved the most agile of the trio. 77 From 1965 Bokassa was life

President and from 1977 Emperor, holding an elaborate coronation

ceremony in December attended by 3,500 foreign guests and featur-

ing an eagle-shaped throne, a crown with 2,000 diamonds and

regalia modelled on Napoleon’s coronation. It cost $30 million, a

fifth of the country’s meagre revenues. His friendship with the

expansive President Giscard d’Estaing of France, to whom he gave

diamonds, was not the least of the factors which buttressed his

regime. He celebrated his first anniversary by sacking and exiling his

eldest son, Prince Georges, for anti-paternal remarks. Two months

later, in January 1979, he slaughtered forty schoolchildren who

rioted when forced to buy uniforms made in Bokassa’s factory. In

April, between thirty and forty more children were murdered in the

Ngaragba prison, apparently in Bokassa’s presence and partly by

him, a fact established by a commission of Francophone lawyers

under Youssoupha Ndiaya of Senegal. When Giscard, alarmed by

the publicity, sent out his adviser on African affairs, Rene Journiac,

to ask the Emperor to abdicate, he was whacked on the head by the

imperial sceptre. In retaliation Giscard landed troops at Bangui on

21 September 1979, with Dako in their luggage as replacement-

president. Bokassa was given asylum in the Ivory Coast at Giscard’s

request, and was later condemned to death in absentia for murder,

cannibalism, ‘intelligence with Libya’ and fraud in gold and dia-

monds.

The Sekou Toure regime in the Republic of Guinea was little

better; Colonel Gadafy’s in Libya considerably worse; both commit-

ted the additional crime of exporting their horrors to their neigh-

bours. The most instructive case, however, was that of ‘General’

Amin in Uganda, because it illustrated so many weaknesses of the

world system in the 1970s. It was also the most tragic, for it virtually

destroyed Uganda, once the most delightful country in Africa.

Churchill, who visited it as Colonial Under-Secretary in 1908, called

it ‘that paradise on earth’, ‘that tropical garden’. ‘Uganda is a

fairy-tale,’ he wrote. ‘You climb up a railway instead of a beanstalk

and at the top there is a wonderful new world.’ 78 Uganda’s indepen-

dence was rushed through in October 1963 in accordance with

Macmillan’s ‘Winds of Change’ policy. The Baganda ruling tribe

were well-educated and always impressed Europeans by their charm.

But the country was in many ways primitive, riven by complex tribal

rivalries, racial enmity between Muslim north and Christian south

and long-standing sectarianism within the Christian communities.

Violent magic was ubiquitous. The Kakwa and Nubi of the Muslim

north drank their victims’ blood and ate their livers and believed in

the Mahdist ‘Yakan of Allah water’, which when drunk makes

soldiers invulnerable. But the sophisticated Baganda kings also

mutilated bodies for purposes of politico-religious terror. 79 To make

matters worse, Milton Obote, the professional politician installed as

Prime Minister on independence, was a narrow-minded anti-Baganda

sectarian of exceptional administrative incompetence. In 1966 he

destroyed the constitution by using Amin to storm the Kabaka’s

palace and eject him by force. When Obote, in turn, was toppled by

Amin in January 1971, many people greeted military rule with

approval as the lesser of two evils.

It is important to grasp that even at this stage Idi Amin was known

to be an exceptionally cunning and wicked man. The giant son of a

Lugbara witchwoman, he had become a Muslim at sixteen and drew

his power from the northern Kakwas and Nubis. He enlisted in the

King’s African Rifles as a boy and his promotion to officer, though

he was virtually uneducated, reflected the desperate need to avoid a

Congo-type mutiny as independence neared. He quickly acquired an

evil reputation in Kenya, fighting against cattle-rustlers. It was

discovered he had murdered Pokot tribesmen and left them to be

eaten by hyenas, got information from Karamajog tribesmen by

threatening to cut off their penises with a panga, and had actually

sliced off the genitals of eight of them to obtain confessions. He was

also known to have murdered twelve Turkana villagers. The British

authorities were themselves reluctant to prosecute one of the few

black officers on the eve of independence, and referred the case to

Obote, already Prime Minister-designate. Obote settled for a ‘severe

reprimand’, a curious punishment for mass-murder. 80 Indeed, he

promoted Amin colonel, used him to put down the Baganda and

permitted him to build up a military tribal base in the north, to

engage in large-scale smuggling of gold and ivory, to recruit Muslims

without reference to the government, to murder the only other senior

black officer, Brigadier Okoya (and his wife) in January 1970, and

thereafter to treat the army as his own. When Obote was told by the

auditor-general that £2.5 million was missing from army funds, the

Prime Minister left for a conference in Singapore, telling Amin he

wanted a ‘full explanation’ by his return. That was to invite a coup,

which Amin had already been pressed to undertake by Colonel

Gadafy and the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who wished to oust

Obote’s Israeli advisers.

Amin’s was a racist regime, operated in the Muslim-Arab interest

from the start, since he began massacres of the Langi and Acholi

tribes within weeks of taking over. In July 1971 he asked the Israelis

to help him invade Tanzania by seizing the port of Tanga; they

responded by pulling out. The British repented their support at the

same time, and thereafter Amin was Gadafy’s client. Muslims form

only 5 per cent of the population and only Libyan support made the

long tyranny possible, though Palestinian terrorists provided Amin

with his personal bodyguard and the most adapt of his executioner-

torturers. Gadafy persuaded Amin to throw out the Asians, and it

was at that point, in August 1972, that the real looting of the country

began. But it ought to be on record that Britain was shipping

armoured cars to Amin as late as December 1972. 81 Indeed, freight-

ing of scarce luxuries to Uganda from Stansted airport, an important

traffic which enabled Amin to keep up the morale of his soldiers,

continued with British government approval almost to the end of the

terror.

Surviving cabinet minutes give a unique glimpse of the emergence

of a primitive tribal tyranny in the outward forms of British

bureaucratic constitutionalism. Thus cabinet minute 131, dated 14

March 1972, read: ‘Should any minister feel that his life was in

danger from unruly crowd or dissatisfied persons, he was at liberty

to shoot to kill.’ 82 In fact it was not dissatisfied persons but the

President whom ministers feared. His Minister of Education, Edward

Rugumayo, who escaped in 1973, sent a memorandum to all African

heads of state which claimed Amin had ‘no principles, moral

standards or scruples’ and would ‘kill or cause to be killed anyone

without hesitation’. 83 His Attorney-General, Godfrey Lule, wrote:

‘He kills rationally and coolly.’ Henry Kyemba, Minister of Health,

said that it was the murder of Michael Kagwar, President of the

Industrial Court, in September 1971, which ‘revealed to the country

as a whole that the massacres were not to be limited to the army or

the Acholi and Langi’. 84 The dead soon included any public figure

who in any way criticized or obstructed Amin: the governor of the

Bank of Uganda, the vice-chancellor of Makerere University, the

Foreign Minister, the Chief Justice, dragged out of his court in broad

daylight, Archbishop Janan Luwum — the last beaten to death, along

with two cabinet ministers, by Amin himself. Amin often partici-

pated in atrocities, sometimes of a private nature. Kyemba’s wife

Teresa, matron-in-charge of Mulago hospital, was present when the

fragmented body of Amin’s wife Kay was brought in: Amin appears

not only to have murdered but dismembered her, for he kept

collections of plates from anatomical manuals. He is also said to

have killed his son and eaten his heart, as advised by a witchdoctor

he flew in from Stanleyville. 85 There can be little doubt he was a

ritual cannibal, keeping selected organs in his refrigerator.

The image of refrigerated cannibalism encapsulated the regime,

which was a grotesque caricature of a Soviet-type terror. The

traditional police simply faded away, as their senior officers were

murdered for investigating Amin’s crimes. Like Stalin, Amin had

competing security services. They included his personal creation, the

Public Safety Unit, the military police and his equivalent of the kgb,

an organization called the State Research Centre which had evolved

out of the old Cabinet Research Section and still retained its bound

volumes of the Economist. The src was run on the advice of

Palestinians and Libyans who had themselves, in some cases, had

Russian training. It usually killed with ‘sledgehammers but it was by

no means primitive in all respects. It was linked by tunnel to Amin’s

villa so that intended victims who came to see him (he liked to ask

them to cocktails) could be taken away without being seen again.

src beatings were regular affairs, carried out at specific times every

day. In contrast to Amin’s impulsive nature, there was an element of

totalitarian routine and bureaucratic order about the terror. As in the

Soviet bloc, at least two src agents were attached to Ugandan

overseas missions. Like the kgb, the src financed itself by commer-

cial activities (including drug rackets) and often killed for hard

currency. 86 Amin was not just a case of a reversion to African

primitivism. In some respects his regime was a characteristic reflec-

tion of the 1970s. His terror was a Muslim-Arab phenomenon; his

regime was in many ways a foreign one, run by Nubians, Palestinians

and Libyans.

It could be argued that the UN power-politics of the 1970s, the

ugly consequences of the relativistic morality impressed on the

organization by Hammarskjold and his school, were responsible for

prolonging the Amin regime by six terrible years. According to one

authority, the failure to take international action in 1972, when the

nature of the regime was already glaringly apparent, cost the lives of

200,000 Ugandans. Britain bore a heavy responsibility. The src

records revealed how important the ‘Stansted whisky run’ was to the

regime. British appeasement reached its nadir in June 1975 when

Amin threatened to execute a British lecturer, Denis Hills, for calling

him ‘a village tyrant’. James Callaghan, a weak Prime Minister even

by the standards of the 1970s, sent out General Sir Chandos Blair

with a letter from the Queen begging for clemency, and later he flew

to Kampala himself. But he allowed the Stansted run to continue

until 4 March 1979, the very eve of Amin’s overthrow. The only

government to emerge with credit was Israel’s, which acted vigo-

rously to save lives when Amin and the Palestinians hijacked an

airliner at Entebbe in June 1976.

Most African states actually supported Amin, in accordance with

the old Latin- American principle of ‘Caudillos stick together’. Des-

pite the revelations of his genocidal atrocities by his ex-ministers, the

oau elected him its president and all except three of its members

attended the oau summit he held in Kampala. Nyerere objected, not

so much on moral grounds as because he was an Obote ally and

rightly feared an Amin invasion. ‘By meeting in Kampala,’ he

protested, ‘the heads of state of the oau are giving respectability to

one of the most murderous administrations in Africa.’ Furious, the

oau even considered a motion condemning Tanzania. The heads of

state showered Amin with congratulations during the summit when,

having consumed parts of his earlier wife, he married a new one, a

go-go dancer from his Suicide Mechanized Unit. They applauded

when Amin was carried on a litter by four white businessmen, a

Swede holding a parasol over his head, and when the Ugandan Air

Force made a demonstration bombing on Lake Victoria against a

target labelled ‘Cape Town’ (the bombs all missed and the Air Force

commander was murdered as soon as the delegates had left), oau

heads of state again gave Amin a warm reception in 1977, and there

was no criticism of Amin whatever by the oau until 1978; even then

it was muted. 87

Most members of the UN, where the Afro-Asian-Arab and Soviet

blocs formed a majority, behaved equally cynically. As chairman of

the oau, he addressed the General Assembly on 1 October 1975 in a

rabid speech which denounced the ‘Zionist-US conspiracy’ and

called not only for the expulsion of Israel but for its ‘extinction’ (i.e.

genocide). The Assembly gave him a standing ovation when he

arrived, applauded him throughout, and again rose to its feet when

he left. The following day the UN Secretary-General and the President

of the General Assembly gave a public dinner in Amin’s honour. 88

Attempts to raise Uganda’s violation of human rights at the UN in

1976 and 1977 were blocked by African votes, which rendered Amin

the same service at the Commonwealth Conference in 1977. Even

when he invaded Tanzania on 30 October 1978, an act which led to

his downfall five months later, the oau refused to condemn him and

told Nyerere to accept mediation. For once the Tanzanian socialist

dictator dropped his verbal guard:

Since Amin usurped power he has murdered more people than Smith in

Rhodesia, more than Vorster in South Africa. But there is this tendency in

Africa that it does not matter if an African kills other Africans …. Being

black is now becoming a certificate to kill fellow Africans. 89

That, indeed, was the consequence of the morally relativistic

principle introduced by Hammarskjold that killing among Africans

was not the UN’s business; and Amin could be forgiven for thinking

the UN had given him a licence for mass-murder, indeed genocide.

The Amin regime was made possible by the philosophy of the

Bandung generation as well as by the re-emergent barbarism of

Africa. But within a year of his fall history was being rewritten. It

was claimed the applause which greeted him at the UN was ‘ironic’.

The terror was being linked to ‘imperialism’. 90 Nor did Uganda’s

sorrows end when Tanzania’s ‘army of liberation’ arrived, with

Obote in its baggage. The first thing the Tanzanians did when they

got to Kampala was to loot it. Though Amin himself was given

sanctuary in the Muslim world (Libya, then Saudi Arabia), his tribal

forces continued to occupy and terrorize part of the country. With

Nyerere’s armed backing Obote ‘won’ the 1980s elections. Obote’s

upc party and the Nyerere-controlled ‘military commission’ gerry-

mandered constituency boundaries; illegally declared 17 seats un-

contested upc victories; killed one opposition (Democratic Party)

candidate and beat up others; illegally removed fourteen returning

officers who were not upc stooges; sacked the Chief Justice and

other officials to intimidate the judiciary; and finally, after it became

clear on election night that the dp was nevertheless winning,

announced on the official radio that all results would be ‘vetted’ by

the military — whereupon the secretary to the election commission

fled for his life. The army subsequently destroyed evidence of dp

victories and Obote was declared the winner. 91 The result was

regional and tribal civil war; and mass-terrorism by three undisci-

plined and mostly unpaid ‘armies’ prolonged indefinitely the agony

of Churchill’s ‘fairy-tale land’.

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