By Takura Zhangazha*
South African president Cyril Ramaphosa recently returned from
what is now a controversial bi-lateral meeting with his USA counterpart Donald
Trump. It was evidently controversial in
its public live streaming by the mainstream media and social media platforms. This was mainly because the media framed
it as ‘ambush’ of Ramaphosa by Trump on the issue of an alleged ‘white genocide’
happening in South Africa.
An alleged genocide that is patently untrue.
But had been built up as a major diplomatic
relations issue between the two countries because of the USA recently offering
refugee status to white Afrikaners on
the basis of the same allegations of 'white genocide.'
I would not however refer to this bilateral meeting between
the two presidents as an ‘ambush’ similar to the one that occurred with Ukraine’s
Vladimir Zelensky.
Instead this was supposed to be a well-planned, well- choreographed
meeting on the part of both countries with a specific focus on as Ramaphosa
said ‘resetting’ their bilateral relations.
Both in their diplomacy and also their trade agreements.
Even on the part of Trump, his spokespersons had publicly
indicated that they were not inviting Ramaphosa in order to embarrass him.
Well it turns out they did not only embarrass him but also
humiliated his team. It was a clear
charade in which where one was watching it streamed live on social media, as a
black African, you could only wince in pain at the absurdity and racist tone of
it all.
And as a black African it definitely induced an immediate sense
of anger at how an African sitting head of state can be trivialized to the
extent that occurred in the White House.
Moreso by a white American president.
Or even as to why Ramphosa took white business and celebrity Afrikaners as a key diplomatic move who when they were preferentially allowed to talk were busy undermining African history and their own South African state.
One of them even praised the USA for helping with
the ‘Angola war’ forgetting that at that time the Americans were firmly on the
side of the apartheid government against the liberation movements.
Now the criticisms of anyone, particularly black African,
who has expressed angst and disgust at the way Ramaphosa is being treated as though we are being too emotional. Surprisingly
this criticism is also coming from black Africans who in the main purport to
have ‘business lenses’ to all matters African.
The latter are busy praising Ramaphosa for remaining calm/
mature in what they are calling either an emotional diplomatic storm or
necessary engagement for the purposes of achieving the business goals of the
interaction.
With all due respect calling this incident anything other than
the humiliation it was is nonsense. And
signals the highest levels of our African inferiority complexes.
And I will not go deeply into the Malcolm X narratives that defined what a ‘house negro’ or a ‘field negro’ can be.
In this instance I would just hazard to argue that Ramaphosa and his team were being treated and accepting being treated as ‘house negroes’ at the White House.
In front of
a glaring global mainstream and social media and under the aegis of Elon
Musk.
But beyond this, there are more important issues that we must now learn from this diplomatic disaster that was visited upon South Africa and by default Africa. (I am not sure what head of an African state will next visit Trump without similar treatment)
And I will outline at least three.
The first being that we need to understand the importance of retailing our historical and organic Pan Africanist ideological and cultural pretext as Africans. Even if we are presidents or government minsters as we interact with global superpowers or even among ourselves. Now this new organic Pan Africanism is not about business or fawning to private capital. It is also about our own cultural and historical identity which must always be apparent when we interact with the rest of the world. And our presidents and prime ministers must always bear this in mind. Especially in their public interactions with the global north.
Business can and should generally be part of how Africa
interacts with the rest of the economic world but it is not the priority as Ramaphosa
tried and failed to demonstrate with Trump.
It is about respecting our history, culture and liberation struggle
legacies anew and for setting an example to younger Africans of this. Even as time, technology and global interests
in the African continent shift.
In the second instance, linked to the first, is that as Africans we now need to re-learn how to hold our own in international affairs. This is beyond strategic plans such as the African Union’s Agenda 2063 or the African Free Trade Continental Agreement (AFCTA).
Being feted as politically
correct in the global north may help but it is essentially a veneer that
dismisses the principles of the United Nations (UN) of universal equality of
all human beings. A point that the global
north increasingly electorally pushes back against.
Thirdly and finally, what happened with Ramaphosa and Trump
is part of an emerging cultural, political and economic complex that directly
affects young African minds in a negative way.
The incident to all intents and purposes was designed to put Africans in
their place about global power and what race ultimately controls it.
And to this add the fact of the techno-feudal entrepreneurs
as represented by Musk and the social media platforms that they privately own
and how they influence young Africans today.
So the impression of power and its origins even against a sitting South
African president creates and exacerbates an inferiority complex among young
Africans. To the extent, and as seen by
arguments being made from the ‘master’s house’ on social media that if you can’t beat them,
join them. Or if they really don’t want you, just pander to their whims as Ramaphosa
tried to do.
To conclude, what happened between South and the USA this week is emblematic of Africa’s placement in world. Going forward we need to revamp our Pan Africanism, understand our colonial and post-colonial political-economic histories, make new global friends that treat us equally.
But
perhaps above all else, we need to be more resolute and believe in ourselves,
our historical struggles and remember that in the final analysis, the majority
of us Africans are in the Malcom X sense the more revolutionary ‘field negroes.’
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.com)
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