Fatma Karume |
Why CCM should shun racists for the sake of democracy in Zanzibar
BY FATMA A. KARUME
16th January
2016 Email Print One of the placards carried by CCM Youths during the
celebrations to mark 52 years of Zanzibar’s revolution on Tuesday this week. The message in the placard
sparked public outrage as it was racist. CCM strongly apologized and condemned
such an incident but critics say the ruling party should take a good look at
itself.
I am a
product of Zanzibar. I am the result of thousands of monsoon winds that
swept people in dhows from all over the world to these tiny islands nestled in
the warm waters of the Indian Ocean on the east side of the African continent.
As the Indian Ocean merchants traded, the Swahili language
emerged and with it the Swahili people with their culture. I am proud to
be called a Swahili. I am a mixture of all those races that had the
courage and strength to cross the Indian Ocean and the African continent and
settle in Zanzibar.
At the age of 10, my great grandmother, Bi
Amani, was kidnapped from her village in Central Africa by slavers and survived
the walk across the continent and the dhow journey from Bagamoyo to Zanzibar;
my great-great grandfather came as a trader from Kutch Province in India; my
great, great, great grandfather sailed into Zanzibar from Muscat with the aid
of the ever present monsoon winds, not long after the arrival of Seyyid Said
bin Sultan, the Lion of Oman; and further still, my great, great, great, great,
great ….great grandfather sailed into Zanzibar from Persia.
I am no different from thousands of ‘Waswahili.’ We are people of the coast,
a people whose genetic make-up is a mixture of Bantu, Arab, Persian and Indian.
We have lived on the Swahili coast and in Zanzibar for centuries.
We are a testament to the history of the East African coast - and yet on
Sunday, members of the CCM youth league had the audacity to tell us that we are
not welcome in Zanzibar.
On Sunday,
January 10, 2016, two days before celebration of the 52nd anniversary of the
Zanzibar Revolution, at a CCM public rally attended by the Vice-Chairman of the
party, Ali Mohammed Shein, members of the CCM youth wing carried two placards.
Both placards informed the country and the world at large that people of
mixed race, who they referred to in a derogatory manner as ‘machotara,’, are
not welcomed in Zanzibar because we are apparently servants of the Sultan,
while, according to their views, Zanzibar is for Africans only.
The pictures
of the placards were picked by the social media whereby on Tuesday, January 12,
2016, they went viral. Everyone with Internet connection knew that the
CCM youth wing had finally shown its true colours. On Tuesday evening,
Daniel Chongolo, the CCM Acting Head of Publicity and Ideology, had the decency
and honour to issue an unreserved apology on behalf of CCM for the
discriminatory placards displayed by the CCM youth league. On the front
page of the ‘Daily News’ of Thursday, January 14, 2016, the general public was
informed that “CCM is working to identify and eventually take appropriate
action on people behind the discriminatory poster displayed by one of its
members in Zanzibar early this week,” and Nape Nnauye, the CCM Secretary for
Ideology and Publicity, was quoted as stating, “I would like to reiterate that
CCM is against all forms of segregation, and this is known all over the world.
It is unfortunate that the party is taking the blame for wrongs committed by
just a small number of our supporters.”
On Thursday,
January 13, 2016 Shaka Hamdu Shaka, UVCCM Acting Secretary General, issued a
press statement on behalf of the party. It is notable that the press
statement was devoid of an apology from UVCCM but instead accused the
opposition of fomenting racial hatred and assured the general public that CCM,
with the help of TCRA and the police, would take strong legal measures against
all those involved. So, we shall no doubt soon see another wave of
arrests instigated by CCM against members of the opposition, for daring to
bring to our attention the despicable conduct of members of UVCCM, whilst the
real culprits remain at large waiting for another occasion to display their
hateful banners.
Shaka’s
statement asked CCM members of mixed race to remain patient. Patient for what,
I wonder? And what of the mixed race citizens of this country who are not
members of CCM - are they the ‘traitors’ referred to in the message? Apparently,
UVCCM believes that patience and commanding the police to deal with the
opposition is the cure for this evil. We have seen too many members of
the opposition arrested during the election period and Shaka did not stop UVCCM
members from publishing racially hateful statements. Which brings me to
an idea that may be rather novel for UVCCM: perhaps the police should try
arresting errant members of CCM, it may bring an end to this type of illegal
conduct.
Before CCM
can deal with the racism in its party, it needs to commence by accepting some
simple truths. First and foremost, on Sunday, January 10, 2016, there
were two racist placards displayed by members of the CCM youth wing and not one
as claimed by CCM. Secondly, these placards were displayed in front of
the Vice-Chairman of CCM and other prominent members of CCM, and we did not
hear a word of condemnation from them, either at the public rally or
afterwards. Thirdly, please do not patronise us all by telling us that
you will ‘work’ on identifying the members responsible for the placards because
their pictures are all over the social media. In fact, I have them on my
phone; if you wish to see them I can ‘Whats Up’ them to you at no cost.
Fourthly, this is not the first time that CCM members have made racist
comments. CCM displays a black board called ‘Sauti ya Kisonge’ outside a
CCM maskani situated in Michenzani, in Zanzibar, which has recently taken to
displaying racist comments aimed at Arabs and people of mixed race and, of
course, Wapemba.
The people
who originate from the island of Pemba have suffered the worst excesses of
racism at the hands of CCM. Fortunately, there are people who have kept
records of this hateful propaganda. I have never heard official
condemnation for this behaviour from CCM.
Finally,
there are high-ranking members of CCM who make racist and anti-Islamic comments
during public rallies. Again this is on record. None of these people have
ever been sanctioned by CCM. Instead they are rewarded with high-ranking posts
within the party and the government. So, I am not convinced that the
blame on CCM is unfortunate. I would argue that it is well placed, and
until CCM has the courage to cut this cancer out from its midst, instead of
putting the blame on the opposition, it is unlikely that the party will be
dissociated with this hateful behaviour.
During April
and June 1994, the Interahamwe and their allied militias in Rwanda murdered
about 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The Rwandan genocide was planned and
prepared by very evil human beings who used the written word in the form of a
newspaper, including ‘Kangura’ and the spoken word in the form of ‘Radio
Television Libre des Mille Collines,’ to publish and disseminate racist and
hateful propaganda. Tutsis were referred to as ‘’cockroaches,’’ and
moderate Hutus who had married Tutsis were called, ‘’traitors.’’ Racism
became part of the culture of Rwanda. Are we any different from Rwanda
before the genocide, when the police allow members of CCM to consistently
publish racist and inflammatory comments on public blackboards and placards and
make hate speeches during public rallies with impunity? When a prominent
member of CCM can refer to Zanzibaris as problematic simply because 95 per cent
of the population professes the Islamic religion?
Fortunately,
there are people who find this conduct unacceptable, but they dare not speak
out for fear of personal attacks that will be unleashed on them by the Grand
Old Party. I am not going to quote Mwalimu’s famous speech on racism
because you all know it, and therefore ignorance is not an excuse for this atrocious
behaviour. Suffice it to say that when members of CCM make anti-Islamic
comments, thousands of Zanzibaris and I are repelled because more than 95 per
cent of our population profess the Muslim religion. When members of CCM
make racist comments against Wapemba, thousands of other Zanzibaris and I are
repelled because we have close relatives who are Wapemba. When members of CCM
make racist comments against Arabs, thousands of other Zanzibaris and I are
repelled because we have Arab relatives. When members of CCM make racist
comments against people of mixed race, CCM has lost Zanzibar because our
fathers and mothers are Africans and they too are repelled.
This
commentary is my footprint in the sands of time so that, long after I am gone,
my children and their children will know the truth rather than the legend of
CCM. They will know how CCM allowed racism and religious fervour to
invade it. The story is yet to end, either the racist elements within CCM
will destroy the party and our country or CCM will have the courage to stop the
rot that has invaded it. I suggest that
CCM takes a good look at itself and starts cleaning up the racist fringes of
the party for everyone’s sake, and, most of all, for the sake of democracy in
Zanzibar because, believe it or not, we need to have a strong and viable CCM as
a counterbalance to CUF. A CCM that remains in power with the aid of the
gun is of no use to anyone, especially Zanzibar.
Left:Mohamed Said, Salim Bimani, Awadh Ali Said Fatma Karume and Babu Ali at Channel Ten Studios, Dar es Salaam |
Ms Karume
was called to the Bar in the Middle Temple and is an advocate of the High
Courts of Tanzania and Zanzibar. She is presently Senior Litigation
Partner with IMMMA Advocates in Dar es Salaam. Email: Karume@immma.co.tz SOURCE:
THE GUARDIAN
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