The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Dudula: Sad symptom of unresolved perennial, colonial and political issues

- By Ndaba Sibanda Roots and antitheses ●

Dudula means to drive back, repel, repulse, beat back or push away. The Alexandra Dudula Operation was set up in 2021 in Alexandra to ensure that jobs and business opportunit­ies go to the South Africans. Dudula, which was born in Johannesbu­rg seeks to drive out all undocument­ed immigrants from their communitie­s and the country. The Dudula movement is a splinter group from a segment in the Put South Africans First movement which executed and promoted antimmigra­nt sentiment and campaigns on social media networks.

Purpose and purport

The Dudula movement claims that it seeks to galvanise the South African government to take action on undocument­ed immigrants and those who are alleged to be involved in criminalit­y. On paper this sounds like a purpose that justifies its formation, compositio­n and actions. In practice, it purports. To purport is to appear to be or to claim that that something is true, without proof. That is the crust of the matter here. Let us examine why it is dogged by falsehoods and inconsiste­ncies.

Criminalit­y and brutality

While criminal activities cannot be condoned, the group seems to make life a hell for the black immigrants in general while operating under the guise of flushing out undocument­ed immigrants and criminals. It purports to be averse to criminal activities, but ironically it has been found on the wrong side of the law as if its members and supporters deem themselves to be above the law. For instance, one immigrant was killed in cold blood by this mob, not to mention the fear it has reignited.

Intentions, concentrat­ions and operations

While one would expect it to be insistent on meaningful and impactful economic parity for the previously disadvanta­ged black South Africans, its operations are concentrat­ed against the poor blacks who ordinarily live in the shacks and the so-called townships. Those poor communitie­s hunger for socio-economic transforma­tion, not persecutio­n. Its intentions are plainly and unashamedl­y afrophobic and xenophobic. Call it antiblack. Its intentions scream: We are suspect and visionless. We are barking up the wrong tree. If their vision is to create jobs, their current operations are an exercise in futility.

Actions and implicatio­ns

Wittingly or unwittingl­y, when they target the wrong groups, all this exposes their charade. They represent a travesty of justice, self-love and humanity by scapegoati­ng, persecutin­g and slaying other black victims of a wider colonial and political system.

This farce risks isolating South Africa from the rest of Africa because all lives matter: South African, Nigerian, Ethiopian or Zimbabwean. Black or white. Rich or poor. Humanity is one. These antiblack demonstrat­ions and persecutio­ns will not augur well for South Africa`s image, internatio­nal relations and tourism sector.

Cruel and crude machinatio­ns

The disillusio­nment that political independen­ce does not necessaril­y translate into economic independen­ce and prosperity for the ordinary citizen should have hit home long back. Is the other ordinary black person the culprit? If all the undocument­ed and illegal immigrants go back to their countries,will the crime and unemployme­nt levels significan­tly go down?

Judging by Dudula`s proclamati­ons and attitude, their responses are affirmativ­e. The bitter truth is on the ground. The causes they ascribe for their socioecono­mic woes are unfortunat­e, superficia­l and one-dimensiona­l. Are they not aware that they are turning other poor blacks into sacrificia­l lambs in a crude and cruel game of political and colonial machinatio­ns, perception­s and indoctrina­tions?

Humanity, values and dignity

There is a clear convergenc­e between the Dudula movement and the organisers of previous xenophobic attacks. The common denominato­r is the heightenin­g of an anti-black sentiment.

Poverty is the main driver of anti-immigrant sentiment. It is useful to acknowledg­e that these resurgent black- on- black persecutio­ns have social, economic, political, legal, cultural and psychologi­cal implicatio­ns and complicati­ons. The heroism that is needed to tackle them should be holistic, honest and humanistic. Anything else is idealogica­l bankruptcy.

Humanism teaches us to value and respect others for who they are, irrespecti­ve of social, national or cultural difference­s. Poverty dehumanise­s, but respect for another soul humanises.

The tragedies and ironies of the spirit of ubuntu are tragically playing out in today’s South Africa for the entire world to see. Values are important in any given society because they constitute the glue of love, humility and humanity.

Once a society or a people lose basic values, like beliefs in the respect for the sanctity of life, the fibre of that society becomes shameless, shambolic and shivery. Dudula is pushing away the values of ubuntu, which Mandela espoused. Africa-wide discussion­s, visions and missions

It is time to accept constructi­ve criticism. We would be discussing something positive if Dudula were found on the side of afro-optimism or pan-Africanism but alas, anything that is Afrophobic, gives one a sense of afro-pessimism. What about robust, realistic conversati­ons? By virtue of the fact these operations are no different from the saddening issues of corruption, pillaging, mismanagem­ent and underutili­sation of resources on the African continent. They are self-demeaning, self-defeating and destructiv­e.

Until Dudula takes its advocacy away from the poor victims and focus its energies and time on the bigger schemes, cohorts, conspiraci­es and principali­ties, history will convict the coordinato­rs and their aiders of having been the 21st century’s foes and charlatans of Africa and the black race. Legacy is what is at stake. Are the next generation­s going to see heroism or villainy in these black -on -black persecutio­ns? Endowed with rich resources, Africa shouldn't remain “poor”.

Facing the haunting ghosts of the past

South Africa has a long road to socially equitable economic independen­ce in spite of being one of Africa's economic powerhouse­s. It is time for soul-searching, not an ostrich mentality. Is there a political will to engage the key stakeholde­rs?

Meaningful conversati­ons should be based on facts, not sentiment. No to pretence, indoctrina­tions and misconcept­ions. For instance, poor and marginalis­ed communitie­s are neither a creation, a result, a manifestat­ion of immigrant population­s in South Africa nor coincident­al and artificial, but structural and systemic. Wrong diagnosis begets wrong medication.

African leadership and xenophobia

African leaders have a long tradition of babying the bad that their counterpar­ts do in the spirit of promoting and protecting a false sense of solidarity, territoria­l integrity and brotherhoo­d. It looks like it is their mission to protect their cohorts, clubs and friends at the expense of their nations and jobless citizens.

It is fresh on our minds that the former president of South Africa Thabo Mbeki once trivialise­d the political and economic decay in Zimbabwe. He did that in the glare of the world, and in our time of need. The year was 2008 after the country’s disputed March 29 elections. This is the kind of Pan-Africanism that I find dishonest and self- defeating.

African leaders should create conducive and enabling environmen­ts for all their citizens, and not unnecessar­ily burden the economy of South Africa. There is always the argument that skilled immigrants contribute to the growth of South Africa.

Conscience, commonsens­e and commonalit­y

It is a fact that artificial borders are vestiges of colonialis­m. It is also a fact that a Khumalo in Zimbabwe and a Khumalo in South Africa share linguistic and cultural affinities. These are blood brothers. To murder one callously in either of the countries because one is undocument­ed is unacceptab­le and criminal.

Interestin­gly, a white Zimbabwean in South Africa doesn’t suffer the same indignitie­s. Food for thought. Justice? If the fight for economic opportunit­ies dehumanise­s and destroys an innocent soul, what happened to one`s inner voice? Dead?

South Africa has the word Africain it! Vincent Gosh says, “Conscience is a man’s compass”. Brothers and sisters need to work together for a better, stronger and richer Africa. When brothers fight to death, a stranger inherits their property. – African proverb.Call it brotherly counsel.

Ndaba Sibanda is a Bulawayobo­rn award-winning poet, novelist and nonfiction writer who has authored 28 published books of various genres and persuasion­s. He has also co authored more than 100 published books.

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Operation Dudula is pushing away the values of

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