<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata>
  <identifier>CcsHaroldWolpeLecture30Oct2008</identifier>
  <title>CCS Harold Wolpe Lecture 30 Oct 2008</title>
  <creator>radio continental drift</creator>
  <mediatype>audio</mediatype>
  <collection>opensource_audio</collection>
  <description>The Centre for Civil Society (UKZN) and the Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum present the Harold Wolpe Lecture, by Tendai Biti with&#13;
commentary by Bishop Rubin Phillip&#13;
30 October 2008&#13;
Venue: Howard College Auditorium, &#13;
University of KwaZulu-Natal Howard College Campus&#13;
&#13;
Presenters: Tendai Biti (Movement for Democratic Change) and Bishop&#13;
Rubin Phillip (Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum)&#13;
&#13;
That Zimbabwe's moment of truth has arrived in late 2008 partly reflects &#13;
the durability of civil society, especially grassroots and labour &#13;
advocates for democracy and socio-economic justice. These organisations &#13;
are attempting to make the transition both thorough-going in political &#13;
terms, and as free of imperialist influence as possible. But will &#13;
negotiations deliver a political deal? Is the deal dependent upon aid &#13;
and credit from the 'international community', including SA? What would &#13;
be asked in return? How can civil society safeguard Zimbabweans' civil, &#13;
political and socio-economic rights in the turbulence still ahead? &#13;
Answering these questions are two of the most qualified actors in the &#13;
Zimbabwe drama: the opposition's lead negotiator, and SA civil society's &#13;
leading church advocate for democracy and justice in Zimbabwe.&#13;
&#13;
Tendai Biti is the Secretary-General of the Movement for Democratic &#13;
Change (MDC-Tsvangirai) in Zimbabwe and its lead political negotiator. &#13;
In 1988-89 as Secretary General of the University of Zimbabwe Student &#13;
Union, Biti led student protests against government censorship in &#13;
academia and against the early forms of Mugabe's IMF-inspired Economic &#13;
Structural Adjustment Programme. He served as a lawyer during the 1990s, &#13;
and was active defending many civil society groups. In 1999 he helped &#13;
found the MDC and in June 2000 was elected Member of Parliament for &#13;
Harare East. He has been arrested and beaten by police while advocating &#13;
democracy on numerous occasions.&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Rubin Phillip is Anglican Bishop of KwaZulu-Natal. He is &#13;
chairperson of the Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum and Co-Chair of the &#13;
Solidarity Peace Trust, and is a board member of the SA Liaison Office, &#13;
a policy research group for Zimbabwe. He also chairs the KZN Council of &#13;
Churches. In April he and transport workers turned back a Chinese ship &#13;
aiming to unload military equipment destined for Mugabe, from the Durban &#13;
harbour and other Southern African ports.&#13;
&#13;
thanks to the Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum and SA Liaison Office, Rosa &#13;
Luxemburg Foundation, and Harold Wolpe Memorial Trust.&#13;
Transport and refreshments are offered for civil society organisations&#13;
contact:&#13;
http://www.ccs.ukzn.ac.za&#13;
&#13;
The Zimbabwean leader's talk, which explains the recent breakdown in Zanu(PF)/MDC negotiations and the need for international civil &#13;
society solidarity, was rebroadcast on 31 October by SW Radio Africa: &#13;
http://www.swradioafrica.com/ &#13;
&#13;
(apologies, editors, we worked hard to clear up the 'popping'. tracks 01, 03, 06 are ok. the others need attention)&#13;
contact: long_walk_abridged@yahoo.co.uk&#13;
radio continental drift</description>
  <subject>Zimbabwe; Tendai Biti; Movement for Democratic Change; Bishop Rubin Phillip; Zimbabwe Solidarity Forum; Centre for Civil Society; Durban; South Africa</subject>
  <licenseurl>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/</licenseurl>
  <publicdate>2008-10-31 11:07:46</publicdate>
  <addeddate>2008-10-31 10:53:11</addeddate>
  <uploader>long_walk_abridged@yahoo.co.uk</uploader>
  <updater>radio continental drift</updater>
  <updater>radio continental drift</updater>
  <updatedate>2008-10-31 13:38:51</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2008-10-31 15:27:10</updatedate>
  <updatedate>2008-11-17 18:12:38</updatedate>
  <updater>radio continental drift</updater>
</metadata>
