posted on 2005-11-01, 15:01authored byR. Paul Sturges, Mbenae Katjihingua, Kingo J. Mchombu
The Namibian liberation struggle, 1966-1990, is discussed as an
information war, rather than a military conflict, so as to explore the dimensions of
information activity under conditions of conflict. This builds upon the idea, expressed
by participants in earlier struggles of this kind, that the contest for ‘hearts and minds’
is more significant than the armed confrontation that accompanies it. A model that
incorporates information and communication activity by both contestants, at their
command centres, in the field and in the media was elaborated in a previous paper,
using data from a number of conflicts mainly in Southern and Central Africa. The
present paper focuses on the Namibian struggle so as to examine the capacity of the
model to assist in explaining the outcomes of the conflict. Using published sources,
printed archive material and oral testimony, the range of information inputs, the
incidence of suppression of information and information outputs are set out in the
pattern provided by the model. This shows how both sides used covert intelligence
gathering, secret communication, propaganda and disinformation, accompanied by
censorship and the suppression of critical comment by force to further their
political/military aims. Whilst South Africa and its Namibian military structures were
generally successful in armed confrontation with the chief liberation organisation
(SWAPO)’s forces, they were not able to bring the conflict to a successful military
conclusion. This was because SWAPO’s attention to the diplomatic war, based on
strong and consistent information flows, convinced the United Nations and other
allies to press for a negotiated solution. Once this was agreed, the success of the
liberation movement’s news and education campaigns in attaching the people to the
cause of liberation was revealed by SWAPO’s overwhelming success in free elections
in 1989.
History
School
Science
Department
Information Science
Pages
88203 bytes
Citation
STURGES, P., KATJIHINGUA, M. and MCHOMBU, K., 2005. Information in the national liberation struggle: modelling the case of Namibia (1966-1990). Journal of Documentation 61(6).