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Mugabe
untouchable
Tony
Hawkins, Financial Mail (SA)
July 05, 2005
http://free.financialmail.co.za/05/0701/currents/acurrent.htm
Appeal for
security council action unlikely to succeed
Harare - Spare
a thought for Anna Tabaijuka, Tanzanian economist and UN secretary-general
Kofi Annan's special envoy to Zimbabwe. She has the task of writing
a report on the impact of President Robert Mugabe's Operation Murambatsvina
(Drive Out Trash). Whatever her report says, she will be in trouble.
On Monday, British
prime minister Tony Blair, describing the situation in Zimbabwe
as "a disgrace", said he hoped her report would be the basis of
referring the matter to the UN security council. In other words
he, along with some UN top brass, is hoping for a sufficiently damning
assessment to force at least some African leaders to abandon their
support for Zimbabwe's government.
For his part,
in announcing a Z$3 trillion (US$320m) urban regeneration programme,
Mugabe hopes he has stolen the initiative in the clean-up controversy
by promising that the 250 000-300 000 people who lost their homes
and, in many instances, their livelihoods, will in fact be better
off.
Last weekend,
he promised a "positive and corrective campaign" to provide "more
decent accommodation and business shells and stalls". The government
says it will provide 1,2m new homes and residential plots by 2008.
Except for "a few negative people", he says, the operation has been
"well-received by the majority of our people".
With hundreds
of African and international and human rights organisations putting
forward a very different picture last week - describing the campaign
as one of "gross and widespread human rights violations and appalling
human misery" - Tabaijuka will find it impossible to produce a report
that both sides will accept as objective.
That she is
in Zimbabwe at all is a measure of the pressure on Annan from the
West to "do something" about Zimbabwe. But because the African Union
believes the clean-up campaign is a purely internal matter that
has nothing to do with the UN, or for that matter with the New Partnership
for Africa's Development, Annan has little leverage. Even were Tabaijuka
to produce a damning report, which is unlikely, the probability
is that the operation will soon fade from the headlines and public
consciousness.
Nor is Zimbabwe
likely to feature as more than a footnote at next week's G8 summit
at Gleneagles in Scotland. British foreign secretary Jack Straw
and EU Commission president Manuel Barroso have already been warned
off by Pretoria, while for all his Downing Street bluster on Zimbabwe
this week, Blair has put his personal reputation on the line to
secure a deal of 100% debt cancellation and the doubling of aid
to Africa's poorest countries.
Neither he nor
President Thabo Mbeki can allow events in Zimbabwe to derail their
grand design for Africa.
Though all this
might suggest yet another victory for Mugabe, it overlooks his Achilles
heel - the economy.
No-one knows
just how much the "clean-up" is costing. Mugabe has put a value
of Z$3 trillion over three years on his reconstruction programme,
but the longer-term cost of unemployment, reduced spending power,
and an estimated 300 000 pupils no longer attending school has not
been assessed.
There is no
official estimate of the size of the informal sector in Zimbabwe,
but a 2002 World Bank study suggested informal activity made up
59% of GDP - the highest in sub-Saharan Africa.
Some economists
believe that, at most, the informal economy is no more than half
that, putting a value - at current exchange rates - of around US$1,8bn
on informal activity.
Yet even on
the most conservative estimate the campaign could cost 7% of GDP,
compared with the 5% government promises to spend on reconstruction
- in a year in which the IMF team that visited Zimbabwe this month
believes GDP could fall by as much as 7%.
The surge in
government spending and borrowing comes at a time when government's
domestic debt has quadrupled in six months and when - in one day
last week - the central bank tried to float Z$2,3 trillion in treasury
bills, equivalent to almost 4% of GDP, at interest rates of 140%-156%.
Inflation, at
144%, is forecast to accelerate, while the economy slows in the
aftermath of the drought and Murambatsvina. Even if Mugabe manages
to salvage a political victory from Tabaijuka's visit, his economic
problems are steadily worsening.
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