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  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • State in Fear: Zimbabwe's tragedy is Africa's shame
    Archbishop Pius Ncube, Dr Roger Bate & Richard Tren
    July 06, 2005

    http://www.fightingmalaria.org/research.php?ID=38

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    Summary
    Robert Mugabe remains President of Zimbabwe only through corruption of the democratic process and the legal system and through suppression of opposition. Desperate to maintain power and control, he is employing tactics used against guerrilla fighters in Rhodesia in the 70s; then he was a victim, now he is the perpetrator. But while the guerrillas of the 1970s were mainly men and knew the risks they were taking, today’s victims are not just men who vote (but not fight) for the opposition but women and children too.

    The international community has done little to prevent Mugabe’s excesses and it is time to act. The G8 leaders who want to help Africa with debt relief and aid, must condition such taxpayer largesse for all African nations on improving democratic performance in Zimbabwe (and other rogue states). Recent reports that President Mbeki will finally act against the Mugabe regime and be supportive of a return to democracy should be seen against years of inaction and similar broken promises in the past. Prime Minister Tony Blair should seize this opportunity to exert pressure on President Mbeki to act in the interest of the suffering Zimbabweans and not the political elite.

    Background
    When Mugabe became the first president of the newly independent Zimbabwe in 1980, his conciliatory approach and apparent commitment to nation building generated worldwide confidence. Numerous countries came forward with support, hoping to ensure the country developed peacefully and prosperously. Apart from his ordering the largely unpublicised and tragic massacre of between 20,000 and 30,000 ethnic Matabele people in the early 1980s by the notorious North Korean-trained 5th Brigade, Zimbabwe was relatively stable. The Mugabe government invested significant amounts of money into improving health care delivery and educational standards, and achieved the highest literacy standard in Africa.

    In time, however, large-scale corruption, economic mismanagement and the increasingly vocal disgruntled war veterans began to undermine Mugabe’s popularity. An attempt by Mugabe to change the constitution and further entrench his power was thwarted in a popular referendum held in February 2000. Just days later, the government-instigated farm invasions began, leading to the collapse of the commercial farming sector. In the face of growing unpopularity, his regime responded by clamping down on opposition politics and the free press. Sham elections were held and property rights, together with any credibility in the rule of law, were destroyed. Wide scale abuse of basic human rights took place. Torture as a means of suppressing opposition escalated dramatically. The Zimbabwean economy has been in freefall for several years with rampant inflation and unemployment (even prior to Operation Murambatsvina) approaching 80 percent. A combination of price controls, politicised state distribution of maize meal and a lack of foreign currency meant that nearly every basic necessity was in short supply. An estimated 4 million Zimbabweans have been forced to eke out a living in the informal sector (such as street traders), supporting further millions, and it is these people who were targeted by Operation Murambatsvina as ‘economic saboteurs’. According to Mugabe, they, along with western imperialists, are causing the economic crisis.

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