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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Mugabe's role in raids debated
Craig Timberg,
Washington Post Foreign Service
July 28, 2005
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/27/AR2005072702154.html
JOHANNESBURG -- A
scathing U.N. report last week condemned the demolition of slums across
Zimbabwe and called for criminal prosecutions of those responsible. But
the report stayed silent on the next obvious question: Who are they?
The demolitions are
now in their third month, and the community of Porta Farm in suburban
Harare, which was first destroyed in June, was attacked again in recent
days. But no senior official has taken responsibility, and President Robert
Mugabe, while defending the campaign, has never said publicly that it
was his idea.
As a result, debate
has intensified in Zimbabwe over whether Mugabe, at 81, still wields total
control over the national government and whether his once-legendary political
savvy has begun to dim after 25 years in power.
"We have a president
who has lost it," said Mugabe's former information minister, Jonathan
Moyo, who was fired in February but has reemerged as an independent member
of parliament and leading critic of the government. "I do not accept
that he is really the one who ordered that. It is the powers around him."
Moyo's contention
was echoed by Pearson Mbalekwa, a former legislator who resigned from
the ruling party this month to protest the slum demolitions.
"The pace at
which he appreciates things, the way he perceives things, has really changed
drastically," Mbalekwa said in a recent interview in Harare. "This
is not the Robert Mugabe we knew. It's a human inevitability. When you
reach that age, you lose touch with what is happening."
Other critics contend
that only Mugabe could have orchestrated such a massive, countrywide effort.
Since May 19, an estimated 700,000 people have been made homeless or have
lost their jobs as police stormed through poor neighborhoods, destroying
homes and informal markets.
"He is thoroughly
in control," said John Makumbe, a political commentator at the University
of Zimbabwe.
Mugabe has praised the demolition campaign as necessary, saying in the
May 28 edition of a government-owned newspaper, "Our cities and towns
. . . had become havens for illicit and criminal practices and activities
that just could not be allowed to go on."
Officials have periodically
asserted that the program was about to end, but reports of demolitions
continued after the U.N. report was released Friday. Several thousand
residents of Porta Farm who were beginning to rebuild their homes faced
new evictions Saturday and Tuesday, according to news reports.
On Thursday, police
also raided churches that were sheltering victims of the campaign in Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe's second-largest city.
Makumbe, speaking
from Harare, said that when ruling party members complained about the
demolition campaigns, they were told Mugabe had ordered them personally
and would tolerate no criticism.
But while he reiterated
the perception that the president remained in control, Makumbe also acknowledged
that the growing international condemnation of Zimbabwe pointed up Mugabe's
deterioration. The president is currently in China seeking aid, but Makumbe
said aides in the his office described him as often napping at his desk.
"He has run out
of steam," Makumbe said. "He is old. He is essentially senile.
He sleeps most of the time."
The U.N. report, by Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka of Tanzania, says the demolitions
violate international law and might amount to a crime against humanity.
It urges prosecution in relation to several deaths attributed to the campaign.
Yet it is quiet on what role, if any, Mugabe might have played in conceiving,
directing or supporting the effort.
"It appears that
there was no collective decision-making with respect to both the conception
and implementation," the report says. "Evidence suggests it
was based on improper advice by a few architects of the operation."
Elsewhere, the report mentions "over-zealous officials, each with
their own agendas." It notes that two officials, the Reserve Bank
governor and the minister for the capital area, gave speeches this spring
citing the need to crack down on dirty streets and illegal trading.
The report also recalls
Mugabe's role as a liberation hero in Zimbabwe in the 1970s and ranks
him with South Africa's Nelson Mandela in "an exclusive club"
of African leaders renowned for fighting racism and colonialism on the
continent.
But Mbalekwa, who
first met Mugabe in the mid-1980s and soon after joined his feared secret
police, said the old Mugabe was long gone.
"Maybe he has
been there a little too long, maybe he is no longer listening to the wishes
of the people," Mbalekwa said. "He is no longer the Robert Mugabe
of yesteryear, that energetic man . . . who was an inspiration to everyone,
that man whose traits were admired across the breadth and length of Africa."
The president "is
too old, and his mortality is beckoning," Moyo said. He "is
no longer in total control of things, not even of himself."
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