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Expert
presents 'Road Map' for post-Mugabe Zimbabwe
Catherine
Maddux, VOA News
September 14, 2006
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-09-14-voa72.cfm
Zimbabwe is
in the midst of an unprecedented economic and political free fall.
With skyrocketing inflation rates, declining agricultural production
and repressive political and media policies, Zimbabwe is a nation
in crisis. One long-time Zimbabwe watcher has proposed a plan to
help put the nation, once proudly known as Africa's "breadbasket,"
on the road toward economic and political recovery.
Todd Moss, senior
fellow at the Center for Global Development, says the story of Zimbabwe's
decline is tragic. He says the nation began its post-British-colonial
era with a measure of true economic strength.
"At independence
in 1980, Zimbabwe had a fairly diversified economy," he said.
"In fact, it was a very robust economy that had just survived
an extended period of trauma, and, at independence, was in a very
good position to lead Africa as a kind of model going forward."
Speaking at
a recent forum at the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International
Studies, Moss said independent Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia, had
achieved political stability, despite lingering racial tensions.
"Politically,
it was sort of a model of racial reconciliation," he added.
"Obviously, there were racial tensions during the colonial
period, but for the most part, the previous white Rhodesians - white
Zimbabweans - largely withdrew from politics. But politically, it
was also somewhat of a success story."
All that good
fortune began to erode in the early
1990s, says Moss, when Zimbabwe's economy cooled, and official corruption
rose along with the nations' debt level.
Moss says the
point of no return for Zimbabwe began six years ago, when the first
credible opposition movement was formed, the Movement for Democratic
Change. Perhaps more important to the country's decline, he says,
was the land reform program instituted by President Robert Mugabe,
the country's only leader since independence.
Zimbabwe's land
reform program was designed to redistribute white-owned commercial
farms to poor, landless blacks.
Moss says the
implementation of the program, often violent and used to reward
President Mugabe's political friends, has been devastating. Thousands
of farmers have been forcibly evicted, and, in their absence, tracks
of once highly productive land have stalled, amid a combination
of bad policy and a withering drought.
The Zimbabwean
ambassador to the United States, Machivenyika Mapuranga, attended
Moss's seminar, and he strongly defended land reform. He called
it successful, and a much needed redress from the British colonial
era that has now created racial equity.
"Eighty
percent of Zimbabweans are peasants," he explained. "Getting
them out of the reservations and giving them productive land. [And
now] 320,000 families have been resettled. You cannot call them
cronies of Mugabe! We are talking about a substantial part of the
peasant population. Where you used to have just a handful of black
farmers in commercial farming business, now you have 40,000. This
is the equity that we were fighting for."
Moss questioned
the ambassador's numbers, calling them highly doubtful. In response,
the ambassador angrily walked out of the forum.
Moss went on
to propose steps the international community could take to help
restore prosperity in Zimbabwe.
They include
tightening sanctions, exposing the government's propaganda, pushing
to get Zimbabwe expelled from the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
and applying more U.S. diplomatic pressure.
The focus, Moss
says, should be on the future, when President Mugabe is no longer
in power.
"While
all these short terms things are kind of pushing around the margins,
there's a more important thing that the West can do to help Zimbabwe.
And this is really to think ahead, and to do some contingency planning,
for the transition is coming at some point," he noted.
By transition,
Moss means the inevitable end of the 26-year rule of the 82-year-old
president.
At that time,
Moss says, Zimbabwe should be thought of by donors as what he calls
a "post-conflict" situation.
"We have
had political violence and social trauma. There are militias. There
have been gross human rights violations. There has obviously been
an economic collapse; not only on the scale of a war zone, but worse,"
he added. "Maize, the staple crop, is now down to a fraction
of what Zimbabwe can produce. They are importing food. The infrastructure
is collapsing. And really, unfortunately, the country is past the
point of a quick rebound."
He says international
donors must be ready and willing to respond quickly.
"One example
of this is, they put in a lot of money upfront to try to steer the
country, to get it on a recovery path early, rather than sitting
back and waiting," he said. "In terms of political support,
there could be an international effort to smooth the transition,
depending on how it unfolds. There would definitely have to be some
kind of security forces reform. That will have to be dealt with,
and, actually, the U.S., in particular, has a pretty good record
on helping reform the security sector."
Another key
element to help rebuild Zimbabwe, according to Moss, is the creation
of a truth and reconciliation commission, or a war crimes tribunal
to address the issue of severe human rights abuses.
And, there should
be an immediate effort to deal with humanitarian needs among poor
Zimbabweans suffering under a shattered economy. Among them are
hundreds-of-thousands of people made homeless last year, when the
government destroyed homes and businesses as part of an urban rationalization
scheme.
Finally, Moss
says, there must be a deliberate effort to court private investors,
especially highly skilled Zimbabweans who have left the country,
amid its collapse.
The United States
has condemned human rights abuses in Zimbabwe and imposed some sanctions.
However, the U.S. continues to provide humanitarian assistance to
Zimbabwe.
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