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Under
dictator, Zimbabwe slides into chaos
Jason Beaubien,
National Public Radio (NPR)
October 10, 2006
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6243668
Over the past
two decades, poverty rates in every region of the globe went down
-- except in sub-Saharan Africa, where war and disease have hampered
development. But dictatorial leaders, who cling to power as their
countries crumble, are also to blame.
No place is
that more evident than in Zimbabwe, where President Robert Mugabe
has overseen the downfall of one of Africa's most promising nations.
During Mugabe's
first two decades in power, Zimbabwe grew into one of the most prosperous
nations in sub-Saharan Africa. Its beef was prized in specialty
shops in Europe. Its tobacco farms generated more than $7 billion
a year in sales. Literacy rates were some of the highest in the
developing world. Zimbabwe still had problems, but compared with
the rest of Africa, things were going relatively well.
But in the late
1990s, things started to fall apart.
The tipping
point was the disclosure that allies of Mugabe had looted a pension
fund for war veterans. When the veterans demanded compensation,
Mugabe told them to help themselves to white-owned farms.
"There was no
need for things to go the way they did, given that government was
declaring a policy on land," says Jonathan Moyo, who served as Mugabe's
information minister during the height of the chaotic land-reform
movement. Moyo has since fallen out of favor with Mugabe and is
now one of the president's harshest critics.
Zimbabwe's violent
land-reform program drove most of the country's white commercial
farmers off their land. Many of the farms ended up in the hands
of Mugabe's allies, including, at the time, Moyo. Other farms disintegrated
into chaos.
Moyo says the
farm invasions, which included the killing of white farmers, were
orchestrated by Mugabe.
Land reform
was not a spontaneous uprising by black peasants, as Mugabe likes
to portray it, Mayo says. The movement which destroyed the country's
agricultural economy was, in fact, government policy, the former
minister says.
By 2003,
Zimbabwe was facing shortages of food, fuel and foreign currency.
In the capital Harare, lines of beat-up cars stretched for blocks
outside gasoline stations. Some people had been waiting for days
to get fuel.
Zimbabwe's fuel
shortage was driven in large part by the government setting the
price of gas at 20 cents a gallon and refusing to raise it. Price
controls also caused shortages of most staple foods.
Ever since land
reform, Zimbabwe, which used to be the regional breadbasket, has
been unable to produce enough food to feed its own people.
And it isn't
just agriculture that Mugabe's regime has driven into the ground.
Schools, hospitals and sewage-treatment plants are falling into
disrepair.
After Zimbabwe's
urban centers voted heavily against Mugabe's ruling party in 2005,
the government launched an urban-cleanup campaign that destroyed
the homes and businesses of about 700,000 people.
This year,
inflation has risen above 1,000 percent. John Robertson, an economist
in Harare, says the country's hyper-inflation is being driven primarily
by the government borrowing money to cover recurring costs such
as wages and operating expenses.
Like a shopaholic
bingeing on credit cards, Zimbabwe is frantically digging itself
deeper and deeper into debt.
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