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In
his own world of denial
Craig Timberg, Washington Post
March 14, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/13/AR2008031304286_pf.html
Johannesburg -- Author
Heidi Holland's route to her interview with one of the world's most
notorious dictators was a travelogue of decay, down crumbling streets,
past half-empty stores, through neighborhoods where hawkers touted
goods in an increasingly desperate bid to survive a once-proud nation's
collapse.
But when she arrived
at Zimbabwe's State House in Harare, the capital, that December
morning, a massive banner outside the office of President Robert
Mugabe made clear she would find little reflection -- or contrition
-- inside.
"Mugabe is Right,"
declared the wall-size banner, hung where only the president's staff
and handpicked visitors such as Holland could see it.
The interview that followed
-- a 2 1/2 -hour conversation with a man who rarely speaks to any
writer outside Zimbabwe's tightly controlled government propaganda
machine -- was like the banner: odd, boastful, unrepentant. It offered
rare insight into the thinking of Mugabe as he faces a difficult
bid for reelection this month after almost three decades of unbroken
power.
The interview included
tender moments, such as when he discussed the deaths of relatives
and his enduring "love" for Britain's royal family. But
Mugabe, 84, displayed little remorse for the actions many Zimbabweans
regard as his signature misdeeds, including the slaughter of thousands
of minority Ndebeles in the 1980s and, more recently, land invasions
that destroyed Zimbabwe's agriculture industry.
When Holland suggested
that the nation's economy was ailing, Mugabe angrily insisted that
-- contrary to hyperinflation then racing toward 100,000 percent
and all other evidence -- it was "a hundred times better"
than that of most African nations.
"Outside South Africa,
what country is like Zimbabwe?" Mugabe said. "Even now,
what is lacking now are goods on the shelves, perhaps. That's all.
But the infrastructure is there. We have our mines, you see. We
have our enterprises."
After that and several
similar comments, Holland concluded that Mugabe was profoundly out
of touch, surrounded by sycophantic aides unwilling to speak truthfully
about Zimbabwe's deterioration.
"He's not mad, but
he lives in the world in a mad kind of way," Holland said.
"He's constructed his world as this kind of bubble."
Holland, who lives in
South Africa but was raised in what is now Zimbabwe, shared a recording
of her interview for the book "Dinner With Mugabe." Its
release is scheduled for Friday.
The title comes from
an encounter between Holland and Mugabe in 1975, when he was a guerrilla
leader recently released after 11 years in prison. Holland, who
is white and was then a magazine editor, was sympathetic to efforts
to end white supremacist rule. A friend of hers arranged for Mugabe
to have dinner at her home in Harare before his departure for Mozambique,
where he took control of the insurgency that five years later forced
the white supremacist rulers of what was then Rhodesia to give way
for the creation of black-led Zimbabwe.
As dinner ended a bit
late, and it became clear that Mugabe might miss his train, Holland
frantically drove him to the station -- leaving her toddler son
home alone, asleep in his crib.
Mugabe's phone call the
next day, in which he thanked Holland for the meal and inquired
about the well-being of her son, endured in her memory as she watched
Zimbabwe rise to the forefront of African progress under his rule,
then plunge into ruin. More than 80 percent of Zimbabweans now live
in poverty, and an estimated one-quarter of the population of 12
million has fled to other countries. Millions of those left behind
receive international food aid.
In the early phases of
Holland's interview, Mugabe spoke with palpable affection for his
village's inspirational Irish priest, the Rev. Jerome O'Hea, and
his own older brother, Michael, who died from a mysterious poisoning
at age 15.
Mugabe also reminisced
about the simple pleasures of his early life, such as reading voraciously
and swimming with O'Hea and other Catholic boys in a river near
their village.
He described the land
invasions of white-owned commercial farms in 2000 not as criminal
acts but as political protests against Britain, the former colonial
ruler of Zimbabwe. He said Britain had failed to pay its fair share
to redistribute land originally taken by its settlers. War veterans
instigated the invasions, but Mugabe supported them even as many
became violent.
"They criticized
us for having allowed this form of occupation to become legal,"
Mugabe said of the British. "In fact, we didn't regard it as
legal, but we didn't disallow it because we were taking action against
the British government, who had torn up what was a legal agreement.
. . . They had reneged on it, so why look at just our own act?"
Mugabe also accepted
little responsibility for his army's killing of Ndebele civilians
-- estimates run up to 30,000 -- for supposedly fomenting rebellion
against his rule.
"You had a party
with a guerrilla force that wanted to reverse democracy in this
country," Mugabe said. "And action was taken. And, yes,
there might have been excesses, on both sides. . . . But we'd have
to start with the excesses of Ian Smith -- and the colonialists,
the British, who were still in charge, because lots of people disappeared,
lots of people died." Smith was Rhodesia's longtime prime minister.
Holland said she was
careful not to challenge Mugabe forcefully out of fear that he would
end the interview immediately. And throughout, Mugabe maintained
a tone of polite, persistent reasonableness as he made the case
for his leadership of Zimbabwe.
As Holland scribbled
notes and repeatedly flipped the tape on her recorder, Mugabe's
own video camera captured the entire interview, she said.
The only truly contentious
moment came near the end, as Holland suggested that Mugabe might
be wrong in his assertions about the supposed health of Zimbabwe's
economy. In her book, she wrote, "His eyes flashed and his
voice rose" as he predicted that a dramatic recovery was imminent.
"We don't even have
to go two years," Mugabe said. "Look at what we will do
next year, and you'll be surprised."
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