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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
A
decade of suffering in Zimbabwe: Economic collapse and political
repression under Mugabe- report
David
Coltart, Cato Institute
March 24, 2008
http://davidcoltart.com/archive/2008/385
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Executive
Summary
On
March 29, 2008, Zimbabwe will hold presidential and parliamentary
elections. Few people believe that they will be free and fair or
that Robert Mugabe and his Zimbabwe African National Union-
Patriotic Front party will fail to return to office. That is a tragedy,
because Mugabe and his cronies are chiefly responsible for an economic
meltdown that has turned one of Africa's most prosperous countries
into a country with one of the lowest life expectancies in the world.
Since 1994, the average life expectancy in Zimbabwe has fallen from
57 years to 34 years for women and from 54 years to 37 years for
men. Some 3,500 Zimbabweans die every week from the combined effects
of HIV/AIDS, poverty, and malnutrition. Half a million Zimbabweans
may have died already. There is no freedom of speech or assembly
in Zimbabwe, and the state has used violence to intimidate and murder
its opponents.
At the root of Zimbabwe's
problems is a corrupt political elite that has, with considerable
international support, behaved with utter impunity for some two
decades. This elite is determined to hang on to power no matter
what the consequences, lest it be held to account for the genocide
in Matabeleland in the early 1980s and the wholesale looting of
Zimbabwe that followed the mismanaged land reform in 2000. When
change comes to Zimbabwe, the nation will have to rediscover the
rule of law and the sanctity of persons and property. The public
discourse and the economy will have to be reopened. The new government
will have to embrace a more limited idea of government and rescind
legislation that makes the operation of the private sector next
to impossible. Moreover, the new government will have to find a
way for the people of Zimbabwe to heal the wounds caused by decades
of political violence.
*David Coltart is a member of the Parliament of Zimbabwe. Affiliated
with the Movement for Democratic Change, he represents the Bulawayo
South Constituency and serves as the shadow justice minister.
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