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Zim's
Mugabe watches his people starve
By Aryeh Neier,
President of the Open Society Institute in New York
August 20, 2004
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/news/2004/August/Friday20/1311.html
SLOWLY - much too
slowly - international opinion is being mobilised to bring pressure on
the Sudanese government to halt the militia attacks in Darfur that have
killed thousands of people and displaced more than a million.
Unfortunately, nothing
is being done to stop another African government that for years has inflicted
hardship on its citizens and has now escalated the cruelty to an unprecedented
level.
Large numbers of Zimbabweans,
many of them weakened by Aids, are in danger of starving to death because
President Robert Mugabe, an elderly despot, is blocking food relief for
his people.
Mugabe is getting
away with murder - because fellow African leaders, notably his South African
neighbour President Thabo Mbeki, are defending him or ignoring evidence
against him.
Why would Mugabe block
the United Nations World Food Programme from delivering food to hungry
Zimbabweans? Last year, about half the country's 12 million people were
getting such assistance. No longer.
Mugabe says the country
is having a bumper harvest and relief is no longer needed, but it is hard
to determine whether this is true. Mugabe has shut down the country's
main independent newspaper, the Daily News. The World Food Programme has
been denied permission to assess crops. Other sources of independent information
have also been muzzled.
A few brave individuals,
such as Archbishop Pius Ncube of Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, are
still speaking out. They report that all around them, large numbers are
dying quietly of hunger and disease. Only Mugabe and his coterie claim
otherwise. They say the farms are yielding a bountiful harvest.
The farms were violently
seized under the land reform from white farmers and their black farm workers
by Mugabe's cronies and war veterans who fought in the 1970s liberation
struggle.
The world has been
down this path before. The worst famine since World War II took place
in China in the late 1950s and the early 1960s. Mao Zedong had initiated
his "great leap forward", which included radical changes in
agricultural policies. For a period, it appears, officials in Beijing
were themselves deceived about the consequences.
Loyal Communist Party
cadres from around the country sent in glowing reports about record harvests.
When Beijing began to realise that a disaster was unfolding, officials
could not acknowledge this. To do so would be to admit that Mao was responsible
for a catastrophe.
No international assistance was sought, and none was obtained. We now
know that at least 14 million people, and perhaps as many as 30 million,
starved to death because a dictatorship could not admit that the dictator
had erred. There were no independent sources of information.
The economist and
philosopher Amartya Sen, a Nobel laureate, has long pointed out that,
in our era, famines only take place when governments lack democratic accountability
and suppress the dissemination of critical information. This makes it
impossible for them to correct mistaken policies in a timely fashion.
When I first visited Zimbabwe, more than 20 years ago, the country was
known as the breadbasket of southern Africa.
Its agricultural exports
were a main source of revenue and seemed to form the basis for enduring
economic prosperity. It still had that reputation just a few years ago.
The reversal is due to the land seizures, the repressive policies enforced
to facilitate the seizures and also to the Aids epidemic.
With an adult infection
rate of more than 30%, Zimbabwe is one of the hardest-hit countries in
Africa. As elsewhere, the disease is particularly prevalent among those
in their most productive years.
One reason the Aids
epidemic has ravaged the country so severely is that Mugabe long refused
to acknowledge its presence in Zimbabwe. In the era when the disease was
associated with homosexuals, it was impossible to deal with because Mugabe
was so blatantly homophobic.
The stigma that still
attaches to those suffering from the disease, despite the sharp demographic
shift in those affected, continues to impede efforts to control its spread.
Mugabe is an effective demagogue.
Unfortunately, his
victims are his own black citizens whom he has oppressed and impoverished
and who are now dying in unprecedented numbers. - International Herald
Tribune.
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