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A
moral duty to act there
Peter Oborne, Centre for Policy Studies (CPS)
January, 2003
http://www.cps.org.uk/pdf/pub/12.pdf
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Introduction
If Rwanda happened again today
we would have a moral duty
to act there. - Tony Blair, Labour Party Conference Speech, 2 October
2001.
THERE IS LITTLE
TIME LEFT. Zimbabwe has passed through crisis into catastrophe,
and gone beyond fear into terror. Her people have fallen from poverty
into desperation. They have made the sordid and degrading journey
from hunger into starvation: famine beckons. No more than a few
months remain until this recently prosperous and law-abiding country
falls over the edge and becomes a failed state. The innocent may
die in their millions. Only the evil and rapacious will thrive.
Robert Mugabe,
the President of Zimbabwe, is waging war on his own people. The
famine that looms for 7 million Zimbabwean citizens - more than
half the population - is no natural disaster.1 There is indeed a
drought in Southern Africa, and it is indeed causing widespread
suffering. But Mugabe has taken advantage of the drought to starve
and terrorise his people.
The prospect
of famine has handed Mugabe a new weapon. Maize is the national
subsistence food. Once it has been ground down in the mills it is
turned onto a porridge-like substance known to the people as 'mealie
meal'. Mealie meal is as ubiquitous, and as essential for the nourishment
of the population at large, as the potato was in Ireland before
the great famine of 1846-47.
A moral duty
to act there
President Mugabe has seized control of the supply of mealie meal.
He insists that it is marketed and distributed through state agencies
to ensure that he can dictate who is worthy of food aid. Private
operators are not permitted to procure or sell mealie meal. Generous
supplies of maize exist on Zimbabwe's borders, waiting to be brought
in. But this the President will not allow. His objective is to ensure
that mealie meal is supplied only to the supporters of his own Zanu-PF
ruling party, and forbidden to the opposition. So far, through ruthless
use of the state machinery, and aided and abetted by his authorised
thugs, Mugabe has been successful in his objective: hence the famine.
Zimbabwe can
be saved, but only if Britain and the world wake up. Given the political
will, it would be easy to restore Zimbabwe to prosperity and freedom.
It took 78 days to bomb Serbia into submission during the Kosovo
conflict. Mugabe and his henchman could be brought to their knees
within weeks, merely by cutting off the fuel supply to this landlocked
state. In particular, it is hard to find words strong enough to
condemn the indifference shown by President Mbeki to the tragedy
taking place on his northern border.
Yet there is
no political will to act. Too many people have accepted Robert Mugabe's
own false narrative that he is fighting a post-colonial battle against
racist white farmers. This claim has gained him sympathy among some
neighbouring states. But above all, it has cut ice among the liberal
élites in the west. For some, Mugabe's rants have provided
an excuse for inertia. For Mugabe, though, they are an alibi for
genocide. The white farmers are a statistical pinprick in the Zimbabwean
tragedy. There were just 4,000 before the land seizures began two
years ago, and less than 500 today. The victims of Mugabe's oppression
are not the whites, but the black Zimbabwean people. It is reckoned
that 1.5 million black Zimbabwean farm workers and their families
have been flung off the land and into camps in the past 30 months.
Four times that number are starving. It is for those people, and
emphatically not on behalf of the whites, that the world must act.
It must act with compassion. It must act with conviction. It must
act today.
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