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The truth behind the South African government loan to Zimbabwe
R Muvambi
August 17, 2005
You can contact Mr
Muvambi at bhinyadanger@yahoo.com
While we Zimbabweans
may desperately need the so called US$1 billion loan from S.A the South
Africans need to be careful with their own president as they are still
very green to the goings on in African politics and its leadership.
Firstly for Zimbabweans,
all we know is we owe the IMF, World Bank, Europeans, Libyans, the US
and lately the Chinese millions of dollars but we do not know exactly
how much we owe them. All we know is what the government tells us. As
for the South Africans, all they know is what their government tells them-if
not what Mbeki tells them as well.
The IMF- maybe due
to banking ethics would never or have never told us as citizens of Zimbabwe
exactly how much we owe them either by way of public bank statement or
by any other public means, hence we will never rely on whatever the government
will state as being owed. In the same breath whatever we have repaid in
loan repayment or in arrears payment for the period 2003 to 2005 is what
Dr Gono told us. Again the IMF may never confirm the same figures back
to us.
Herein lies the ruse.
How many movies have we watched whereby a genuine bank robbery not only
enriches the robbers but also the bank employees and the policemen? The
bank officers may take advantage of the late arrival of the police to
line their pockets. The police may also quickly help themselves to whatever
loot the robbers dropped whilst on the run. The worst part is when there
is connivance and stage management between any two of these people or
amongst the whole lot.
It is not a secret
that at the end of his second term in office Mbeki is not eligible for
reelection unless of course he convinces the SA lawmakers to amend the
SA constitution to allow him a third term which is very unlikely. Indeed
one makes hay while the sun shines, Mbeki needs a good retirement package
not what is offered under SA laws but what befits a former head of state
by African standards. He (Mbeki) will therefore legitimately lay claim
to SA funds, offloaded to the Zimbabwean leadership under the guise of
a loan at the same time he may ask the same leadership to remit part of
the loan to him as a kickback. They do not have to issue an open cheque
to Mbeki but the funds may be routed to various offshore accounts where
Mbeki may have some influence be it family, friends, trust, etc. Now that
the Zimbabwean economy is in a crisis, the Zimbabwean leadership will
for this reason or any other you may think of readily accept such an offer.
One might add the Zimbabwean leadership actually drew up this proposal.
At the best one would
say Mbeki finally asked the Zimbabwean government to sort out their economy,
and may also have "quietly" and "diplomatically",
asked the present leadership to retire to which he was told " yes
we want to go but we are afraid of the sizeable drop on our incomes once
we do so". So Mr. Mbeki offered the loan with which Zimbabwean leadership
will utilize in part to pay the outstanding loans and augment their life
long pensions. The worst scenario is where no outstanding loan is repaid
and all the money ends up in the pockets of the Zimbabwean leadership
and their cronies.
Finally people should
be reminded that when Zimbabwe experienced civil strife during our war
of independence the majority of Zimbabwean refugees did not flock to SA
as but to Mozambique, Zambia, Botswana and Namibia. The long survival
of the Rhodesian economy despite the sanctions during the same war was
due to the oiling the Rhodesian regime got from the apartheid SA.
That the SA borders
are not readily passable from Zimbabwe could be a valid reason until you
consider the Zambian border- then you will know that SA borders were heavily
protected then just as they are now and therefore refugees will still
be kept at bay.
We now all can see
that Mbeki assertion that the collapse of the Zimbabwean economy will
be heavy on his side is just but a fallacy unless he is obliged to save
Zimbabwe just like his apartheid predecessors.
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