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Zim
a steadfast country
Baffour Ankomah, Editor of New
African
Extracted from The Herald (Zimbabwe)
October 04, 2005
http://www.herald.co.zw/index.php?id=47509&pubdate=2005-10-04
FROM the international media, you may
be forgiven for thinking that Zimbabwe, demonised as a failed State,
is about to collapse. Baffour Ankomah, Editor of New African magazine,
was here again in August, and reports that the rebuilding programme
launched after the recent controversial clean-up operation is going
pretty well, and though the economy is still struggling, the obituary
writers had better suspend rushing to their computers. They may
well have to praise rather than bury President Mugabe’s country.
ZIMBABWE is an enigma. When everybody expects it to go down, it
goes up. Unlike Isaac Newton’s falling apple, pulled down by the
force of gravity, Zimbabwe appears to defy the gravitational pull,
much to the chagrin of its detractors.
Weighed down by what President Mugabe calls "these odious economic
sanctions" imposed by Britain, America and their European partners,
and not helped by some spectacular own goals scored by Zimbabwe
itself, the country still marches on, chest high, where many others
in similar situations would have long fallen.
Yes, fuel, foreign exchange and other essential shortages persist,
and agriculture the mainstay of the economy — has still not recovered
from four straight years of drought (though irrigation has been
stepped up this year), but Zimbabwe refuses to go down, largely
through the determination of the nationalists there who want to
prove a point to the world that some Africans do possess stiffer
and capitulation is not an option.
Take the recent controversial Operation Restore Order which saw
the demolition of slums and shacks across the country, an operation
which was widely condemned by Western countries and later by a damning
UN report which came up with an estimate of 700 000 people having
been affected by the operation.
In late August, the Government officially responded to the UN report
with a 45-page rebuttal in which it accused the compilers of the
report, led by the Tanzanian head of UN-Habitat, Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka,
of bias against the Government.
"From the content of the report," the rebuttal said, "it is clear
that submissions from Government are dismissed as claims, allegations
or rhetoric whilst submissions from NGOs hostile to the Government,
donors and those opposition leaders who are critical of the Government,
are explicitly or impliedly treated as statements of fact.
"The report grossly exaggerates the number of people who were rendered
homeless by the operation. A fact-finding mission must report on
what it actually found on the ground and not infer homelessness
from some fictitious formula or mathematical extrapolation."
The rebuttal continued: "Zimbabwe is currently under illegal sanctions
that were imposed by the USA, UK, EU and the white Commonwealth
countries opposed to the land reform programme. It is not true that
the sanctions are not directed at the economy.
"The Zimbabwe democracy and Economic Recovery Act (co-drafted by
one of the opposition MDC’s white parliamentarians, and passed by
the US Congress in 2001), blocks Zimbabwe’s access to balance of
payment support from the IMF and any financial assistance from the
World Bank, and excludes Zimbabwe from benefiting from the African
Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) facility.
"EU sanctions have seen Zimbabwe being denied access to the ACP-EU
9th European development fund. Even access to humanitarian assistance
through the Global Fund for HIV/Aids, TB and malaria has been blocked
mainly as a result of EU and USA pressure, and the UN report says
nothing about it."
However, what both the Government rebuttal of the UN report have
refused to say is the exact reason why Operation Restore Order was
launched in the first place.
New African can now reveal that the operation was the brainchild
of Zimbabwe’s intelligence community which felt it had to move quickly
to nip in the bud a Ukrainian-style revolution (or street protests)
then being planned in Zimbabwe and funded by the same Western countries
who paid for Ukraine’s so-called "orange revolution" earlier this
year.
After the success in Ukraine, the same metropolitan powers that
paid the Ukrainian students to start the street protests in Kiev
were paying for a similar thing in Harare. They had in fact hoped
that Zimbabweans would do it by themselves in the aftermath of the
March 31 parliamentary elections that saw the MDC beaten out of
sight.
When the protests did not materialise, because the majority of Zimbabweans
saw no need for them (having voted for the party of their choice
and accepted the elections to be free and fair), the metropolitan
powers upped the ante by secretly channelling funds for an insurrection
via opposition elements who were going to use vulnerable slum dwellers
to confront the Government in what they had hoped would be bloody
street clashes.
Somehow, Zimbabwe’s Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), one
of the best spy agencies on the continent (if not the world), got
wind of the impending operation — and they must have panicked; because
they chose to deal with it in a most usual way — nip the danger
in the bud by dispersing the slum dwellers via the demolition of
their habitats.
The security agency quickly got hold of the President, showed him
the evidence of the anger and sold him the hasty solution.
With the experience of Ukraine fresh in everybody’s mind, Operation
Restore Order was given wings, without going through the normal
route of Cabinet discussion and approval. As a result, many Cabinet
ministers and key Government officials who would have normally been
privy to such an operation were kept in the dark. Some, in fact,
heard about it a day after it had begun.
In so doing, a lot of mistakes were made in the implementation of
the operation.
First, the normal civil service scrutiny was dispensed with. In
normal times, as happened with the land reform programme, the civil
services would have been tasked to write papers looking at the pros
and cons of the operation, the relevant local and international
laws governing the area, the provision of alternative accommodation
and stalls, the financial cost, the international repercussions,
and so on, before the operation could get Cabinet approval.
In this case, as the security services drove the operation, all
the elaborate laid-down procedures were short-circuited, and in
the process serious errors were made, leading to international outcry
and condemnation.
Therefore, some of the criticisms contained in Tibaijuka’s UN report
were justified.
In private, some Government ministers and key officials admit that
they could have done it better. They say the security services were
allowed too much latitude to run the operation, and as security
people, they focused too much on diffusing the danger and less on
the consequences.
Interestingly, you will have to read up to the end of page 30 of
the Government’s response to the UN report to find an "official
hint" of the main reason why the operation was launched with such
haste.
"The risk to public health and morality, national security and the
economy necessitated that the operation had to be undertaken without
further delay," the Government response says.
However, where the UN report got it totally wrong was underestimating
the will of the Zimbabwean nationalists to provide for the people
in the face of adversity.
In the 100-page UN report, only four pages were devoted to the rebuilding
programme (code-named Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle) launched
while Tibaijuka and her mission were still in Zimbabwe compiling
the report. And even out of the four pages, two were used to dismiss
Operation Garikai.
In a rather unenthusiastic manner, the report said of Garikai: "Whilst
the reconstruction intervention is much welcome, and a sign that
the Government of Zimbabwe acknowledges the existence of the crisis
it has created, and is willing to accept its responsibility to take
corrective measures, it is the view of the UN special envoy (Tibaijuka)
that Operation Restore Order has precipitated a humanitarian crisis
which the Government itself, even with the best of intentions and
efforts, has limited capacity to fully address without the assistance
of the international community.
"Firstly, the scale of announced expenditure (US$300 million) was
not foreseen in the 2005 budget, and if it were to somehow materialise,
it could exacerbate the inflation rate which is running at over
140 percent.
"Secondly, as conceived, Operation Garikai is predominantly a developmental
intervention. It does not address immediate needs, such as shelter,
food, water, sanitation, health and education… Operation Garikai
continues to be premised on the false assumption that evictees would
return to their rural homes while the majority in fact have not,
or are not in a position to do so."
Perhaps Tibaijuka and her mission would want to go back and see
what Operation Garikai has achieved since their report was released
on 22 July. The "illusive" US$300m has materialised, not from this
year’s budget but from the Government borrowing from the Reserve
Bank’s strategic reserves that had been lying idle until now.
In its response to the UN report, the Government said it " has released
a further $3 trillion (US$300m) under the National Housing Facility
which is being disbursed through building societies at low interest
rates to those who opt to construct their own homes".
Rather than " exacerbating" the inflation rate as prophesied by
Tibaijuka’s report, the "illusive US$300m" has created jobs linked
directly and indirectly to OPeration Garikai. For example, thousands
of construction workers, including women, have been employed, building
houses and market stalls (or Small and Medium Scale Enterprises)
for those who lost their homes and stalls in the clean-up operation.
Local suppliers to the building industry are, thus, laughing all
the way to the bank as Operation Garikai has brought an unexpected
boom. And contrary to what the UN report said, Operation Garikai
is addressing the need for shelter, water, sanitation and health.
All these amenities are being provided as part of the rebuilding
programme. And a "majority" of the evictees have returned to "their
rural homes" to await the day, in the next few months, when they
would be recalled to take possession of their new homes.
In mid-August, this writer had the opportunity to tour some of the
rebuilding sites in Harare, Kwekwe, Gweru, Bulawayo, Masvingo and
Mutare — right across the country. It was an impressive sight that
awaited me, especially since the Government had had only a few weeks
to do it.
What was quite heart-warming was to see women bricklayers and masons
rubbing shoulders with their male counterparts at these sites.
In short, because of the exigency of the situation, the Government
is building half of each house (which, in Zimbabwe, is called a
"core house", made up of one bedroom, a kitchen, a separate bath
and a separate toilet).
The new owners will be given loans by the Government (payable over
30 years) to buy the "core houses" outright. They will then build
the other half (or extend it) at their own pace.
The "core houses" will have amenities such as electricity, water,
sanitation, roads, sewage, postal services, etc, which their former
shacks did not have. (In Zimbabwe, unlike many African countries,
the post office delivers letters to home addresses provided it has
a street number — a service which the former slums did not have
because they had no street numbers). It will be a big improvement
on their demolished habitats.
By mid-September, work was going pretty well all over the country.
Apart from one location, Hatcliffe Extension in Harare, where the
Ministry of Local Government unwisely allowed evictees to return
to their former plots without shelter, there was good news almost
everywhere else.
Sadly, Kofi Annan, the UN secretary general, who had accepted an
invitation from President Mugabe to go and see things for himself
at the end of August, cancelled his trip after pressure from the
big powers.
Meanwhile, another surprise in this nation of many surprises is
the famous US$1billion loan that Zimbabwe is said to have asked
for from its southern neighbour, South Africa. The truth is that
Zimbabwe did not ask for any such loan. Or, better put, the initiative
for the loan did not come from Harare; it was the World Bank that
initiated it.
New African can reveal that when the World Bank’s boss, James Wolfowitz,
visited South Africa early this year, a member of his entourage
— a woman called Krueger — sold the idea to President Thabo Mbeki.
According to inside sources, Krueger told Mbeki: "Why don’t you
help Zimbabwe as it is your biggest trading partner.
"If Zimbabwe is expelled by the IMF, all credit lines will dry up
and it will affect your trade with your northern neighbour. All
that the IMF will need is a word from you to underwrite Zimbabwe’s
debt to the IMF. You may not even need to move any money. Just your
word".
According to the sources, Mbeki was taken aback as he did not know
the Bretton Woods institutions to be charitable to Zimbabwe. He,
however, carried the message to President Mugabe when they met at
the AU Summit in Sirte, Libya, in early July.
President Mugabe, according to the sources, was equally surprised
to learn of the unexpected generosity from the World Bank, but decided
to go along if the offer was truly genuine and not a Trojan horse.
However, as officials of the two countries began to discuss the
offer further, elements in the South African central bank opposed
to the deal leaked the story to the anti-Mugabe media in South Africa.
The opposition Democratic Alliance gave it even more wings.
Soon all sorts of conditions, from within and outside South Africa,
were being attached to the loan. Twice in the past few months, when
President Mbeki was out of the country, some of his officials conspired
behind his back to send letters to Harare attaching even more conditions
to the loan. On each occasion, Mbeki had to dispatch an envoy to
tell Harare to disregard the letters.
At the time of going to Press, the two countries were still discussing
the loan. In the meantime, Zimbabwe, from its own resources, had
paid US$131m of the IMF debt of nearly US$300m — even before the
South African loan became available — wrong-footing the IMF, which
threatened to throw Zimbabwe out for non-payment. — New African
magazine October 2005.
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