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Mugabe's
colonial ghosts
Comment,
International Herald Tribune
October
20, 2005
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/10/20/opinion/edmugabe.php
President Robert
Mugabe of Zimbabwe went to Rome for the meeting of the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization this week. As he usually does whenever
he manages to elude sanctions that restrict his travels to Europe
and America, he let loose at George W. Bush and Tony Blair, likening
them to Hitler and Mussolini and blaming them for all of Zimbabwe's
woes.
While he spoke,
armed bandits back in Zimbabwe were raiding potato farms, and opposition
leaders were drumming up support for a boycott of Senate elections
next month. In addition, aid agencies say 4 million of Zimbabwe's
11.5 million people are facing famine.
Mugabe's response
has been to raze squatter camps around Harare, driving hundreds
of thousands of the destitute into greater misery. The United Nations
has called that a "catastrophic injustice." Mugabe has called criticism
of the destruction "blatant interference." Zimbabweans are not hungry,
he said - they just can't eat their favorite foods.
Clearly, the
Food and Agriculture Organization can allow anyone it wants to attend
its World Food Day ceremony in Rome. The United Nations and its
agencies must remain ecumenical and open. And the occasional appearance
by Mugabe does help remind the world that the 81-year-old tyrant
is still around, still blaming colonialists, neocolonialists, racists
and everybody else for his country's suffering, still fixing elections
and hounding his opponents.
There was a
time when Mugabe's credentials as a fighter against white-minority
rule earned him respect. That time is long gone. He is a millstone
around the neck of one of Africa's best endowed lands. Who says
so? The South African archbishop Desmond Tutu, who has said Mugabe
is a "caricature of an African dictator"; Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia,
who has called on Mugabe to stop "fighting colonialist ghosts";
the Nobel-Prize-winning writer Wole Soyinka, who has labeled Mugabe's
regime "a disgrace to the continent."
Mugabe has run
Zimbabwe for a quarter of a century, crushing every attempt to dislodge
him, so there's little point in urging him to heed his fellow Africans.
But there is every reason to support the opposition in its brave
efforts to oust Mugabe's clique, and to assure the suffering people
of Zimbabwe that the world has not forgotten them.
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