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Who
will take Mugabe's cake?
Basildon
Peta, Sunday Argus (SA)
July
09, 2006
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=14759
Civil
disobedience in Zimbabwe will be the only way to defeat the old
man of African politics, writes Basildon Peta
For a man of many despicable transgressions, Robert Mugabe can count
himself extraordinarily lucky. The world continues to watch while
he gets away with just about everything. In view of the hype that
President Thabo Mbeki and British prime minister Tony Blair had
raised about Kofi Annan's "intervention" in Zimbabwe, few had expected
that Mugabe would easily bulldoze his way past the UN secretary-general
at the just ended African Union (AU) summit in Gambia. Yet that's
exactly what the 82-year-old Zimbabwean leader did, once again,
displaying his disregard for Mbeki and other important international
players who can help end the trauma in his country. Mugabe's economic
genocide in a once prosperous country, his relentless suppression
of his people, now reduced to paupers and scavengers, his flagrant
disregard for the rule of law and legendary contempt for democracy
are all disgraceful in this age of African renewal.
Yet the man seems to get away with just about anything. Leaders
with the most leverage fail to rein him in. Annan is only the latest
in a chain of such. Mugabe's subjects remain too scared to confront
him. Disenchanted deserting soldiers would rather deploy their military
expertise against innocent South Africans in violent robberies instead
of pointing their guns at the main author of their miseries. Although
Mugabe has shut down all possibilities of being dislodged from power
via democratic electoral means, it is popular wisdom that a military
coup in Zimbabwe remains a very remote possibility. While Mugabe
continues to plunge his country and people into a wretched existence,
it's ironic that he continues wrestling to the ground just about
everyone who tries to stand up to his excesses. Getting Annan to
call off his visit to Zimbabwe and to step aside in favour of former
Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa is Mugabe's latest success. When
former AU chairman Olusegun Obasanjo tried to get former Mozambican
president Joacquim Chissano to mediate in Zimbabwe, Mugabe slammed
the doors.
The reason: Chissano had not been vociferous enough in support of
Zimbabwe despite being the best man at Mugabe's 1996 wedding to
Grace. Fearing further embarrassment, both Obasanjo and Chissano
quickly backed off. As usual, Mugabe got away with it. Mkapa is
a staunch ally of Mugabe. He of all African leaders has spoken strongly
and publicly in support of Mugabe. Mkapa was not appointed by the
UN, the AU, Southern African Development Community or any other
institutional body. He is Mugabe's own appointee although Mugabe
says Mkapa will work within the auspices of SADC. Mkapa's mandate
and terms of reference as mediator are unclear but it seems Mugabe
has set the agenda. He says Mkapa's main brief is to mediate between
Zimbabwe and Britain. Which perhaps explains why many Zimbabweans
are highly sceptical of this mediation effort. They disagree with
Mugabe and Mkapa's location of the root cause of the Zimbabwe crisis.
It's within Zimbabwe and not in Britain.
"Principles of natural justice and common sense dictate that one
cannot be an umpire and wicketkeeper in the same game," says University
of Zimbabwe (UZ) political science professor Elphas Mukonoweshuro,
also shadow foreign minister of the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, in reference to Mugabe's appointment of Mkapa. Mugabe is
a party to the dispute to be mediated. Yet in appointing Mkapa,
he easily assumes the role of judge, jury and executioner. And he
gets away with it. Annan lets him off the hook. Zimbabwe's Financial
Gazette newspaper speculates that Mkapa might pull the rug from
beneath Mugabe's feet by insisting on an exit plan as a pre-condition
to resolving the diplomatic stand off between London and Harare.
The newspaper says Mkapa is keen to succeed where many others failed.
Tanzania's withdrawal this week of its ambassador to Zimbabwe, Brigadier
Hashim Mbita, a staunch ally of Zanu-PF, in favour of Adadi Mohamed
Rajab, seems to give credence to this hypothesis.
Speculation is that Rajab, a lawyer by profession, is being deployed
to add impetus to Mkapa's mediation effort because new Tanzanian
president Jakaya Kikwete also wants Mugabe out and is eager to help
Mkapa. But Lovemore Madhuku, who heads the National Constitutional
Assembly, dismisses all this as wishful thinking. Like many Zimbabweans,
Madhuku thinks Mkapa's mediation effort is doomed because it is
based on Mugabe's own self-serving philosophy that the problems
in Zimbabwe are a result of a bilateral problem between Zimbabwe
and Britain over the land issue. The problems in Zimbabwe stem from
poor governance and Mugabe's determination to cling to power at
all costs, says Madhuku. His sentiments are echoed by another UZ
political scientist, John Makumbe, who says that if Mkapa is realistic,
he should re-focus his mediation between Mugabe and his opponents
in Zimbabwe because the root cause of the crisis is within Zimbabwe.
"It seems Mkapa is the best way for Mugabe to avoid anything constructive,"
argues Makumbe. Political activist Welshman Ncube says Mkapa's intervention
is useless because the author of Zimbabwe's woes is Mugabe himself
and not Britain. Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions head Wellington
Chibebe says Mkapa's mediation is a tactic by Mugabe to buy more
time for himself and ward off meaningful foreign intervention in
Zimbabwe. Apart from bad governance, Mukonoweshuro says the crisis
in Zimbabwe is also one of a weak, usurped constitution, and a privatised
and militarised state that has failed. Unless Mkapa acknowledges
that position, he is wasting everyone's time. Britain too insists
that the Zimbabwe crisis is not a result of a bilateral dispute.
Whether Mkapa succeeds in undertaking whatever mission he aspires
to achieve, the fact is that Mugabe has once again had his way by
trashing Annan and handpicking a friend. It is thought that Annan's
involvement could easily have attracted the UN Security Council's
involvement in Zimbabwe. Mugabe did not want that. So how does this
old man of African politics always have his cake and eat it? Makumbe
thinks Annan easily let Mugabe off the hook because the secretary-general
only has a few months left before his reign ends. He thus did not
want to assume a responsibility which in all likelihood is un-resolvable
in the few months left before a new secretary-general is sworn in.
In Zimbabwe itself, Mugabe easily gets away with anything because
of his use of brute force to suppress his people. Hungry Zimbabweans
no longer have the stamina to take to the streets. Most are consumed
in daily survival issues. Prominent opposition activist Roy Bennett,
who fled Zimbabwe and is now seeking asylum in South Africa, thinks
the people of Zimbabwe have been left to their own devices by the
international community. Unlike South Africans who were partly inspired
to rebel against the apartheid regime by the backing they got from
the international community, Zimbabweans don't enjoy that luxury.
Mugabe has also ensured a lifeline by maintaining a well-oiled propaganda
machinery. He dwells on issues that appeal to black Africans still
recovering from their disempowerment in the colonial era. Black
leaders who have to answer to their black constituents cannot therefore
tackle him effectively. It also seems the man survives on luck.
Analysts agree that the only way for Zimbabweans to nudge the international
community into meaningful intervention is by overcoming their fear
of embarking on a sustained civil disobedience campaign to make
their country ungovernable with visible repercussions for the entire
region. Unless that happens, Mugabe will continue having it his
way.
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