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Passing
parade in Havana, Harare
Paul
Moorcraft
August 16, 2006
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A250765
DAILY, far more Zimbabweans
are dying needlessly than civilians in Lebanon. This was the dramatic
point made by veteran Zimbabwe journalist Michael Hartnack in practically
his last words before he died late last month. Despite the power
and water cuts, fuel queues and all the rest of the daily hassles
in present-day Zimbabwe, Hartnack remarked that he was still one
of the lucky ones. "The unlucky ones are out there in the freezing
night dying at 3200 a week, which is a lot more than Lebanon."
Robert Mugabe is not directly
attacking the west and does not have any oil, so who cares what
he does in his own country? And even for those who might do something
about one of Africa’s nastiest dictators, Iraq and Afghanistan have
drained most of their interventionist tendencies. If the US intelligence
agencies weren’t so pre-occupied elsewhere, they might accuse Mugabe
of supplying Congo uranium to his old pals in North Korea.
In March 2003, UK Prime Minister
Tony Blair told a British minister during a discussion about the
need to invade Iraq: "If it were down to me, I’d do (invade)
Zimbabwe as well."
Like Fidel Castro, Mugabe
at 82 is a great survivor. Castro may be trying to create a dynasty
by handing over to his brother Raul. Mugabe has less faith in family
but has favoured a former girlfriend as a possible successor, Joyce
Mujuru or Teurai Ropa ("Spill Blood", to use her nom de
guerre).
The Americans tried invasions,
blockades, sanctions and assassination but it looks as though Castro
will die in his bed. Will Africa’s great dictator enjoy the same
fate? Unfortunately, his country may have reached its own terminal
state before then.
Zimbabwe has the world’s
fastest shrinking economy and the worst inflation rate — now about
1000%. As United Nations humanitarian chief, Jan Egeland, put it,
the country is in meltdown. Services have collapsed and cannot deal
with the AIDS pandemic that has infected one-third of the population.
Life expectancy has dropped
from an average of 62 to 38 years. Unemployment stands at 70%. More
than 5-million people are on the brink of starvation. At least 4-million
have fled, with perhaps 2,5-million Zimbabweans in SA. Most of the
professional middle class has left.
Many black Zimbabweans will
freely admit that conditions were better under Ian Smith. Smith
said that a Mugabe victory would bring the decimation of the Ndebele,
then the destruction of the economy by driving out the white farmers.
Yesterday, Smith’s stubbornness may have made that a self-fulfilling
prophecy. Today Mugabe is the problem, but he won’t go. How can
he be persuaded?
A military coup is unlikely,
partly because a creeping coup has already taken place. The security
apparatus is full of Mugabe’s Zezuru clan, and they have been amply
rewarded. The boss keeps a tight rein on his military mates in the
new National Security Council. Mugabe still has some residual popularity
in Mashonaland.
Many within in his own Zanu
(PF) party are praying for him to quit or die. Although he is due
to leave office in 2008, he may try to stay on.
Mugabe has never named a
formal successor, which could mean chaos if he were to die in office.
Three key factions jostle for power. Foremost is the group around
Vice- President Joyce Mujuru; second, followers of the now disgraced
Emmerson Mnangagwa; and those remnants of Zimbabwe African People’s
Union (Zapu) who hope an Ndebele might get the top job.
Mujuru is a Zezuru, however;
another Zezuru victory could upset the clan balancing act, especially
among the Karanga, the largest Shona-speaking group. This is where
the main opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, the head of the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) could benefit. Though he comes from
a minority Shona-speaking tribe, he is popular among the Ndebele.
But while the electoral system is so fixed in favour of the ruling
party, the MDC is unlikely to defeat even the most fractious Zanu
(PF)..
So no western invasion and
little chance of internal reform; that leaves SA. Pretoria tried
to bring the MDC and Zanu (PF) together, to little effect. Then
it pinned its hopes on a so-called moderate faction emerging in
the ruling party. No such luck with Mugabe’s mastery of divide and
rule. The African Union and the Southern African Development Community
have been toothless. Commonwealth smart sanctions have been water
off a duck’s backside.
More recently it looked as
though Kofi Annan might offer Mugabe a deal: an economic rescue
package in exchange for a deadline to quit office, maybe at the
2008 presidential election. Crucially, there would also be a deal
on immunity from prosecution.
All these forlorn moves indicate
that President Thabo Mbeki’s quiet diplomacy has failed. SA has
the power to dethrone Mugabe immediately, so why hasn’t it?
In 1976 prime minister John
Vorster pulled the plug on his white kin by cutting fuel and ammunition;
the rebel Smith had to comply almost immediately by formally accepting
majority rule. SA put its own national interest first. So does Mbeki
have less courage than Vorster?
In the west, SA is perceived
as the regional superpower. SA has the hard power: it could cut
off fuel and electricity and bring Mugabe to heel almost overnight.
If it did this it might be branded as a puppet of the US.
From a western perspective,
quiet diplomacy amounts to doing nothing. Prof Jack Spence, Britain’s
leading expert on SA, said this allows western liberals "to
argue with some justice that black liberation solidarity of the
kind that links Mbeki with Mugabe trumps human rights and profoundly
damages SA’s claims to be a good and influential citizen of the
international community".
Mbeki’s quiet constructive
enga-gement was based on the premise that direct confrontation would
ultimately damage South African interests. Ironically, that is what
has happened. Mugabe is badly damaging SA, the region and indeed
the continent. If Zimbabwe implodes completely, it may be too late.
If Mugabe is the problem,
then Mbeki is the only solution. It might be unfair to burden Pretoria
with the burden of Zimbabwe’s future, but that’s the way it is.
Nelson Mandela could and
did condemn Mugabe and Desmond Tutu could describe him as "a
caricature of an African dictator". Unfortunately Mbeki seems
to defer to the older revolutionary hero in Harare.
The Zimbabwe crisis is causing
major rifts in the ANC but, for the president, the more vocal criticism
of Harare by the Congress of South African Trade Unions (natural
allies of Tsvangarai) and by the South African Communist Party must
be embarrassing.
More important than party
unity is the danger of the land issue spiralling out of control.
More than 20 times more white South African farmers have been murdered
than white farmers in Zimbabwe. SA, where murder is underreported,
is a powder keg: the actual number of killings may outnumber Iraq’s.
Also, the flood of Zimbabwean
refugees is making South Africans much more xenophobic. Above all,
having a failed, or indeed rogue, state on its borders does no good
for foreign investors’ confidence in the region. It also affects
tourism to SA.
Above all, it is a question
of image. The South African government is seen in the west as implicit
in all that Mugabe does. The president’s stance over AIDS might
have been forgiven as unfortunate ignorance but tolerating Mugabe
is seen as either plain stupidity or deliberately condoning the
dictator.
I interviewed Mugabe at length
for Time magazine when he first returned to the then Salisbury in
January 1980. After the dullards in the Rhodesian Front, it was
a breath of fresh air to talk to such an intelligent, articulate
man.
Above all, I believed his
sincerity about racial reconciliation. So how did he become a monster?
There were early signs — within a year his army had started to wipe
out the Ndebele. Anyone who challenged him was destroyed; the white
farmers whom he accused of helping the MDC, then 500000 urban squatters’
homes and shops were destroyed because they might vote for the MDC.
Nothing will stand in Mugabe’s
way except death, or SA.
Perhaps it is time for the
statesman to emerge in Mbeki.
*Dr Moorcraft is the director
of the Centre for Foreign Policy Analysis, London. His accounts
of the 1965-80 war, including Chimurenga! The War in Rhodesia, have
just been re- released in Canada.
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