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Breaking
records
Eddie Cross
November 20, 2006
I spotted a short statement from the UN this morning. It said "Zimbabwe
has the highest ratio of orphans to population of any country in
the world." We seem to be making a habit of this just now ?
breaking all sorts of records in the realm of development economics.
Just the other day I heard we had the
lowest life expectancy in the world. I knew it was low and still
falling, but I did not know we were the worst in the whole world!
Then I listened to a speech at a conference and heard for the first
time that we have been officially classified as a "failed State".
We already knew that our economy is the fastest shrinking in the
world and that we have the highest inflation to this we must now
add the accolade that we are in that exclusive group of less than
10 countries who are regarded as being in such a shambles that they
are classified as "failed states".
This week we have seen several detailed
international media reports on the Zimbabwe crisis. The Independent
in the UK carried a blazing headline "Dead at 34" not
the latest casualty in Iraq but the epitaph on the grave of a young
women in Bulawayo. The story went on to detail a social and economic
crisis that has decimated the lives of millions of people. The shortages
and the cost of all basic foods, the collapse of the health system,
the impact of unemployment and high inflation and the lingering
affects of urban slum clearance campaigns that have destroyed the
livelihoods of millions and the homes of hundreds of thousands,
are all contributory factors.
Diseases that were once considered
no longer significant are back and killing tens of thousands of
people every month. The mortality figures for this country above
those that we would have regarded as "normal" just 20
years ago, exceed the combined death toll in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The Zanu PF regime here is killing thousands of people every week
it is not shooting them or blowing them up in front of roving TV
cameras but it is killing them just as emphatically as the Jangaweed
in the Sudan or the car bombers of Baghdad.
I had always imagined that the leaders
of the world would sit up and take notice when a crisis of these
proportions occurs. They do not have the luxury of not having information
or not fully understanding what is going on ? they do know. But
somehow it is only when the images come up on that little screen
and CNN or the BBC capture the stark reality on electronic disc
that leaders suddenly take notice and seek action.
Just look at the disproportionate effort
being made in the Darfur region of the Sudan
Population affected Darfur - two
million, Zimbabwe - ten million. Physically displaced Darfur
- 200 000 people, Zimbabwe - 2,4 million internally displaced people
and at least 3 million externally displaced refugees. Deaths Darfur
- 20 000 people in 3 years, Zimbabwe - 550 000 deaths in three years.
The response by the UN direct intervention
by the Security Council, the Secretary General takes personal charge
of negotiations. The AU sends in 7000
troops and the global community demands that this be strengthened
with thousands of UN troops and peacekeepers. The media exposure
is daily graphic pictures of sprawling camps and men in uniform
on camels and pick up trucks. The response to the crisis in Zimbabwe,
a one hour talk with Mugabe on the sidelines of the AU summit and
a half hearted effort to appoint an ineffective mediator in the
form of Mkapa. The response of the AU and the SADC silence.
As we slide towards the abyss several
things come to mind. Could P W Botha and Ian Smith have got away
with this in their lifetime? Why the difference in response just
because those doing the killing and abusing our rights are black?
Or does Mugabe have some sort of Juju that makes him invisible -
just like the original rebel groups in the Congo?
We are told by all our critics that
Zimbabweans must change things themselves on their own. Would the
ANC, Zanu and Zapu have ever argued that in their day in opposition
to a grossly unjust and tyrannical regime? The answer of course
is never they asked for, nay demanded, full international support
and solidarity and got it in big measure. UN resolutions, global
mandatory sanctions, the threat of force and finally political and
economic threats that crushed the remaining sources of resistance
to change in South Africa and Zimbabwe.
The final outcome negotiated assumption
of democratic, social and economic reforms that brought the majority
to the ballot box and peace to the streets.
When I hear the deputy Foreign Minister
of South Africa (who seems to have a special mandate to deal with
Zimbabwean issues) pontificate on the situation in Zimbabwe I just
cringe. He has said repeatedly that this is a crisis but one that
must be resolved by Zimbabweans. He wrings his hands and says, What
do you want us to do? Send in the troops? as if there were no alternatives
to physical intervention. Just recently he was quoted as saying
that South Africa was aware of the nature and extent of the crisis
in Zimbabwe and was concerned but that the matter was now in the
hands of the SADC troika I assume he was referring to the group
made up of former Chairmen of the SADC who head up the SADC Organ
on Security and Politics.
Any Chief Executive of a major Corporation,
who ignored a threat of the magnitude that is represented by the
crisis in Zimbabwe to the region as a whole, would soon find himself
looking for another job. Unfortunately the same rules do not apply
in politics.
So here we are, at the start of a new
wet season, facing a continuing crisis that threatens the stability
of the State and the region as a whole. Zanu PF is disintegrating
and there are now so many leaks of sensitive information that it
is clear that the sailors on this particular ship no longer have
any faith in the Captain. No life rafts or boats on this vessel
if you want to get off you have to leave the ship at the next port
or not at all. But then at least we will still be breaking records
the wrong sort, but still world records, we will be remembered for
some of the things we did even if it was always the wrong thing.
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