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Mugabe
is not Amin - historian
Trevor Grundy
March 08, 2007
http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk/viewinfo.cfm?linkcategoryid=4&linkid=9&id=3557
Extremist commentators
who tell the world that every man, woman and child in Zimbabwe is
in danger from an "unrelenting autocracy" controlled by
President Robert Mugabe, who they often liken to Idi Amin or Adolf
Hitler, are doing more harm than good, says a respected historian.
Delivering the first Swantz Lecture at the University of Helsinki,
Professor Terence Ranger told academics: "Robert Mugabe is
not Idi Amin. Yet some commentators have made even more extreme
comparisons."
Giving a review
of his work as an "expert" when it comes to clarifying
the rights of some of the thousands of Zimbabweans seeking residence
in the United Kingdom, Professor Ranger called on political commentators
to be balanced when writing and talking about Zimbabwe.
"Zimbabwe
is currently a country of unpredictable violence. Some women are
in danger of rape; some teachers are in danger of assault; violence
has been contracted out to war veterans and youth militia; lists
of 'traitors' have been compiled; hundreds of thousands of people
are sick, or suffering from AIDS, or in exile.
"But this
is very different from maintaining that every Zimbabwean is in danger
from an unrelenting autocracy."
Commenting on
reports published in a leading British weekly paper which claimed
that Zimbabwe's genocide is 10 times worse than Darfur's and more
than twice as large as Rwanda's, Ranger declared: "This kind
of exaggeration spoils the case of critics of Zimbabwe."
Apart from writing some of the most interpretative books ever published
about Zimbabwe and its pre-colonial history, Professor Ranger (a
former Professor Emeritus in Race Relations, University of Oxford)
is Chairman of the Britain-Zimbabwe Society.
It has established
a panel from its members consisting of academics with enough knowledge
of Zimbabwe to act as "experts "in asylum appeals.
He told the
academics gathered at Helsinki University on February 14 - "Between
us we have written hundreds of assessments. The result is an extraordinary
archive for future historians of the crisis of the 2000s."
He went on to
explain that every time an asylum seeker presented an argument for
staying in Britain, the Home Office made a counter narrative "de-constructing,
disbelieving, distancing Britain from any ex-colonial activity."
While the Government
condemns the Mugabe regime the Home Office claims Zimbabwe is a
perfectly safe place for a 'failed' Zimbabwean asylum seeker.
One case involved
a young girl gang raped by so called "war veterans" because
her uncle supported the MDC. The Home Office accepted her credibility
but refused her asylum, saying she did not fall within the terms
of the UN's Convention relating to the status of refugees.
Moreover, said
the Home Office letter, "the fact that you were not killed
during this time causes the Secretary of State to believe that agents
of Zanu (PF) have no interest in killing you."
Said Professor
Ranger: "It is disheartening that a couple of years ago, the
Home Office assessors denied young women asylum because they would
not accept that war veterans and youth militia were government agents
and today they deny young women asylum if they have not been abducted,
raped or killed by ' brigands' empowered by the same."
Professor Ranger has an impeccable revolutionary track record. Deported
by the Smith Regime in 1963, he became one of the few white academics
who sided with black freedom fighters during the Second Chimurenga.
Like millions
of others, he was ecstatic when Mugabe became the first black head
of state in1980. He returned to Zimbabwe in that year and helped
establish the Britain-Zimbabwe Society the following year.
He told academics
in Finland that Gukurahundi posed a terrible problem for him and
the society. "Our silence paralleled that of almost all other
agencies concerned with Zimbabwe. Nevertheless, I became ashamed
of it."
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