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Zimbabwe's
had enough of Robert Mugabe
Martin Meredith
April 01, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-op-meredith1apr01,0,1030544.story?track=rss
AFTER 27 years in power, President
Robert Mugabe is finally losing his grip over Zimbabwe. Economic
disaster has provoked mounting criticism not only from opposition
groups but from powerful factions within his own party. Mugabe's
customary tactics for dealing with his critics have been violence
and repression. But so dire has the plight of Zimbabwe become recently
that there are signs that even violence is no longer sufficient
to keep the increasingly unpopular president in power.
Zimbabwe has the world's fastest-shrinking
economy outside a war zone. Agricultural production has declined
by half since 2000, when Mugabe sent militia groups to seize white-owned
farms in the hope of restoring his popularity. Vast tracts of land
now stand unused. The inflation rate has officially soared to 1,700%
and is expected to reach 5,000% by the end of the year. Three-quarters
of the population is unemployed. More than 3 million people, desperate
to find work, have moved to neighboring countries. Education and
health services are on the brink of collapse. Foreign diplomats
have begun warning of mass starvation.
Amid rising public despair, opposition
groups convened a "Save Zimbabwe" prayer meeting in Harare on March
11, defying a government ban on public rallies. Mugabe's response
was to order armed police to break up the meeting — to "bash them,"
as he likes to say. Dozens of opposition activists, including Morgan
Tsvangirai, the 55-year-old leader of the Movement for Democratic
Change, were savagely beaten.
Last week, opposition leaders charged
that scores more advocates of political and civic change had been
abducted and badly beaten in recent middle-of-the-night assaults
by unidentified assailants — widely believed to be part of a government
campaign to stifle dissent. Nelson Chamisa, spokesman for the Movement
for Democratic Change, was attacked at Harare's airport last month
by four men who fractured his skull with iron bars, according to
the New York Times. "It's state terrorism," he said.
But far from intimidating opposition
groups, Mugabe's use of violence has emboldened them. "They are
losing their fear, despite every effort of the government to build
that fear over the last eight years," Christopher Dell, the U.S.
ambassador to Zimbabwe, told a reporter.
Furthermore, this latest bout of repression
has led to a torrent of foreign condemnation, even from Mugabe's
allies in Africa. The South African government, which is Zimbabwe's
largest trading partner and has hitherto been reluctant to criticize
Mugabe's regime, has made it clear that it wants him to retire when
his current term expires in 2008.
Mugabe, of course, has other ideas.
Despite his age, the 83-year-old leader is determined to hold onto
power beyond 2008. He has even talked of continuing in office until
2014, vowing that Tsvangirai will never be allowed to become president
as long as he is alive.
But it will be increasingly difficult.
These days, prominent figures within Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party
are trying to maneuver him toward an exit, fearing that their private
wealth amassed during the Mugabe years could be lost in an economic
collapse. Mugabe previously retained their loyalty by rewarding
them with farms, government contracts and other perks, but he no
longer has the ability to offer such patronage because the government,
mired in debt, is bankrupt. When Mugabe recently tried to postpone
next year's presidential elections for two years, to keep himself
in power for an extended term, he was thwarted by Solomon Mujuru,
a former army commander and one of Zimbabwe's richest men.
Nevertheless, Mugabe has long experience
in outmaneuvering his critics within ZANU-PF; the wayside is littered
with challengers. Moreover, as long as he maintains control of the
army and police, the option of violent repression remains at hand.
For much of Mugabe's career, violence
has been his stock in trade. As leader of one of the guerrilla armies
that fought to overthrow white-minority rule in Rhodesia, as Zimbabwe
was previously called, he became obsessed with the power of the
gun, telling supporters that even when they had the vote, the gun
would always be ready for use. During the 1980s, he unleashed a
campaign of terror against opponents in the western provinces of
Matabeleland in which at least 20,000 civilians were killed.
So proud was he of his record that
he once boasted about having "a degree in violence" to add to his
six university degrees. "The area of violence is an area where ZANU-PF
has a very strong, long and successful history," said Nathan Shamuyarira,
one of Mugabe's closest colleagues, confirming the point.
It didn't have to be this way. Mugabe
came to power in 1980 in an atmosphere of hope and optimism. In
the early years, he strove to build a good working relationship
with his former white adversaries; he reassured white business about
the future, stressing the need for foreign investment. Buoyed by
a huge influx of Western aid, he was able to embark on an ambitious
program to extend education and health services to the population.
But as the years passed, he turned
viciously on his black opponents and, over time, his goodwill toward
the white community evaporated as well. In his bid to create a one-party
state in the years since, he has crushed his political opposition,
rigged elections, corrupted the courts, trampled property rights
and suppressed the independent press. Now, however, his style of
government has become a matter of embarrassment for other African
leaders. In return for Western aid, they have repeatedly promised
to adhere to strict rules of governance and to bring an end to the
era when Africa's "big men" could rule the roost with impunity.
But, like other big men before him, Mugabe has no intention of going
quietly.
*Martin Meredith is a journalist
and historian whose books include "The Fate of Africa" and "Our
Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe."
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