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How
we we-ve let down Zimbabwe
Mangosuthu
Buthelezi
April 11, 2007
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=21&id=10387&siteid=1
The Zulu people have
a saying which I believe crisply captures what is happening in Zimbabwe
today: "Akukho silima sindlebende kwabo". It translates
as "Even a fool whose ear is disproportionate to the other
ear is not regarded as such within the family". I find it
interesting that African leaders all seem to subscribe to this saying:
that for the sake of "African solidarity" we should
not allow those regarded as "outsiders" to criticise
one of our own. I experienced this first hand whenever the issue
of Zimbabwe came up for discussion at Southern African Development
Community meetings as minister of home affairs.
I remember one such discussion
in Angola after the US had made it clear that President Robert Mugabe
would not be welcome at a meeting of, I think, the G-7. The general
reaction in that meeting of the council of ministers was that the
US had no right to make such a ruling. I gingerly raised the issue
of the help we needed for the New Partnership for Africa-s
Development (Nepad), which we expected from countries such as the
US. I enquired whether my African brothers did not think that such
people had a right to express their views, if we expected them,
at the same time, to help us.
During the tea break
some foreign ministers congratulated me for raising the issue in
the manner I did. Yet not one of them did so in the plenary sessions.
In fact, in the next plenary session in which I wanted to speak,
my colleague, the foreign minister, told me I had to tell her first
what I wanted to say, as she was the leader of the South African
delegation. Mugabe, in view of the above, might be justified for
believing that he enjoys widespread support among ordinary Africans.
The man and his record are, of course, far more complex than the
one-dimensional African Hitleresque caricature: hero turned villain.
Boasting impeccable struggle credentials, Mugabe is still something
of a folk hero to many Africans. It is difficult for observers in
the west to comprehend the conundrum this presents Mugabe-s
fellow African liberation leaders in terms of censuring him.
The entire Mugabe phenomenon,
cemented in stereotypes as it is, is baffling. Some in our ruling
party and outside of it lead us to believe that the fiercest opposition
to the Mugabe regime comes from the west, its alleged stooges in
the Movement for Democratic Change and the dispossessed white farmers.
Few black South Africans would acknowledge that the main victims
of the regime-s misrule have increasingly been ordinary black
Zimbabweans. It seems a lifetime since Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, former
president of Tanzania, recalled to me how he plaintively told Mugabe
at his inauguration in 1980: "You have inherited a jewel.
Don-t do what I did in Tanzania. Don-t destroy it!"
If only Nyerere-s form of socialism, ujamaa, was the worst
that would have happened to Zimbabwe over the next quarter of a
century.
In fact, for
a time it seemed that Mugabe-s peculiar domestic mix of doctrinaire
socialism and semi-free enterprise economy could work as it brought
relative prosperity and social progress in the form of health care
and education to the black population in the 1980s. Since our northern
neighbour slipped into chaos in the late 1990s, Mugabe-s tottering
government has been buoyed by considerable populist support of the
rawest kind. As the latest issue of The Economist put it, "many
Zimbabweans, paradoxically, both despise and admire him".
And not just Zimbabweans. That is why I think, in this context,
it is wrong to single out President Thabo Mbeki for blame.
Mugabe has skillfully
justified his authoritarian misrule within a discourse of legitimate
redress for colonial injustice and imperialism. These sentiments
have resonated across Africa. Large numbers of Africans feel marginalised
by the global economy and its mighty supranational institutions
and remain wedded to the Marxist narrative of the liberation struggle.
I watched Mugabe receive rousing plaudits from many African delegates
at the World Development Summit in Johannesburg in 2002 —
the same conference at which he launched a scathing attack on Tony
Blair and Britain-s colonial past.
Two years later, at Mbeki-s
inauguration, he received an equally rapturous welcome. I have seen
this spontaneous outpouring of affection for a bankrupt African
leader before. I recall watching the heady welcome that Idi Amin,
the former Ugandan dictator, received from crowds of Kenyans when
he arrived at the Nairobi Hilton as chairman of the Organisation
of African Unity in the 1970s. I remember on one occasion being
rebuked by some of my fellow black leaders in The Sowetan for daring
to speak against the self-styled "King of Scotland".
This, particularly, leads me to recall the Zulu saying that I quoted
at the beginning.
And so it is with Zimbabwe
today. Many senior African National Congress officials are genuinely
concerned about the crisis, even though few of them would care to
admit it in public. And this is it. This is where we all have blundered.
This is where lies our — South African — complicity
in the failure of Mugabe-s regime. We have let the situation
in Zimbabwe deteriorate so fast and so far without as much as a
word of concern. Yet, all along, at home we have celebrated human
rights, promoted reconciliation and respected the rule of law and
the political opposition. Given these obvious double standards in
my own country, as an African I feel I am obliged to take some of
the blame for Mugabe-s belief that he is right to hang on.
Let-s look beyond the denialist Mbeki. He is not the only
one to blame. We are all culpable.
*Buthelezi is
an MP and president of the Inkatha Freedom Party.
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