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Until
death do us part - the Mugabe vow
Alexactus
T. Kaure, The Namibian (Windhoek)
April
13, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200704130379.html
IT is a theme
that runs through some of the great literary works of our time.
It is particularly a dominant theme in Shakespeare's works, especially
Macbeth. That
is: once one goes deep into crime, then it becomes difficult for
such a person to get out of it. In
such a situation, there is usually one option left for the perpetrator:
keep on committing the crimes. The
past becomes the present. This
is how Mugabe ended up where he is today.
It is, therefore, pure
daydreaming or wishful thinking on the part of SADC leaders and
others to think that somehow Mugabe would one day voluntarily relinquish,
or retire from, power.
There is simply
too much at stake. Forget
about such naïve comments by President Thabo Mbeki and others
that Mugabe will retire peacefully. Mugabe
is not totally oblivious to the fact that he might face a Saddam
Hussein-type trial should he step down. He
thus cannot envision a peaceful retirement life even if his ruling
Zanu-PF is still in power.
Otherwise there is no
explanation why the 83-year-old Mugabe, who has been President for
27 years, is precariously clinging onto power at all cost and in
the face of a country which is in a political social and economic
coma.
Also forget about the
much-touted fast-track land reform as being at the centre of the
current malaise and stagnation.
The point is that Mugabe
has a long history of silencing his opponents - sometimes in the
most brutal fashion.
Because for him, politics
is a matter of life or death and he does not regard it as a means
of running the affairs of a nation with periodic changes among those
at the helm of state structures.
Almost 30 years on and
there is still no answer about the mysterious death of the former
liberation struggle military commander and hero, Josiah Tongongara,
in a car accident just before Zimbabwe's independence in 1980.
Journalists who in the
past have implied that Mugabe had a hand in Tongongara's death have
been swiftly punished.
And that should tell
the story.
Some of us knew
that there were different opinions on how to conclude the Chimurenga
War. The
commanders were convinced that their forces could, within few months,
over-run the Rhodesian forces and take the country, but the political
leadership instead opted for a sell-out strategy - the Lancaster
House Agreement - which was a face-saving strategy for Britain.
And Mugabe and others
instead agreed to be co-opted into this scheme because it fitted
into their own grand strategy to succeed the Rhodesian ruling elite.
But it was the
Matabeleland massacre in the early and mid 1980s that highlighted
Mugabe's disdain of any challenge to his rule. He
brooks no opposition.
Operation Gukurahundi
was launched as an effort to stem an uprising in part of the Midlands
and in Matabeleland immediately after independence. One
could legitimately argue that any sovereign state has a right to
ensure that law and order is maintained. But
this operation was internationally condemned for the excessive violence
it unleashed for over a period of five years - from 1981 to 1987
only ending with the signing of the Unity Accord between PF-Zapu
and Zanu-PF.
Even one of
Zimbabwe's foremost nationalists, Joshua Nkomo, was on the run during
this reign of terror by Mugabe's North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade.
Figures are always elusive in a war situation but it is estimated
that close to 20 000 people, mainly innocent civilians, perished
at the hands of the Fifth Brigade.
The respected
Catholic Commission
for Justice and Peace compiled a report about these atrocities.
It is a document worth
reading, especially for those interested not only in Zimbabwean
history and politics but Africa's as well.
The genocides in Rwanda
and now in Darfur perhaps are clear reminders that these are problems
of our time and not events relegated to the dustbin of history.
For this writer, the
scars of this operation were visible all over Matabeleland, especially
in Bulawayo - which was my first entry into independent Zimbabwe
in September 1980 when I was still in a refugee in neighbouring
Botswana.
So the current clampdown
on the opposition parties and politicians, their supporters and
the independent press must not be seen in isolation.
It is part of long-running
political culture based on violence and total disregard for the
opposing views.
You are either with them
or against and in the latter case, you must perish.
Joshua Nkomo understood
this and that's why his party was literally incorporated within
the Zanu-PF structure and he allowed himself to be made one of the
two vice-presidents to Mugabe - a strategy that was meant to water-down
his power and silence him completely.
So, the opposition in
Zimbabwe has an uphill battle.
They are fighting a well
organised state machinery and not just another political party -
backed by some of the most draconian laws, the police, the military,
the intelligence network and organised thugs sponsored by the ruling
party.
Remember 'operation clean
up trash' - Murambatsvina? It had its political contents and functions
- to break up opposition strongholds in urban areas.
One often hears some
self-serving comments like: Mugabe is a liberation hero, Pan-Africanist,
or he is fighting the West and therefore needs support.
To me, Mugabe is not
a Samora Machel or an Amilcar Cabral.
He is just another capitalist
worshipper and he therefore can't be a liberator or a Pan-Africanist.
He has effectively joined
the other capitalist thugs in the rest of Southern Africa and beyond.
Let me be on record.
No one is calling for
a regime change in Zimbabwe - though there is nothing wrong with
this if it comes through a democratic process - but for a different
set of leadership at the helm of the ruling Zanu-PF party.
But with the recent endorsement
of Mugabe as the next presidential candidate for Zanu-PF, hopes
are dashed again and Zimbabweans might have to endure another extended
period of back-breaking hardship and suffering.
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