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Mugabe's
academic mugs
Peter
Godwin, The Sunday Times
June 17, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article1942886.ece
So, Edinburgh
University has finally stripped Robert Mugabe of the honorary degree
it awarded him in 1984. It is the first time in the university's
425-year history that it has revoked an honorary degree - and Mugabe
will be afforded a right of appeal.
The university's sanction
came about after a sustained anti-Mugabe campaign by its student
body and alumni, local newspapers and MPs. In order to carry it
out, the university's senate first had to alter its rules and then
empanelled three professors to examine whether there were grounds
to penalise Mugabe.
On June 6, the senate
duly announced that there were such grounds. Not a difficult decision
to arrive at, I'm sure, if 23 years late. More troubling than the
time lag is that the university has been less than honest about
the circumstances under which it conferred the honour.
Edinburgh's recent official
announcement read: "After examining evidence relating to the
situation in Zimbabwe in the early 1980s - evidence that was not
available to the university at the time the degree was conferred
[my bold] - the group recommended that the degree should be withdrawn."
One of the "three
wise men" on the investigating panel, Professor Sir Neil MacCormick,
emphasised that the university's offer of the honorary degree had
been made "in good faith" and that evidence of Mugabe's
human rights abuses - namely, the massacres in Matabeleland, in
which as many as
20,000 civilians are believed to have been murdered - only came
to light later, and "was not known to the senate when in 1984
it confirmed its decision to proceed and award the degree".
Indeed? Let's look at
the timeline: Edinburgh University conferred the degree (at the
initial suggestion of Lord Carrington, the former foreign secretary)
upon Mugabe on July 20, 1984. But more than three months previously,
on April 8, I had started reporting the massacre. The Sunday Times
ran my first piece (to which we appended two other bylines to protect
me) under the headline, "Mass murder in Matabeleland: the evidence".
The first line read:
"Robert Mugabe's government in Zimbabwe has launched a new
campaign of extraordinary brutality in Matabeleland, in the south
of the country." I reported from inside the curfew area (from
which journalists were banned) using my own testimony and other
eyewitness accounts of the Balaghwe "death camp", run
by the fearsome 5th Brigade, a North Korean-trained army unit fiercely
loyal to Mugabe.
These reports were backed
up by local priests - at least one of whom was already openly calling
the killings "genocide" - and by the Catholic Justice
and Peace Commission.
On April 15, I followed
this with a report on the front page, headlined "Zimbabwe massacre
bodies found in mine". I interviewed dozens of eyewitnesses
and went to the abandoned Antelope mineshaft, where victims from
Balaghwe were being dumped. My reporting (and that of others) continued
into mid-May, when the Catholic church had already submitted to
Mugabe a list of 629 names of those killed by the army in Matabeleland.
At that point I was forced
to leave Zimbabwe, having been warned that my life was in danger.
The police surrounded my family home looking for me and I was denounced
as an enemy of the state.
For Edinburgh University
to say that information on the killings was unavailable in July
1984 is a travesty. Just such information was paraded under banner
headlines in a national broadsheet Sunday paper with a large circulation.
Yet academics proceeded to dignify the architect of genocidal massacre,
giving him, in the words of a Foreign Office cable, "a flattering
laudation".
I find it almost impossible
to believe they could genuinely have been unaware of these reports.
In which case, what we have here is a breathtaking disregard for
the truth back in July 1984, followed by a shameful cover-up now,
in claiming these facts "were not available at the time".
Subsequently, more and
more information came out. More than a decade ago, the Catholic
Justice and Peace Commission published its detailed report on the
Matabeleland massacres. Yet still, nothing was done to strip Mugabe
of his honour.
To make matters worse,
in 1994 the Queen, acting on the advice of the Foreign Office and
the then prime minister, John Major, conferred an honorary knighthood
on Mugabe for his "important contribution to relations between
Zimbabwe and Britain". When questioned about it in parliament
in
2003, Tony Blair agreed to consider stripping Mugabe of the knighthood.
He still hasn't got round to doing so.
Such action would not
be unprecedented; a bunch of foreign royals, including the Emperor
Franz Joseph I, had their honorary knighthoods rescinded in
1915. Mussolini had his taken back in 1940, Emperor Hirohito had
his rescinded in 1941 and restored 30 years later, and Ceausescu
had his withdrawn in 1989, in the nick of time - a week before his
people rose up and executed him.
The government has no
business allowing Mugabe to retain his honorary knighthood and the
dons of Edinburgh, before basking in our approval for withdrawing
Mugabe's honorary degree, need to come clean about the circumstances
in which they conferred it.
- Peter Godwin's memoir,
When a Crocodile Eats the Sun, is published by Picador
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