|
Back to Index
Why
Mugabe attracts Africans and repels the West
Peter Kagwanja, Christian Science Monitor
September
17, 2007
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0917/p09s02-coop.html
As Africa applauds its
oldest ruling freedom fighter, Zimbabwe teeters on economic ruin.
Western dignitaries attending festivities to mark a decade of South
Africa-s democracy on April 27, 2004, were struck mute by
the deafening applause that greeted Zimbabwe-s president,
Robert Mugabe. "I cannot figure out why he is being applauded
when he has destroyed his country," protested Gareth Evans,
former Australian foreign minister and president of the Western
think-tank, the International Crisis Group.
Mr. Mugabe remains both
an enigma and a magnet, attracting Africans and repelling the West.
He is at the center of a seven-year-old game of brinkmanship between
Africa and the West, fostered by diametrically opposed responses
to Zimbabwe-s seizure of land owned by some 4,500 white farmers
in 2000. Since then, the two sides have looked each other in the
eye to see who would blink first. This face-off hovered over the
summit of Southern African Development Community (SADC) leaders
last month in Lusaka, Zambia, and now haunts the Commonwealth Heads
of Government Meeting in Uganda this November and the upcoming Euro-Africa
summit in Portugal in December.
Mugabe-s fall from
grace in the eyes of the West is a relatively recent phenomenon
in his 27 years in power. Now portrayed as the archetypal bare-fisted
dictator, he was hailed by former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
as "a man I can do business with." And in 1994, Queen
Elizabeth bestowed on him an honorary Knight Commander of the Order
of the Bath. What inflamed relations with Britain was the injudicious
denial by Tony Blair-s Laborites in 1997 of Britain-s
colonial responsibility for land reform. Clare Short, Britain-s
secretary of state for international development, wrote to Zimbabwe-s
minister of agriculture and land: "We are a new government
from diverse backgrounds without links to former colonial interests.
My own origins are Irish; and, as you know, we were colonized not
colonizers."
After Britain reneged
on its pledge to fund land reform, citing cronyism, Mugabe went
ahead with his own land redistribution plans, which pushed Zimbabwe-s
predominantly agrarian economy down the cliff: 80 percent unemployment,
nearly empty government coffers, collapsed services, and an annual
inflation rate of 18,000 percent. In less than seven years, Zimbabwe
has witnessed the fastest peace-time economic dip in history since
Weimer Germany - plunging one of Africa-s strongest economic
and regional breadbaskets into a crisis with 4 million people reportedly
starving and in need of food aid.
Mugabe may have lost
the economic war, but he has won every political battle with the
West. As the oldest freedom fighter still in office, he has always
drawn the biggest applause in African meetings, including the recent
SADC summit. The Africa-West standoff has emboldened him and turned
him into a symbol of African resistance, a liberation hero. Even
though foreign humanitarian aid has flowed steadily to the poor
in Zimbabwe, the West-s asset freezes and travel bans on Mugabe
and a hundred of his associates and spouses are seen in some quarters
as "racial" retribution for his seizing of white farms
and handing them over to black Zimbabweans. But invoking a moral
mission, the West insists that its "smart" sanctions have
targeted elements of the ruling elite "engaged in actions or
policies to undermine Zimbabwe-s democratic processes or institutions."
In the aftermath of the
Iraq invasion in 2003, Mugabe upped the ante, whipping nationalism
to a fever pitch: "Our cause is Africa-s cause,"
he told the fervently pro-Zimbabwe publication, New Africa, in May.
This has given wing to intense militarization of polity in the government
ahead of the 2008 elections to forestall a Western-sponsored "regime
change." In a move aimed at demobilizing the opposition-s
urban support and nipping in the bud a Ukrainian-style "orange
revolution," the Mugabe government ordered "operation
Murambatsvina" (Drive Out the Filth) - a draconian clearance
of what it termed "illegal shelters" in Harare and other
cities - which a United Nations report estimates has destroyed the
homes and livelihoods of 700,000 Zimbabweans and negatively affected
2.4 million more.
Apart from the economic
cost of Zimbabwe-s meltdown on the region, Mugabe-s
real impact on Africa is ideological. The West has urged South Africa
to break rank with states that back Mugabe and to adopt a forceful
stance against Harare. At the same time, South Africa-s ruling
elite fear that, owing to Mugabe-s nationalist credentials
and popularity, public condemnation of Harare would exacerbate South
Africa-s internal divisions over President Thabo Mbeki-s
successor and lead to isolation on the continent.
Pretoria-s behind-the-curtains
quiet diplomacy talks between Zimbabwe-s ruling party and
the opposition from 2000 to 2004 yielded a new constitutional draft
for Zimbabwe. But the initiative was stillborn because Pretoria
lacked the muscle to enforce it. Moreover, in a continent where
age matters, the 65-year-old Mr. Mbeki has an uphill task getting
octogenarian Mugabe to take him seriously.
Issues of sovereignty
have also come into play. Pretoria-s effort to use economic
leverage by offering Zimbabwe a $500 million credit line to pay
the International Monetary Fund debt in return for governance reforms
backfired. Zimbabwe rejected the offer and paid its own debt in
February 2006. Mugabe-s status as elder statesman and anticolonialist
hero has ensured unwavering regional support. An extraordinary SADC
summit in March 2007 expressed "solidarity" with Mugabe,
but appointed Mbeki as mediator between Zimbabwe-s ruling
party and the opposition. Zambia-s president, Levy Mwanawasa,
the new chair of SADC who previously described Zimbabwe as a "sinking
Titanic," made a U-turn, declaring that the country-s
problems were "exaggerated."
SADC-s meeting
last month resolved to bail Zimbabwe out of its economic woes and
endorse Mbeki-s mediation, but this enterprise has no breathing
chance unless Africa and the West end the face-off. Moreover, the
trial of Liberia-s warlord, Charles Taylor, in 2006 for crimes
against humanity as part of the West-s war on impunity in
Africa has removed guarantees for safe retirement, thus diminishing
the chance of Mugabe-s exiting. He is running in the 2008
elections. The face-off has fostered an international climate hostile
to Zimbabwe-s economic recovery.
Although Harare exited
the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in 2003, it is important
that the CHGOM in November provides an opportunity to bring Zimbabwe
back onto its agenda. Portugal, now holding the EU presidency, must
stay the course regarding its decision to invite Zimbabwe to the
Euro-Africa summit in December. This event provides a window to
revive the ties between the two continents in ways that can usefully
impact Zimbabwe.
Mugabe-s liberation
colleagues, such as Namibia-s Sam Nujoma and Zambia-s
Kenneth Kaunda should work with Europe-s new leadership -
Gordon Brown and Nicolas Sarkozy - and other influential global
elders to support the SADC mediation to deliver an economic recovery
plan and a democratic constitution to ensure a level playing field
in the 2008 polls.
*Dr. Peter Kagwanja
is acting executive director of the Democracy and Governance Program
at the Human Science Research Council in Pretoria and is president
of the Africa Policy Institute in Nairobi, Kenya.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|