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Why
Mugabe must be forced out
Kofi Bentil, Business Daily (Kenya)
December 05, 2007
African Union leaders
meeting their European Union counterparts in December are supposed
to represent our future but when it comes to Robert Mugabe they
are stuck in an ideological time-warp: Mugabe is a freedom-fighter
and Zimbabwe is a victim of Western depredations, including threats
to boycott the meeting. Even democratically-elected Ghanaian President
John Kufuor, chairman of the African Union, recently observed equivocally:
"When the leader of the opposition gets beaten up, for good
or ill, naturally all concerned should be worried." At least
Mugabe is honest: "Some are crying that they were beaten. Yes
you will be thoroughly beaten. When the police say move, you move.
If you don-t move, you invite the police to use force,"
he said about trade-union activists arrested in September last year.
Paralysed by hero-worship,
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit in August
supported Mugabe-s claims of a UK plot, our heads of State
gave Mugabe a podium and a standing ovation in Kenya in May, most
of them backed Zimbabwe-s cruelly ironic election to the UN
Commission on Sustainable Development this year and the whole AU
boycotted a 2003 summit with the EU because Mugabe was excluded.
Their pretext is the sacred mantra of non-interference and respecting
sovereignty - meaning the sovereignty of ruling cliques, not of
long-suffering citizens. Our leaders have to recognise that Mugabe
is not an ideological dictator in the mould of their heroes Kwame
Nkrumah in Ghana, Julius Nyerere in Tanzania, Kenneth Kaunda in
Zambia or Milton Obote in Uganda, nor even like ideologues such
as Hitler, Stalin or his own hero Kim Il Sung: he is a straightforward
kleptocrat determined to hold on to power at any cost.
Even the democratic African
leaders, including Kufuor and South Africa-s Thabo Mbeki,
like to hear Mugabe blaming the West for Zimbabwe-s and all
our ills, as he did in Nairobi at May-s Common Market for
Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) summit. He was applauded for
complaining about commodity prices being fixed by the West, although
free markets do not fix prices in the way that African governments
fix prices and monopolise commodity sales. SADC leaders in Lusaka
even backed Mugabe-s claim that Zimbabwe is a victim of economic
sanctions although the only measures, by the EU and the USA, are
travel and financial restrictions on about 130 members of the ruling
clique (in fact, the UK is the second biggest provider of humanitarian
assistance to Zimbabwe). SADC executive secretary Dr. Tomaz Salomao
said in November: "for us they are sanctions and our approach
has been to have them lifted."
Many also shared Mugabe-s
economically-ignorant call for self-sufficiency. But no developed
country is self-sufficient in commodities (nor even most manufactured
products) and we Africans cannot live on a diet of cocoa beans and
tea: selling it is much more profitable. Manufacturing and adding
value are great economic aims but they do not happen successfully
by government decree - right now, Africans suffer heavy import tariffs
for essential inputs (such as fertilizer) and medicines, state control
of exports, lack of property rights, obstacles to private enterprise
and a ubiquitous corrupt bureaucracy. Yet our leaders do not accept
that the key to our future is allowing our people to create wealth:
we cannot free ourselves from poverty without economic freedoms
such as property rights, the rule of law and free markets.
But the Mugabe version
remains attractive because we all like to believe that our failures
are someone else-s fault. And Mugabe remains in power after
27 years, at the age of 83. It seems true that evil men live long
but that is because every day an evil man lives is like eternity
to the oppressed. Neither South Africa-s "quiet diplomacy"
nor Western restrictions on money-laundering can influence a man
who is cocooned in delusions and treated with deference by his neighbours.
Our new crop of elected African leaders, blithely talking of an
African Renaissance, should be emboldened by their own democratic
authority to face up to people like Mugabe (and the leaders of Ethiopia,
Sudan and Somalia). They should make Mugabe unwelcome at civilized
meetings like the EU-AU summit in Lisbon and put legal pressure
on him by consensus, as West African leaders did to force out Charles
Taylor in Liberia. They should heed the call of Ghanaian former
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan who said recently: "Africans
must guard against a pernicious, self-destructive form of racism
that unites citizens to rise up and expel tyrannical rulers who
are white, but to excuse tyrannical rulers who are black" Before
embarrassing themselves again, our leaders must come to their senses
and join the huge majority of Africans who reject the barbaric Mugabe:
by embracing economic freedoms to save their own countries, they
would offer hope to Zimbabweans for the day after Mugabe.
* Mr Bentil is a lecturer
at Ashesi University
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