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I
ripped up my dog collar to help topple this brutal tyrant
John Sentamu
December 16, 2007
http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,,2228345,00.html
A friend of
mine who has just returned from Zimbabwe wrote to me quoting what
TS Eliot wrote in The Waste Land in 1922: 'Unreal city/ Under the
brown fog of a winter dawn,/ A crowd flowed over London Bridge,
so many,/ I had not thought death had undone so many.'
What strikes
those who visit Zimbabwe is how many have been undone by death.
Zimbabwe has the highest proportion of orphans in the world (1.3
million), largely due to the devastation caused by HIV and Aids
and their related illnesses, which kill 3,200 people each week.
Then there are the needless deaths every day which occur because
most of the doctors have fled a health system in ruins. Most have
no transport to get to hospital, or, in the unlikely event that
they reach one, money to pay bills. Added to all of this is hunger
and malnutrition. It is no accident that the average life expectancy
of Zimbabweans hovers around 35, lower than any war zone.
The very identities
of individuals, of families and the nation, are eroded daily by
the struggle for life. This is the most tragic part of the history
of Zimbabwe, which so successfully struggled to liberate itself
from a racist rule that limited the identities of citizens to the
colour of their skin. Now racism has returned to haunt Zimbabwe
in a different form as the world looks on, cowed by the fear that
to criticise those who rule over a land so steeped in death is to
enter into the shoes of former colonial masters. Such misplaced
fears must be put aside.
It is not colonialism
that is to blame, but rather the ruinous policies of President Robert
Mugabe. For all his bluster against Britain and those anti-colonial
tirades that play well with those former freedom fighters and soldiers
who now occupy government positions in Africa, the wail of suffering
and the stench of death are evidence enough of the failures of a
corrupt and brutal regime, bent on staying in power at all costs.
As a clergyman
I am identified by wearing a dog collar. Last Sunday I cut it up
during a television interview and will not wear it again until Mugabe
has gone. The people of Zimbabwe have lost their identity. Until
democracy and good governance return, the spiral of poverty, brutality
and economic chaos will continue. At a political level, change will
come when the United Nations makes Zimbabwe a priority. Those European
leaders who sat down with Mugabe must now bring his appalling treatment
of his countrymen and women to the UN and provide the moral and
legal framework for a response that puts an end to his tyrannical
rule and frees the people of Zimbabwe. Our government needs to hear
our voices raised as one to take action and put pressure on the
UN.
As the UN works
to implement the plans brought by Britain to the international community
over Darfur, so the UN must now start the necessary work to place
pressure on Zimbabwe. By bringing pressure to bear on Mugabe, the
UN also provides cover to Thabo Mbeki, the South African President,
to whom Britain has looked to solve the crisis. Any progress report
on Mbeki's efforts might suggest that he has, at best, been ineffective
in his efforts to advise, cajole and persuade Mugabe to reverse
his regime. At worst, Mbeki stands offering the other cheek in complicity,
failing to lead the charge against a neighbour who is systematically
raping the country he leads.
There are many
who wonder how it is that the people of Zimbabwe survive and cope.
We do well in this season of Advent to make clear that in a country
in which the majority are Christian that it is through faith that
God remains with them, even when all the instruments of government
stand against them. The scandal is how the voices of a few heads
of African nations are heard over the cries of millions of ordinary
and suffering people. The churches at times have led bravely and
at others been complicit, co-opted by the politicians. They must
struggle against their own temptation to a quiet piety in the face
of threats and bribes and a culture of political terror. The churches
in Zimbabwe and their leaders are one of the few mechanisms left
to support both advocacy for change and delivery of vital services.
They need the full support and ears of leaders within Zimbabwe and
around the world. They are nearest to those for whom Jesus cares
most: those who hunger and thirst for righteousness' sake. They
also know best how to heal the trauma of those undone by death,
and how to fill the hungry with good things and send the rich away
empty.
There are many
at work in the UK lending essential support to the people of Zimbabwe.
Agencies such as Christian Aid, Tearfund and World Vision support
those on the ground with community development programmes. Ordinary
Zimbabweans long for the day when their international relations
become again what they were: when Zimbabwe inspired the world with
its post-independence commitment to reconciliation and when neighbouring
countries were fed from its bounty. The process for justice and
peace around land distribution is yet to be completed and cannot
be avoided.
So as you get
ready to do your Christmas food shopping this year, spare a pound,
from your trolley or your pocket, and ask the supermarkets and shops
to match your donation. Ask them to give something of your spending
to those who cannot even buy bread. Without our help, the starving,
malnourished and sick children of Zimbabwe might not see another
Christmas. By using our voices to call for change and our money
to secure the future of its population, we can each of us bring
Christmas hope to those people living under tyranny.
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