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Regime
change in Zimbabwe is critical for SA labour and business
Moeletsi Mbeki, The Cape Argus (SA)
March 05, 2008
http://www.zwnews.com/print.cfm?ArticleID=18328
Once seen as a progressive
and dynamic movement that was going to deliver Africa from bondage
to modernity and prosperity, African nationalism has turned out
to be a huge disappointment. Half a century after its liberation
from colonialism, Africa has dropped so far down the development
scales that experts refer to Africans as mankind's Bottom Billion
that can only come out of the black hole they have dug themselves
into through interventions by the rest of the world. There is no
better illustration of the failure of African nationalism than Zimbabwe
under the leadership of liberators Zanu PF and its leader, Robert
Mugabe. In the past decade Zimbabwe shows how an African country
travels from relative prosperity to a basket case. At independence
Zimbabwe was one of the most diversified economies in Africa, today
it is breaking every negative growth indicator one can think of.
Life expectancy at birth has fallen below 40 years; a quarter of
the population has fled; inflation has reached numbers that boggle
the mind; and agricultural and manufacturing output is a fraction
of what they were only eight years ago. Zimbabwe's commercial beef
herd fell from 1.68 million in 1999 to only 0.53 million in 2002.
Incomes per head in Zimbabwe have fallen to where they were before
World War 2. Zimbabweans are not the only people who are suffering
from Zanu PF's follies. South Africans are also taking a beating
and so are several other countries in the region.
South Africa's
exports to Zimbabwe reached their peak around 1997-98 when Zimbabwe's
per capita incomes also peaked. After a few years of a steep decline
South Africa's exports have stagnated throughout the present decade
at about R7 billion a year. Before we can answer what must be done
to find a solution to Zimbabwe's crisis and by whom, we need first
to understand who is affected and how they are affected by the failures
of the Mugabe regime. The people of Zimbabwe have clearly been the
primary victims of Mugabe's repressive misrule and economic mismanagement.
Thousands have been killed and many brutalised by Mugabe's security
machine. Over a million people have been uprooted from their homes
in the regime's Operation Clean up Rubbish and in the confiscation
of commercial farms.
The second group of casualties
has been South African workers, especially the poor and the unemployed.
The meltdown of the Zimbabwe economy has led to declining exports
from South Africa to that country. In practice this meant loss of
jobs by South African workers whose companies were exporting to
Zimbabwe. Secondly, due to repression and the meltdown, millions
of poor Zimbabweans have fled to South Africa and have been compelled
to live in South Africa's slums, thus putting further pressure on
the limited resources South Africa's slum dwellers have access to.
The third casualties were South African companies that, besides
losing export markets have lost their investment which became devalued
in the meltdown. Many of the South African companies invested in
Zimbabwe are listed at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and several
of their shareholders are ordinary South African workers whose pension
savings are invested in these listed companies. South Africa's workers
have thus taken a triple blow from Mugabe's attempt to impose his
dictatorship. They have lost jobs; they have had to share meager
resources with fleeing Zimbabweans and they have had their pensions
undermined.
What must be done? Mugabe's
attempt over the past eight years to impose a dictatorship has led
to major losses for South African businesses and especially for
South Africa's black workers. The slow death of Zimbabwe can be
reversed, but it cannot be reversed as long as Zanu PF and Mugabe
retain power and carry on along their destructive path. South Africa's
government elite is not motivated to take practical action to change
the situation in Zimbabwe because it does not feel that its interests
are affected by the crisis in that country. It is, therefore, up
to South African business and South African workers to assist the
people of Zimbabwe to bring about regime change in Harare. South
Africans must be educated by business and labor that the poor Zimbabweans
that have fled to South Africa are not their enemy and that attacking
them, as is becoming increasingly frequent, will not solve the damage
to South Africa caused by the Mugabe regime.
* Moeletsi
Mbeki is deputy chairman of the South African Institute of International
Affairs, an independent think-tank based at the University of the
Witwatersrand in Johannesburg
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