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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe's
Ahab
Peter Godwin, Los Angeles Times
March 25, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-godwin25mar25,0,7210173.story
Once it was Africa's
shining city on a hill, a beacon of prosperity and economic growth
in the gloom of a continent shrouded by poverty. Emerging in 1980
from a seven-year civil war against white settler rule, the newly
independent nation of Zimbabwe embraced racial reconciliation and
invited the country's whites (one in 20 of the population) to remain
and contribute to the new nation.
I was one of those who
gladly dismissed Rhodesia and became Zimbabwean. Upon the firm economic
infrastructure he had inherited, Robert Mugabe, our first black
leader, built a health and educational system that was the envy
of Africa. Zimbabwe became the continent's most literate country,
with its highest per capita income. Zimbabwe easily fed itself and
had plenty left over to export to its famine-prone neighbors.
I remember crisscrossing
the continent then as Africa correspondent for a British newspaper,
and each time I returned to the newly renamed capital of Harare
(previously it had been Salisbury), I was reminded that in comparison
to what surrounded it, Zimbabwe was like Switzerland. The roads
were well maintained, the elevators worked, electricity was constant,
you could drink the water, the steaks were world-renowned. The Zimbabwe
dollar was at near parity with its American namesake.
Fast forward to today,
and the country is unrecognizable.
Zimbabwe now has the
fastest-shrinking peacetime economy in the world. This week, one
U.S. dollar (even in its newly enfeebled state) will fetch you 55
million Zimbabwe dollars on the street. Hyperinflation there has
soared well above 100,000% -- way past what it was in the Weimar
Republic, when Germans loaded up wheelbarrows with money to go grocery
shopping. Zimbabweans must carry huge wads of cash around in shopping
bags, and by the time they reach the checkout desk at the shortage-racked
supermarkets, the prices have already gone up.
Commercial agriculture
-- the backbone of the economy -- lies shattered. All but a few
of the country's 5,000 large-scale farmers, most of whom were white,
have been run off their properties by government-backed squatters
and militia. From being a food exporter, Zimbabwe would now starve
without U.N. famine relief. And even with it, half the population
is malnourished. Education and healthcare have collapsed. Ravaged
by AIDS, life expectancy has plummeted from around 60 years old
to about 35, the world's lowest. Zimbabwe has more orphans per capita
than almost any other country on the planet. Water is undrinkable,
power infrequent, roads potholed, fuel scarce, corruption endemic.
My own parents, an engineer
and a doctor and better off than most, still lost everything as
I watched from my new home in New York, frequently returning to
check on them and try to persuade them to leave. But they insisted
on staying. By the time my father died in 2004, their pensions,
life insurance and stocks were worthless.
Why? It comes down to
one man: Robert Mugabe, now in his 28th year in power and still
refusing to go. Like Sampson, he would rather pull the temple down
around him, would rather destroy Zimbabwe than leave office. The
damage he has wrought will take generations to repair.
The country's free-fall
into failed statehood began in earnest in 2000. That was when the
electorate tired of him and his increasingly imperious one-party
rule and voted down his attempt to do away with term limits so that
he could continue as president. Mugabe, the onetime guerrilla leader
who now saw himself as liberator of the country, reacted with astonishing
venom. He turned on the newly emboldened black opposition, harassing,
imprisoning and torturing their supporters. And those white commercial
farmers he'd invited to remain in 1980 he threw off the land, distributing
their farms among his cronies, which helped precipitate the economic
catastrophe because few of them had the inclination or technical
know-how to farm.
Mugabe became an African
Ahab, Melville's "monomaniacal commander," marinating
in a toxic brew of hate and denial as he plunged his ship of state
down into the dark vortex, railing all the while from the quarterdeck
against the great white whale. He blamed Zimbabwe's plunge on the
largely symbolic sanctions imposed by the West. And he refused to
negotiate with his own, overwhelmingly black, opposition, dismissing
them as lackeys of Britain, the former colonial power.
Why do Zimbabweans continue
to put up with Mugabe? In large numbers, they don't. Since 2000,
most have tried to vote against him in presidential elections, but
these were blatantly rigged. Now, as many as 70% of those between
18 and 60 have left the country to live and work elsewhere. It's
an exodus on a par with the flood of Irish immigrants into America
after the potato famine. And it's also the key to how the shattered
Zimbabwe state survives -- remittances from its diaspora. People
like me sending hard currency back to family and friends. By doing
so, we inadvertently assist Mugabe to survive too.
Now a sprightly 84 years
old, Mugabe has recently moved into a $26-million palace, with 25
bedroom suites, furnished with Sun King flourishes. He rules as
a dictator through a network of army officers.
It is on them that he
will rely once more to mastermind the presidential election Saturday.
It is an election in name only, with no hope of being "free
and fair." Mugabe has already rejected various constitutional
reforms backed by South Africa. Electoral rolls are a joke, stuffed
with fictitious voters. Police officers are to be allowed into voting
booths "to assist illiterate voters." And votes are to
be counted not at individual polling stations but at a single "national
command center" staffed by senior army officers, which is where
the rigging will likely take place.
Mugabe has banned most
independent observers, instead inviting teams from China, Russia,
Iran and Angola -- nations with no modern history of free and fair
democracy. And finally, the more than 4 million in the Zimbabwe
diaspora are not allowed postal votes.
None of this bodes well
for Mugabe's two main opponents. Morgan Tsvangirai, of the Movement
for Democratic Change, is a veteran of several rigged poll defeats
and seems unlikely to fare any better this time, despite the enthusiastic
crowds he draws to his rallies. Mugabe's other threat is Simba Makoni,
a member of Mugabe's own politburo until he was expelled recently
for daring to compete for the presidency.
The only real hope is
that the men responsible for carrying out the rigging -- Mugabe's
secret police, his senior government apparatchiks and the army leadership
-- may have lost faith in their longtime leader. Perhaps they will
refuse to fiddle the vote, especially because Makoni, the former
Cabinet minister, is running as a "reformist" candidate,
presenting the prospect of change with continuity.
It is a very slim prospect.
*Peter Godwin
is the author of "When a Crocodile Eats the Sun -- A Memoir
of Africa," which describes the collapse of Zimbabwe and the
disintegration of his family there.
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