THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists  
 View archive by sector
 
 
    HOME THE PROJECT DIRECTORYJOINARCHIVESEARCH E:ACTIVISMBLOGSMSFREEDOM FONELINKS CONTACT US
 

 


Back to Index

This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • 2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
  • Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images


  • Tsvangirai complicit in Mugabe's crimes
    Obert Madondo, The Ottawa Citizen
    May 06, 2008

    I'm a Zimbabwean victim of Robert Mugabe's brutality enjoying Canada's protection since coming here as a political refugee in 2003. However, I'm sickened by the West's one-sided coverage of the ongoing electoral fiasco in Zimbabwe. The unrelenting anti-Mugabe avalanche in the western media is clearly an effort to conceal the West's complicity in Mugabe's murderous rule.

    Following scattered incursions by apartheid South Africa-sponsored rebels in southern Zimbabwe in the early 1980s, Mugabe unleashed his ruthless, North Korea-trained 5th Brigade military unit. The unit exterminated 20,000 innocent villagers. Mass disappearances, beatings, gang rapes abound. Hundreds were burned alive. Some victims were forced to dig their own graves. Some were forced to sing songs praising Mugabe, before being executed.

    The international community neither intervened nor chastised Mugabe. In 1984 Scotland's Edinburgh University awarded Mugabe an honorary doctorate of law degree. In 1986 the University of Massachusetts awarded Mugabe the same honorary degree. Michigan State University honored Mugabe in 1990. In 1994, the dictator became the Knight Commander of the Order of Bath, knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.

    Zimbabwe's crimes grabbed global headlines only after the post-1999 killings, which claimed 300 lives from both MDC and Zanu PF. But now these killings included about a dozen white Zimbabweans. The dictator had also started repossessing white-owned farms to give to landless black peasants.

    What's worse, Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), and the West's darling-of-the-moment, is also complicit in Mugabe's crimes and the continuing violence in Zimbabwe.

    Tsvangirai was a fully subscribed member of Mugabe's Zanu PF party. He even held the rank of "political commissar." He never spoke out. According to The Independent (U.K.) newspaper story in 2004, he said Mr. Mugabe was once "my hero, and the hero of the liberation struggle."

    The international community is justified in condemning and isolating Mugabe, but coddling Tsvangirai is acting complicit. Tsvangirai is Robert Mugabe in democratic disguise. In 2005, his veto of a majority vote in the MDC National Council supporting participation Zimbabwe's senator elections split the party.

    In July 2006, politically-appointed thugs brutalized MDC MP, Trudy Stevenson, with whom I worked briefly in the 1990s, and left her for dead. She identified her attackers as Tsvangirai supporters.

    On paper and in the biased western media coverage of the Zimbabwe crisis, things will change, but in reality, they'll stay the same. While Mugabe represents the last detour toward Zimbabwe's final descent into hell, Tsvangirai represents a false beginning.

    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