|
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
Zimbabwe's
slow-motion horror show
Nat Hentoff, The Village Voice
May 27, 2008
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0822,zimbabwe-s-slow-motion-horror-show,451814,4.html
According to official
results by Zimbabwe's electoral commission on May 2, the great African
liberator, Robert Mugabe, lost that country's March 29 election
to Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for Democratic Change,
by 43.2 to Tsvangirai's 47.9 percent. Since the law requires a runoff,
Mugabe, who is the law, had the second round delayed while his thugs
terrorized those ungrateful Zimbabweans who dared to vote against
him. (Or, at least, those suspected of doing so.)
As the supreme enforcer
told the BBC on May 16: "We will not allow an opposition backed
by Western imperialists to win." The opposition is forbidden
from holding rallies preceding the runoff.
On May 8, the
Zimbabwe Association
of Doctors for Human Rights reported that in the capital of
Harare alone, "[s]o many victims [of Mugabe's enforcers] have
come in with broken bones in the last 24 hours that hospitals and
clinics . . . are running out of plaster of Paris" (The New
York Times, May 10).
And in rural areas, where
the Movement for Democratic Change did well, the General Agriculture
and Plantation Workers' Union said that at least 40,000 farm workers
and their families were driven from their homes on suspicion of
having voted against the Liberator.
A doctor in Harare, submerged
in the wounded, said of one night's carnage: "What came in
on the trucks was too pathetic for words. They can't walk. Their
feet are beaten. Their buttocks are rotting. Their arms are broken.
They're trying to walk on their knees." In the Economist's
May 10th bloody summation: "Following the aftermath of Zimbabwe's
presidential election is like watching a horror film in slow motion."
Have you heard a word
of protest from Nelson Mandela, the one African whose voice could
awaken the world to these horrors? I asked someone who knows Mandela
about his silence on the genocide in Darfur and Zimbabweans seeking
real liberation. He told me: "This liberator cannot turn against
this fighter who won the independence of his country from the British."
As of this writing, nearly
a hundred suspected wrong voters in the March 29 election have been
murdered by Mugabe's forces, which include his loyal "war veterans"
of the liberation and his merciless youth militia. More than a thousand
people—including children—have been badly battered by
these goon squads, and over 800 homes have been burned down.
But Mugabe is so ferociously
intent on staying in power (and finishing the grand palace he's
been building) that, as Doctors for Human Rights cautions, all of
these figures, nightmarish as they are, "grossly underestimate
the [actual] number of victims," many of whom never made even
it to a hospital or doctor.
Amnesty International,
raising its voice back on April 25 against the storm that was gathering
even before the election, declared: "The actions taken by the
police today are unacceptable. The Zimbabwean police must stop harassing
political and human rights activists immediately and act to protect
victims of post-election violence."
To whom are Mugabe's
atrocities "unacceptable?" The United Nations, of course,
is useless, as it has been for five horrifying years in Darfur.
The members of the African Union confer among themselves, with only
Tanzania and Zambia being openly troubled. South Africa's president,
Thabo Mbeki—still the main negotiator on Zimbabwe—calmly
said, in the days before Mugabi's government unleashed its scorched-earth
approach to the runoff: "It's just an election. I see no crisis
there." Now Mbeki admits there may be one—but he remains
as ineffective as U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
Meanwhile, some of Mugabe's
terrorists are preening about their success in intimidating opponents
of the deadly regime before the June 27 runoff. One of them, the
Wall Street Journal reported on May 14, "showed off a written
log of victims and their 'confessions' that they had voted for the
opposition."
But that runoff election
could be delayed for months—until Mugabe feels certain that
his voter re-education program has secured a sufficiently overwhelming
victory for him. The BBC predicts that on that day, "people
coming to every polling station will see 'war veterans' in police
uniforms" waiting to check off their ballots. Untold numbers
of Zimbabweans will be too scared to show up.
Meanwhile, in Darfur's
endless slow-motion horror show, the ghastly present scene is captured
in the headline of a March 20 story in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:
"No One Is Counting the Dead." This Associated Press story
quotes Jan Egeland, former U.N. chief of humanitarian operations,
as urging the media to stop using the ubiquitous Darfur death count
of 200,000: "It's two and a half years old. It's wrong."
Now a special adviser
to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, Egeland does not doubt that
thousands more have been killed or died of unintended diseases in
areas that humanitarian workers can no longer reach. The A.P. report
grimly adds that the United Nations doesn't support the new large-scale
mortality survey that Egeland insists is necessary, "because
Sudan's government doesn't want one." Sudan, you see, is a
sovereign state!
A new mortality survey
would include the seven children killed on May 4 when—as reported
by the Paris-based Sudan Tribune's website—"Sudanese
government planes bombed Shegeg Karo [in] Northern Darfur."
The raid's targets included a primary school. General Al-Bashir's
Antonov plane (a retrofitted Russian cargo plane) destroyed kids
in the second, third, and fourth grades—plus five-year-old
Yusuf Adam Hamid in the kindergarten.
The names and ages are
in a report by Eric Reeves, the most authoritative historian of
Darfur's genocide, in the May 12 Christian Science Monitor. He asks
a question that some of you may find uncomfortable: "How would
Americans respond if terrorists—acting on behalf of another
country—deliberately killed, with complete military impunity
. . . children in one of our nation's schools? Outrage would bring
the country to a halt. It would change the very nature of the presidential
campaign. News coverage would be unending.
"Washington's response
against the offending nation would be swift and destructive. . .
. The whole world should respond vigorously to a nation that barbarously
bombs kindergartners such as Yusuf Adam Hamid. Instead, we lamely
bow in deference to Sudan's 'national sovereignty.' "
Next week: Only intervention
by force into Zimbabwe and Sudan will put an end to these slow-motion
horror shows.
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
|