|
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
If
only Mugabe were white
Nicholas D. Kristof, New York Times
June 29, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/29/opinion/29kristof.html?ref=opinion
Patson Chipiro, a democracy
activist, wasn't home when Robert Mugabe's thugs showed up looking
for him.
So they grabbed his wife,
Dadirai, and tormented her by chopping off one of her hands and
both of her feet. Finally, they threw her into a hut, locked the
door and burned it to the ground. That has been the pattern lately:
with opposition figures in hiding, Mr. Mugabe's goons kill loved
ones to send a message of intimidation. Even the wife of the mayor-elect
of Harare, the capital, was kidnapped and beaten to death.
When the white supremacist
regime of Ian Smith oppressed Zimbabweans in the 1970s, African
countries rallied against it. Eventually, even the white racist
government in South Africa demanded change and threatened to cut
off electricity supplies if it didn't happen.
Yet South African President
Thabo Mbeki continues to make excuses for Mr. Mugabe - who is more
brutal than Ian Smith ever was - out of misplaced deference for
a common history in the liberation struggle. Zimbabweans suffered
so much for so many decades from white racism that the last thing
they need is excuses for Mr. Mugabe's brutality because of his skin
color.
Life expectancy in Zimbabwe
has already dropped from the low 60s to the high 30s. It's true
that he has created more trillionaires than any other country, but
that's only because inflation may be as much as 10 million percent.
Anyone with $90 is a trillionaire in Zimbabwean dollars, and buying
a small loaf of bread costs one billion Zimbabwean dollars.
When I grew up in the
1970s, a central truth was that Ian Smith was evil and Mr. Mugabe
heroic. So it was jolting on my last visit to Zimbabwe, in 2005,
to see how many Zimbabweans looked back on oppressive white rule
with nostalgia. They offered a refrain: "Back then, at least
parents could feed their children."
Africa's rulers often
complain, with justice, that the West's perceptions of the continent
are disproportionately shaped by buffoons and tyrants rather than
by the increasing number of democratically elected presidents presiding
over 6 percent growth rates. But as long as African presidents mollycoddle
Mr. Mugabe, they are branding Africa with his image.
To his credit, Zambian
President Levy Mwanawasa has taken the lead in denouncing Mr. Mugabe's
abuses, and Nelson Mandela bluntly deplored Mr. Mugabe's "tragic
failure of leadership." Mr. Mandela could also have been talking
about Mr. Mbeki's own failures.
The United States
doesn't have much leverage, and Britain squandered its influence
partly by focusing on the plight of dispossessed white farmers.
(That's tribalism for Anglo-Saxons.) But there is a way out.
The solution is for leaders
at the African Union summit this week to give Mr. Mugabe a clear
choice.
One option would be for
him to "retire" honorably - "for health reasons"
after some face-saving claims of heart trouble - at a lovely estate
in South Africa, taking top aides with him. He would be received
respectfully and awarded a $5 million bank account to assure his
comfort for the remainder of his days.
The other alternative
is that he could dig in his heels and cling to power. African leaders
should make clear that in that case, they will back an indictment
of him and his aides in the International Criminal Court. Led by
the Southern African Development Community, the world will also
impose sanctions against Mr. Mugabe's circle and cut off all military
supplies and spare parts. Mozambique, South Africa and Congo will
also cut off the electricity they provide to Zimbabwe.
If those are the alternatives,
then the odds are that Mr. Mugabe will publicly clutch his chest
and insist that he must step down. There will still be risks of
civil conflict and a military coup, but Zimbabwe would have a reasonable
prospect of again becoming, as Mr. Mugabe once called it, "the
jewel of Africa."
Some people will object
that a tyrant shouldn't be rewarded with a pot of cash and a comfortable
exile. That's true. But any other approach will likely result in
far more deaths, perhaps even civil war.
How do we know that sanctions
will work? Well, we have Mr. Mugabe's own testimony.
In a 1987 essay in Foreign
Affairs, Mr. Mugabe called on the U.S. to impose sanctions on white-ruled
South Africa for engaging in a "vicious and ugly civil war"
against its own people. Mr. Mugabe demanded that the world "accept
the value of sanctions as a means of raising the cost" of brutal
misrule.
If only Mr. Mugabe were
a white racist! Then the regional powers might stand up to him.
For the sake of Zimbabweans, we should be just as resolute in confronting
African tyrants who are black as in confronting those who are white.
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
|