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Whites fine for Zanu-PF, not for MDC
Geoffrey
Nyarota, The Zimbabwe Times
September 08, 2008
http://www.thezimbabwetimes.com/?p=3604
The campaign
pitch of President Robert Mugabe in recent elections has been consistent.
Since the electorate shocked him out of deepening complacency in
the aftermath of the constitutional referendum held back in February
2000 Mugabe has sought to portray himself as a patriot, while presenting
his rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, as nothing more than a groveling puppet
of the West.
Mugabe and the former
ruling Zanu-PF have paraded themselves as paragons of post-colonial
political virtue, while dismissing those who oppose them as shameless
sell-outs, permanently at the beck and call of a dispossessed white
farming community and a Western world seeking to re-colonise Zimbabwe.
In the world of make-believe
painted by Mugabe and his surrogates at Zanu-PF campaign rallies
political correctness entails having nothing or as little as possible
to do with white people especially those of Zimbabwean commercial
farming stock or with the representatives, even accredited diplomats,
of Western nations, particularly the United Kingdom, the United
States or Australia.
This essentially
racist posturing was evolved and fine-tuned in the period after
the 2000 referendum, when it suddenly dawned on the Zanu-PF leadership
that they no longer enjoyed the fawning support and unquestioning
loyalty of the Zimbabwean electorate.
Evidence abounds, however, that Mugabe-s and Zanu-PF-s
racist pretensions are based on a false premise and shrouded in
hypocrisy and double-speak. Zanu-PF has thus continued to delude
both itself and party loyalists over the years simply because its
rivals in the MDC have somehow allowed the party to get away with
what essentially amounts to telling two self-serving falsehoods.
Mugabe in the early days
of Zimbabwe-s independence basked in the glory of overstated
Western adulation, while Zimbabwe benefited from the backing and
support of a Western world anxious to support a government they
somehow believed would constitute a departure from the African post-independence
stereotype of corruption, economic mismanagement, lawlessness and
abuse of civic rights. Aid funds poured into Africa-s newest
nation while Mugabe was toasted in Western capitals. A knighthood
was conferred on him by Queen Elizabeth the Second at Buckingham
Palace while members of the Zanu-PF Women-s League ululated
in Harare. A number of universities on both sides of the Atlantic
recognised him through honorary degrees.
The first lie is that
Western nations are natural enemies of Zimbabwe.
The second falsehood,
more significantly, is that Zanu-PF hates while people. Nothing
could be further from the truth.
In fact, Zanu-PF has
built a strategic circle of its own white friends over the years.
Not only does Zanu-PF have dealings and cordial relations with its
white allies; the people concerned are in most cases capitalist
entrepreneurs who have prospered magnificently in Zimbabwe through
their association with the ruling elite. Some prosper through exploiting
the very people Zanu-PF pretends to protect.
Back in 1980 Mugabe went
out of his way to prove to an anxious world that he was more than
willing to abide by the non-racist tenets of his party-s first
election manifesto.
Zanu-PF-s election
manifesto stated categorically: "Zanu wishes to give the fullest
assurance to the white community, the Asian and coloured communities
that a Zanu government can never in principle or in social or government
practice, discriminate against them. Racism, whether practiced by
whites or blacks, is anathema to the humanitarian philosophy of
Zanu. It is as primitive a dogma as tribalism or regionalism."
The Zanu-PF of today
publicly castigates and demonizes opponents such as the MDC who
espouse similar non-racist policies and openly engage with members
of the white community, branding them as enemies of the people and
as puppets of the West.
Surprisingly, supporters
both in and out of the country who hailed Mugabe for his former
concern for the welfare of the ordinary man and his policy of national
reconciliation, still glorify him long after he abandoned both the
concern and the policy and now constantly spouts racist diatribe
without the mandate of the majority of his people to do so.
But then to a considerable
extent Mugabe and his acolytes depend for their survival on the
existence of powerful white supporters who manipulate and strategize
behind the scenes.
In the eyes
of Zanu-PF and some post-colonial African political opinion the
grievous error that the MDC makes is to parade its Roy Bennetts,
David Coltarts, Eddie Crosses, Ian Kayses and Trudy Stevensons in
public; granting them a manifestly conspicuous frontline role in
the fight for democratic change.
The MDC strategists perhaps
never read George Orwell-s Animal Farm or took serious note
of Squealer-s constant exhortation to "Tactics, comrades."
Squealer was the porcine equivalent of Zimbabwe-s former Minister
of Information, Prof Jonathan Moyo. In the Zimbabwean context, Mugabe
did not preach reconciliation until he had the keys to the office
of the Prime Minister in hand. Yet Tsvangirai practices appeasement
and magnanimity from a position of powerlessness. Maybe if he could
persuade Bennett to withdraw from the front he would soon have real
power to share with him.
Tactics,
comrades!
While the MDC-s
white supporters love to shout from public platforms, Zanu-PF-s
whites are voiceless but powerful backroom strategists. Their rare
forays onto newspaper front pages are often prompted merely by the
pressing need to defend themselves in the face of allegations of
corruption, outright fraud or other impropriety while making money
for themselves and Zanu-PF.
Being dedicated capitalists,
even when Mugabe was still an avowed socialist, their major preoccupation
is to make as much financial hay as possible, while the Zanu-PF
sun still shines. Over the past 28 years of Mugabe-s rule
leading entrepreneurs such as the gregarious British businessman
Roland "Tiny" Rowland, the somewhat eccentric Nicholas
van Hoogstraten, also British, John Arnold Bredenkamp, who constantly
parries accusations of arms dealing, and Conrad Muller "Billy"
Rautenbach who took care of Zanu-PF financial interests in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, have forged strong alliances with the Zanu-PF
leadership, Mugabe himself included.
So too have emergent
businessmen such as Lt. Col Lionel Dyke (Retired). He quickly rose
from the relative obscurity of an officer in the Zimbabwe National
Army and was thrust into the limelight by the turn of the century
as a political broker.
He was assigned by two
men he claimed to be his allies in Zanu-PF, Emmerson Mnangagwa,
then Speaker of Parliament and retired defence forces commander
Gen Vitalis Zvinavashe to broker a partnership deal between the
ruling party and the MDC. Dyke said the MDC was represented by the
party-s secretary general, Welshman Ncube and Paul Themba
Nyathi, its secretary for information and publicity.
Dyke revealed these details
to me in December 2002 when I was editor of the now banned Daily
News. He disclosed that he had also been assigned to secure the
support of The Daily News, then the country-s largest newspaper,
for the ambitious political initiative. The initiative sought to
sideline both Mugabe and Tsvangirai, in favour of a new leadership.
I turned Dyke-s proposal down, and blew the plot in the newspaper.
Col Dyke, one of Zanu-PF-s
most trusted white allies now rakes in millions through landmine
recovery operations in Zimbabwe, the Middle East, Kosovo and other
trouble-spots of the world. South Africa-s President Thabo
Mbeki has since taken over the role of mediator in the Zimbabwean
political crisis.
Dyke, who was commander
of the Rhodesian African Rifles during Ian Smith-s war against
the guerilla armies, was in charge of a regiment of paratroopers
in 1983 to 84 during the Gukurahundi massacres in Matabeleland.
The Catholic Justice and Peace Commission-s report "Breaking
the Silence: Building True Peace" says Dyke expressed support
for the deployment by government of Five Brigade against civilians,
saying this strategy "brought peace very, very quickly".
While Zanu-PF publicly
berates opposition politicians for associating or having links with
whites, behind closed doors Mugabe and his cohorts exploit clandestine
relationships with their own white partners, most of them extremely
wealthy capitalists.
There was Tiny Rowland,
that colourful British businessman who was the most conspicuous
epitome of western capitalism in Rhodesia, in Zimbabwe and elsewhere
on the continent. In Rhodesia he was a friend of Ian Smith and in
Zimbabwe he cultivated the friendship of both the late Dr Joshua
Nkomo and Mugabe.
Rowland was the founder
and chief executive of Lonrho, one of Zimbabwe-s largest multi-national
conglomerates. After independence he became one of the most generous
benefactors of Zimbabwe-s ruling elite. Rowland-s Metropole
Hotel in London became home away from home for the top echelons
of those fighting for the liberation of Zimbabwe, with full board
on the house. The friendship between the controversial British tycoon
and Zimbabwe-s new rulers flourished after independence. The
Lonrho end-of-year dinner party became the social event of the year
in Harare. Meanwhile, the Lonrho pavilions at the Harare Agricultural
Show and the National Trade Fair in Bulawayo were the favourite
haunt of cabinet ministers under the patronage of the flamboyant
Herbert Munangatire, now late.
So revered was Rowland
by Zanu-PF that when he was ousted in a board-room coup, Dr Nathan
Shamuyarira, that eminent custodian of the party-s ideological
values, lamented that the controversial businessman-s ouster
was likely to end the "warm relations between Lonrho and the
government of Zimbabwe".
It is only after the
constitutional referendum of 2000 that Zanu-PF has become openly
critical of Zimbabwe-s white citizens and representatives
of Western governments, especially those who challenge Mugabe-s
excesses and point at failures.
Mugabe-s personal
friend Nicholas Van Hoogstraten, the British magnate whose status
as the largest private owner of fertile Zimbabwean land complements
is unchallenged, spoke with understandable warmth and affection
when he described Mugabe as "100 percent decent and incorruptible".
Separately he said: "I don-t believe in democracy; I
believe in rule by the fittest."
Among Zanu-PF white allies
van Hoogstraten is the most vocal supporter of Mugabe, whom he regards
as a personal friend. More significantly he is said to be a financial
backer of the President.
Van Hoogstraten holds
extensive investments in Zimbabwe. The Rainbow Tourism Group-s
shares register shows van Hoogstraten-s Messina Investments
has a stake-hold of 2.17 percent with 35 727 640 shares. He owns
32 percent of Hwange Colliery Company and seven percent of CFI Ltd,
one of Zimbabwe-s largest agro-industrial enterprises. He
is the single largest shareholder in NMB at 20 percent. The founding
owners of the bank were hounded into exile by Reserve Bank Governor,
Gideon Gono.
The President-s
friend also owns 600 000 acres of prime farmland. Not unexpectedly,
van Hoogstraten-s farms have been spared the treatment reserved
for the farms of less "patriotic" white commercial farmers.
Van Hoogstraten, who
is reported to have relocated from the United Kingdom to Zimbabwe,
is said to manage his vast business empire of 200 residential and
business properties in Zimbabwe from an office in Harare. In January
they hauled him to court. The police had caught him red-handed while
receiving rentals from tenants in hard currency.
The phenomenal success
of van Hoogstraten is clear testimony that Zanu-PF merely pays lip-service
to its anti-white and anti-western mantras.
Another strategic Zanu-PF
ally, wealthy businessman, John Arnold Bredenkamp, has publicly
expressed his open support for the Mugabe regime. He told the Zimbabwe
Independent that because of his vast business interests and extensive
travel experience he had become a friend of politicians and he had
no regrets about it. He said he sincerely believed that it was in
the "best interests of Zimbabwe for Zanu-PF to win the presidential
elections next year".
Mugabe narrowly missed
losing the election in question to Tsvangirai in 2002.
Bredenkamp-s forlorn
hope was understandable, given that at the material time he had
just won a major tender to supply fuel to the National Oil Company
of Zimbabwe. In any case, freedom of speech is enshrined in the
constitution of our once great land.
Yet when British premier
Tony Blair stood in the House of Commons to pronounce that his Labour
government worked hand-in-hand with Tsvangirai-s labour-backed
MDC, Information Minister, Jonathan Moyo, went totally ballistic
in Harare.
That single statement
by Blair and its opportunistic exploitation by Mugabe and Moyo may
have made a considerable contribution to the recovery of Zanu-PF
in 2005 of a significant number of parliamentary seats that it had
lost to the MDC in the 2000 parliamentary election.
Reports in the international
media have consistently referred to Bredenkamp, as an "arms
broker," "arms dealer," "arms merchant,"
"weapons dealer," "weapons broker".
Challenged by Bredenkamp
to substantiate allegations of arms dealing against him one British
publication, Executive Intelligence Review, defended itself haughtily.
"In describing
the charmed life of John Arnold Bredenkamp," the editor wrote,
"it is difficult to know where to start. In fact, it is difficult
to find a media reference to him that does not mention his business
in arms trafficking. From the London Observer, to the Washington
Times, to the Guardian of the U.K., to WorldNet Daily, to the UN
Association of the United Kingdom, to a broad swath of British-based
organizations and NGOs that specialize in opposing arms proliferation,
Bredenkamp is repeatedly mentioned in the context of arms trafficking
- selling, brokering, and violating sanctions.
Bredenkamp gained his
reputation as a shrewd "sanctions buster" while supporting
the racist regime of rebel Rhodesian leader Ian Smith.
"Like many of my
contemporaries, I have adapted to change," Bredenkamp says.
"I was Rhodesian; I am now a Zimbabwean. I was a tobacco merchant;
I am now an investor in many different sectors."
When the George W. Bush
administration imposed sanctions against Zimbabwe and Mugabe in
2001, Bredenkamp was reported to be among Zimbabwe-s businessmen
included on the sanctions list. He was charged with violating international
sanctions.
On February 18, 2000,
Washington Times published a report that the DRC and Zimbabwe were
purchasing arms from Bredenkamp, who was said to be based in Belgium.
After independence Bredenkamp,
indeed, left Zimbabwe and moved his base of operations to Belgium.
A report submitted to
the United Nations Security Council in October 2002 by a panel of
experts investigating the exploitation of raw materials in the DRC
cited Bredenkamp-s role as an arms broker:
"John Bredenkamp,
who has a history of clandestine military procurement, has an investment
in Aviation Consultancy Services Company (ACS). The Panel has confirmed,
independently of Mr. Bredenkamp, that this company represents British
Aerospace, Dornier of France and Agusta of Italy in Africa. Far
from being a passive investor in ACS as Tremalt representatives
claimed, Mr. Bredenkamp actively seeks business using high-level
political contacts.
"Mr. Bredenkamp-s
representatives claimed that his companies observed European Union
sanctions on Zimbabwe, but British Aerospace spare parts for ZDF
Hawk jets were supplied early in 2002 in breach of those sanctions.
Mr. Bredenkamp also controls Raceview Enterprises, which supplies
logistics to the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. The Panel has obtained
copies of Raceview invoices to ZDF dated 6 July 2001 for deliveries
worth $3.5 million of camouflage cloth, batteries, fuels and lubricating
oil, boots and rations. It also has copies of invoices for aircraft
spares for the Air Force of Zimbabwe worth another $3 million."
Bredenkamp protested
the findings of the UN panel. The report highlighted the existence
of an "elite network" comprising Congolese and Zimbabwean
government officials and private businessmen. The network was reported
to be exploiting the rich mineral resources of the DRC. The report
identified the key strategist for the Zimbabwean branch of the network
as Mnangagwa, while the former army commander, Zvinavashe was described
as his key ally.
It has been alleged that
before independence Bredenkamp effectively ran the finances of the
Rhodesian armed forces during the later stages of the guerilla war.
In this capacity he is said to have brokered export sales of Rhodesian
products, mainly tobacco, and used the proceeds to fund the purchase
of munitions and military equipment.
It is said that his complex
"sanctions busting" deals sustained the UDI regime for
far longer than would otherwise have been possible. Could Bredenkamp
now be facilitating the survival of Zanu-PF as Mugabe clings to
power?
On his return in Zimbabwe
in 1984 after he made peace with the country-s new rulers
he remained involved in commodity trading and defence procurement
while making himself generally useful to government and Zanu-PF.
Using Zimbabwe as his base, Bredenkamp conducted business dealings
elsewhere in Africa and in the Middle East. Not only did Bredenkamp
become extremely wealthy, he also helped sustain the Zimbabwean
economy in a period of some turbulence.
Bredenkamp made strategic
inroads into the post-independence political establishment while
gaining considerable clout in the economic affairs of Zimbabwe.
Mugabe is often accused of having made a single-handed decision
to deploy Zimbabwean troops to the DRC. It is alleged, however,
that Bredenkamp may have played a significant role in the events
surrounding Zimbabwe-s costly and suicidal intervention in
the West African nation between 1998 and 2003.
The Zimbabwean army and
air force were deployed to shore up the Laurent Kabila government
in its fight with rebels backed by Uganda and Rwanda. In return
generous mining concessions were granted by the DRC to key figures
in the Zimbabwe political and business elite. It is alleged that
Bredenkamp and his Zanu-PF allies were major beneficiaries. Mnangagwa
has been the key Bredenkamp ally in Zanu-PF since the businessman-s
return from Belgium in 1984.
In fact, it is also alleged
that Bredenkamp became something of a power behind the scenes in
Zanu-PF. Sources say he overplayed his hand, however, when he sought
to facilitate the early retirement of Mugabe in 2004 and his replacement
by Mnangagwa.
This displeased rival
politicians in the party and government and investigations were
instituted into the affairs of Bredenkamp-s Breco trading
company concerning tax evasion and exchange control violations.
Controversial businessman,
Conrad Muller "Billy" Rautenbach, is one of the handful
of white businessmen who have prospered under Mugabe. He owned Wheels
Africa, which quickly grew to become Zimbabwe-s largest freight
company. He also held the Volvo and Hyundai franchises. He is said
to own several thousand cattle north of Harare. The herd remained
unscathed as neighbouring commercial farms were violently seized
during by Zanu-PF sponsored war veterans and other party militants.
Rautenbach was one of
South Africa-s best known businessmen but he fell foul of
the law. The police wanted him in connection with massive fraud
at his Wheels of Africa Group.
The charges against Rautenbach
included stealing 1,300 cars from Hyundai, bribing customs officials
and fraudulently reducing the tax liability of Wheels of Africa-s
subsidiaries. He fled South Africa in 1999 after justice department
investigators raided his office and home. Wheels of Africa was liquidated
in December1999.
In Zimbabwe Rautenbach
has enjoyed the company of equally tough businessmen, including
the ubiquitous Mnangagwa. The relationship between the two men goes
back to the late 1990s when they oversaw the mining interests of
Zanu-PF in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
As part of a deal struck
between Mugabe and then DRC President Laurent Kabila - in return
for Zimbabwe-s military backing during the five-year civil
war - Rautenbach was appointed chief executive of state mining company
Gecamines. He was allocated several of its mining concessions, including
a share in Mukondo cobalt mine in Katanga Province.
Kabila sacked Rautenbach
two years later and seized his assets. Kabila accused the chief
executive of under-reporting sales and exports of hundreds of millions
of dollars of cobalt for the benefit of his own company, Ridgepointe
Overseas Development Company.
Strangely, Kabila then
invited Bredenkamp, another Zimbabwean businessman with impeccable
Zanu-PF credentials, to take over some of Rautenbach-s seized
assets.
Whether this was Kabila-s
own decision or these appointments were manipulated from Harare
is a matter of conjecture, but Zanu-PF-s interests in the
DRC appear to have remained adequately protected.
Miraculously, after Bredenkamp
invested in excess of US$15 million to open the Mukondo deposit,
said to be the richest cobalt mine in the world, Rautenbach was
back on the scene early in 2004. With the assistance of high-ranking
Zimbabwean facilitators, he was awarded half of Bredenkamp-s
assets in the DRC, with no compensation being paid to Bredenkamp.
Rautenbach-s return coincided with the fall-out between Bredenkamp
and Zanu-PF in Harare.
It was not clear how
Rautenbach compensated those who engineered this windfall in a country
from which he had been expelled. But it is likely that Rautenbach-s
fortunes were revived following the assassination of Kabila in 2001.
His son Joseph took over as president. Rautenbach was subsequently
accused of fraud, theft and corruption again and ordered to leave
the DRC.
In a report by the UN
Panel of Experts on the DRC in July 2006, Rautenbach-s dual
role as head of Gecamines and the beneficiary of this transfer of
assets was described as a "blatant conflict of interests".
The report also cited Rautenbach as being among DRC "investors
whose personal and professional integrity is doubtful".
This story would be incomplete
without reference to the legendary Joshi brothers, Jayant and Manharlal
Chunibal, who fled from Zimbabwe within a week of Zanu-PF setting
up a committee to investigate allegations of corruption and fraud
within its business empire.
After establishing links
with them in Mozambique during the war of liberation, Mugabe invited
the Joshi brothers to Zimbabwe after independence to manage Zidco
Holdings, through which Zanu-PF controls a vast business conglomerate.
Mnangagwa, reputed to be one of Zimbabwe-s wealthiest citizens,
was chairman of Zidco.
The Joshi-s fled
from Zimbabwe in April 2004, a few says after the Zanu-PF politburo
established an internal committee to investigate allegations of
wide-spread corruption within the Zidco empire.
Mnangagwa, then the powerful
Speaker of Parliament and the Joshis had become virtually untouchable.
For two decades Mnangagwa served as Zanu-PF-s secretary for
finance. In that capacity he was not only chairman of Zidco, he
also sat on the board of 14 companies owned by the party. More significantly,
Mnangagwa was at the time widely heralded as the man favoured by
Mugabe to succeed him.
The Joshi brothers ditched
a life-style of consummate luxury in Harare and fled to London,
along with fellow Zidco director, Dipak Pandya. Mnangagwa never
denied allegations that he personally escorted the fleeing executives
to the airport.
While Mnangagwa and the
Joshi brothers were repeatedly fingered for alleged corruption,
they had become sacred cows, even when well-investigated and documented
allegations of corruption were published in the press.
For example, they were
linked to a case of corruption well documented by The Daily News
which cited them as having allegedly been involved in the corruptly
awarded tender for the construction of the Harare International
Airport. Through the intervention of Mugabe-s nephew Leo,
the contract was awarded to Airport Harbour Technologies (AHT) an
international company with its headquarters in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Harare was the company-s first airport construction project.
Hani Ahmad Zaki Yamani,
the company-s chief executive, subsequently revealed details
of various payments corruptly made to various government officials,
including President Mugabe, in the process of the controversial
contract.
One of the recommendations
made by the Sandura Commission to government in 1989 at the close
of the Willowgate Scandal hearings was that the role played by Zidco
in the scandal be thoroughly investigated. This never happened.
The Joshis fled from
Zimbabwe15 years later soon after Zanu-PF finally established a
high-level investigation into claims of massive corruption within
a business empire which the Joshis controlled with Mnangagwa, allegedly
with little or no accountability.
There are two major characteristics
that distinguish whites who associate with or support Zanu-PF from
those aligned with the MDC. Zanu-PF-s whites are immensely
wealthy capitalist entrepreneurs. The Bennetts, Coltarts, Crosses,
Kayses and Stevensons of the MDC are, by comparison, men and women
of much modest means by white Zimbabwean standards.
The major differences
between Zanu-PF-s whites and the white men of the MDC camp
is that the former are businessmen while the latter tend to be politicians
and human rights activists. In fact, the while Zanu-PF loves to
portray itself as a socialist organisation, the white entrepreneurs
associated with the party are the flamboyant embodiment of capitalism.
Where Zanu-PF befriends
the aristocracy, as it were, the MDC-s white are plebeians,
figuratively speaking. For instance, Eddie Cross has a chequered
history of service to government, both before and after independence.
He started off as a land resettlement officer in the Gokwe District
before he attained an honors degree in Economics at the then University
of Zimbabwe. He became the chief economist of the Agricultural Marketing
Authority in 1976.
After independence Cross
was appointed to head, first, the Dairy Marketing Board and then
the Cold Storage Commission, then Africa-s largest meat-marketing
organisation. He was then appointed CEO of the Beira Corridor Group,
an organisation established to promote the rehabilitation of the
Beira Corridor as an export outlet to the sea for land-locked Zimbabwe.
Cross then went into
business in his own capacity when he started a group of companies,
which he now runs with increasing difficulty. He joined the MDC
at inception in 1999 and is currently the policy coordinator of
the party and was elected to Parliament in March.
"I regard myself
as a white African," he says, "and am totally committed
to the country of my birth and to the future of the continent."
Zanu-PF is not entirely
convinced and regards it as an inherent weakness of the MDC that
the party appoints white functionaries such as Cross, Coltart and
Bennett to positions of leadership.
Bennett, the MDC-s
treasurer, is particularly reviled by Zanu-PF as the man who allegedly
canvasses for funds abroad for the MDC.
"I believe that
the decision-making process in Tsvangirai and the MDC is now firmly
in the hands of the party-s fundraisers, namely Strive Masiyiwa
and Roy Bennett," said Prof Jonathan Moyo in an article published
in the aftermath of the controversial June 27 presidential election
re-run.
Those who had an idea
of the funding-raising situation in Zanu-PF must have chuckled quietly
on reading Prof Moyo-s article. President Mbeki and fellow
pan-Africanists will certainly not chuckle when it eventually dawns
on them what kind of animal they are dealing with in Zanu-PF.
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