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Letter from Zimbabwe: The Destroyer
Jon Lee
Anderson, The New Yorker
October 27, 2008
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/10/27/081027fa_fact_anderson
Nine hundred
years ago, at a site on a high plateau north of the Limpopo River
called Great Zimbabwe, Shona kings built stone palaces where they
lived in splendid isolation from their subjects, with absolute authority
over their means to sustain life—cattle herds, land, and the
gold that came out of the earth. In the nineteen-sixties, members
of a liberation movement in what was then Rhodesia, among them Robert
Mugabe, adopted Great Zimbabwe-s name to refer to the notional
state they were fighting for. Today, Mugabe can be said to be the
owner of the riches that remain in the nation of Zimbabwe. After
twenty-eight years, he remains in power--Zimbabwe-s
only President since the end of white minority rule, in 1980. His
nephew Leo, therefore, leads a cushioned life. He is an entrepreneur
and has stakes in several companies, among them a mobile-phone network.
He is a director of Zimbabwe Defense Industries, which purchases
the weaponry for his uncle-s Army—most of it, these
days, from China. He also controls at least one large farm that
had been seized from its white owners. In the nineties, Leo earned
notoriety for his alleged role in securing kickbacks, on behalf
of his uncle and other officials, in the construction of Harare
International Airport. In 2005, he was arrested for the contraband
export and sale of government-owned food, but the charges were withdrawn
for lack of evidence. (Leo said the allegations in both cases were
unfounded.) That year, he was a candidate for Parliament for the
Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front, known as ZANU-PF,
the ruling party. He won in a landslide.
Earlier this
year, Leo was added to a sanctions list first imposed by the United
States in 2003 against Robert Mugabe and members of his government.
The sanctions included a travel ban and the freezing of foreign
assets, and also prohibit Americans from doing business with those
on the list. Leo was also named on a sanctions list maintained by
the European Union, for his arms-dealing activities. The new sanctions
came in response to a wave of terror that Robert Mugabe had unleashed
in the country-s Presidential campaign. More than a hundred
and fifty opposition supporters were murdered, many were raped,
and thousands of people were beaten or tortured, often after being
herded into so-called reëducation camps. Because of the violence,
Mugabe-s rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, whose Movement for Democratic
Change, or MDC., had won a slender majority in the country-s
first round of voting in March, dropped out of the race and went
into hiding. In the runoff vote on June 27th, Mugabe was unopposed
and was quickly declared the winner.
Leo Mugabe works from
an office building he owns in Harare, where I met him this summer.
His brand-new silver Toyota Land Cruiser Amazon was parked outside.
He is a slim, goateed man of fifty-one, and was dressed in a dark
tailored suit. On the wall behind his desk hung a map of Zimbabwe
made out of a patchwork of animal skins. His secretary, a young
woman wearing a tight skirt and jacket, very high heels, and a great
deal of jewelry, sat down with us. Her hair was arranged in red-dyed
cornrows, and as Leo spoke she scribbled everything down on a notepad,
expressing approval whenever he made a point, like a personal cheerleader.
He was in a good mood, emanating confidence and optimism over Zimbabwe-s
future.
"Have you seen
anyone beaten up since you-ve been here?" he asked.
"There was less violence here than in Nigeria! And we all
know why Zimbabwe-s violence is being exaggerated—it-s
about the fortune in the land. We have certain resources here, such
as nickel, gold, and platinum. I think Zimbabweans now understand
that they are suffering because of sanctions by the United States,
Great Britain, and the Europeans." Otherwise, Zimbabwe-s
prospects were excellent—his uncle had been distributing computers
to rural schools, for example. "In a few years, rural Zimbabwe
will be computer-literate. We are a nation which is moving, and
these children will understand what empowerment really means."
That week, however,
the inflation rate in Zimbabwe had officially reached eleven million
per cent, the highest in the world; analysts later reckoned it to
have been two hundred and thirty million per cent. Eighty per cent
of Zimbabweans were out of work. Chronic malnutrition was prevalent,
and starvation was spreading in the countryside. Close to two million
Zimbabweans depended for survival on food handouts from international
aid agencies. Twenty per cent of the population was infected with
HIV/AIDS. Zimbabwe-s life expectancy is forty-four years for
men, forty-three for women. But Leo Mugabe scoffed at the idea that
the situation was dire. "People are going about their business,"
he said. "No one is starving—they are driving nice cars!
As a Christian, though, I think it is a challenge by God, and the
attention being drawn to Zimbabwe is maybe to highlight that we
are the new people of Israel, and that we have our own Moses."
I understood "Moses" to be his uncle. His secretary
greeted the analogy with an exclamation of delight.
Under Robert
Mugabe-s leadership, in 2000 his most militant supporters—many
of them veterans of the seventies civil war—began forcibly
occupying the country-s five thousand white-owned commercial
farms, with the help of armed gangs and, frequently, ZANU-PF officials.
By almost all accounts, these actions precipitated the country-s
economic decline. Leo disagreed. "We have no regrets—he
has none, and I have none," he said.
"We have taken
the land," Leo went on. "So what is the next move? The
next move is the mines, the minerals. We know we are very rich—without
the British or the Americans. Yes, they invested, but if we have
to we will go and take over the mines, too." Zimbabwe has
the world-s second-largest platinum reserves and is relatively
rich in other minerals. The country-s mining industry accounts
for some forty per cent of its export income. In 2006, Robert Mugabe
threatened to nationalize the mines by assigning Zimbabwe a controlling
fifty-one-per-cent stake in them. Negotiations with the mine owners,
which include South Africa-s Implats and Anglo Platinum, and
the United Kingdom-s Rio Tinto, have dragged on ever since.
"Rio Tinto can stay there in London, but their mines and their
equipment will stay here. Is that what they want? Because that-s
where they are headed," Leo said. "We can give the mines
to the black Zimbabweans, the people who work them now," he
added. "We are not going to go back on the land issue, and
the wealth that lies underneath the land will remain ours, too."
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