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Mugabe must be grateful
Rejoice
Ngwenya
March 05, 2009
President Robert Mugabe
of Zimbabwe must be one of the luckiest men alive today, having
to share a table with progressive forces of real democracy when
he should be languishing in the doldrums of political obscurity.
And for this, he owes it to millions of Zimbabweans who seem to
have forgiven him, despite a vicious thirty-year political reign
that at one time or another served a diet of starvation, disease,
abject poverty, unemployment and death to his petulant countrymen.
The generously forgiving
Zimbabwean ought to be recorded in history for being one of the
most abused in the world, classified in the category of the Slave
Trade of the 17th Century, Jews under the reign of terror of Hitler
in the 1940s, the Rwanda genocide of the 90s and of late, the blood
bath in Darfur. Between 1890 and 2008, Zimbabweans have been humiliated
by three eras of fatalistic political governance attributable to
three tyrants - Cecil John Rhodes [1890-1964]; Ian Smith [1965-2008];
Robert Mugabe [1980-2008].
Yet just like with Smith
in 1979, the Government of National Unity [GNU] has offered Mugabe
a second chance at life. Surrounded by a 'deadwood-
retirement cabinet meant to chaperone him into political bliss,
the man has the audacity to sit on podiums and pontificate on issues
that not only bear no resemblance to real life but also defy all
known forms of civilised logic.
The first reality is
that Mugabe-s deadly land reform bankrolled by his political
vampires is responsible for decimating our nation-s strategic
grain reserves. His cronies simply took the land, locked it up in
their cabinets and opened up their proverbial beaks for free inputs
which they subsequently traded on the black market. Now the chief
protagonist of human disaster, Gideon Gono, claims an 'audit-
of the implements that he doled out to consolidate Mugabe-s
waning political fortunes will exonerate him. How a man can audit
his own transgressions beats the daylight out of every logical conclusion.
The second reality is
that by continuing to abuse white commercial farmers and violate
property rights, Mugabe is defeating the noble cause of attracting
global strategic partnership reconstructing Zimbabwe. And note,
I said partnership, not aid, because there is not going to be any
foreign direct investment in a country where the head of state continues
to desecrate universal norms of property rights.
Ironically, even if Mugabe
is the chief perpetrator of property rights violations in Southern
Africa, he has ironically done so with inadvertent complicity of
the MDC. This view point demands mature political scrutiny before
fanatic condemnation. I have been directly involved in matters of
'constitutionalising- Zimbabwe-s land
reform since 1999 and are now convinced beyond reasonable doubt
that both Mugabe-s ZANUpf and the two MDC formations actually
have no consistent property rights ideology.
Mugabe-s paranoiac
obsession with rewarding cronies by grabbing farms from Joe Blog
puts him out of the equation of rational judgement in property rights
discourse. What I mean is that in a room where sensible citizens
are discussing matters of justice in land reform, the presence of
ZANUpf starves the atmosphere of life-giving oxygen. The tragedy,
however, is around Tsvangirayi and Arthur Mutambara-s death-defying
equivocal rationale that "land ownership i.e. property rights
in the commercial farming sector cannot revert to the status quo."
This double-edged perspective is neon-lit with patronised hypocrisy
and fatalistic appeasement. Let me explain. The Government of National
Unity will never accumulate international credibility without an
outright endorsement of respect of property rights, and this, unfortunately,
must include the restoration of legitimate ownership of commercial
farms to Joe Blog.
The fact that Tsvangirayi,
Mutambara, Welshman Ncube and Tendai Biti want to avoid 'negative
political backlash at the domestic front- may be politically
correct but ideologically flawed. The assumption, of course being
that the doctrine of Property Rights is a universally accepted ideological
position. Whether or not Leander Starr Jameson and his gangsters
shot their way out of the Fort can still be debated but would not
be a credible starting point for modern day land reform. If C.J.
Rhodes raped my grandmother in 1890, it would not make it right
to rape his granddaughter in 2008. My point cannot be clearer than
this: a return to the rule of law is embedded with returning farms
that were expropriated from black and white Zimbabwean citizens
under a smokescreen of partisan, ZANUpf-aligned constitutional chicanery
on the pretext of social justice.
Mugabe and ZANUpf do
not qualify to define the rules of natural justice. They failed
the test in the 1980s by the cold blooded murder of twenty thousand
innocent Ndebeles. In fact, even on those rare occasions that Mugabe
is right, we should consider him wrong until he justifies his facts.
If MDC are not happy with his brand of land reform, condemnation
without an absolute call for reversal does not suffice.
As late as now, Mugabe-s
primitive political machinery is still active in commercial farms
and all MDC can talk about is a non return to status quo. Zimbabwe
does not require aid, but if international reputation is mortgaged
to the respect of property rights, we can only attract global sympathy
and support if MDC is seen to be on the side of truth, not self-deception.
Meanwhile, Mugabe can blurt all he wants, but as long as he sings
a discord in the symphony of property rights, Tsvangirayi and Mutambara-s
efforts of spearheading sustainable reconstruction of this battered
Southern African reconstruction of this battered Southern African
country will be fruitless.
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