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Mugabe-s 2010 Last Call - I Wish!
Rejoice
Ngwenya
May 20, 2009
Tendai Biti,
Zimbabwe-s Minister for Finance is currently waging a desperately
relentless war of legitimacy and recognition for his Government
of National Unity [GNU] at the Bretton Woods Institutions. To many
commentators, including this one, this losing battle, while noble,
is easily interpreted as a sinister extension of ZANU-PF-s
subtle agenda for international acceptance.
Whilst we all
accept that the Movement for Democratic Change [MDC] have a compelling
case to keep their part of government functional, it is only rational
to assume that they constitute only a third of the size of government.
The remaining two thirds are ZANU-PF-s political entity under
the hypnotic control of a military junta still aching to exert a
measure of revenge against the Morgan Tsvangirayi-s ascendancy
to power. Barrister Biti is well aware of this.
The United States
of America-s [USA] State Department recently unleashed a gem
of a statement that overtly associates development assistance to
Zimbabwe with political and human rights reform. Thus, arguments
advanced in this article are unashamedly pro-USA and with good reason.
Mugabe-s futile attempt to hide behind a facade of humanitarian
sympathy is a glaring act of deceit. Americans may not be the best
example of democratic role models, but we Zimbabweans are nonetheless
wiser to know what real democracy is. As of now, what the inclusive
government that Biti is so passionate about offers very little by
way of individual or collective liberties. The reasons are there
for all to see.
First and foremost, the Robert Mugabe-s political machinery
is firmly in charge of that part of the GNU that has been credited
with - and I am going to be generous with expletives - extensive,
intensive, massive and substantive violations of human rights since
the 1980s. Nobody can convince us that the police, army, prison
service, judiciary, information, diplomatic corps, central intelligence,
the Herald newspaper, Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, provincial
governors, youth militia and war veterans have been 'dismantled-
or are 'reformed-. Zimbabwe-s prisons are still
occupied by political captives; public media continues to spew hate
campaigns while international journalists are still restricted.
There is only one State broadcaster, one State daily newspaper and
one State fixed telephone system network. Exactly Mr. Biti that
it was the Americans and us level-headed Zimbabweans are saying!
Second, most if not all of Rhodesian-type repressive pieces of legislation
remain intact. Access
to Information, Public
Order Security, and Broadcast
Acts have a devastating impact on human and political rights in
Zimbabwe, yet Mugabe still claims that the Global
Political Agreement is 'working- - certainly
for himself. At the last count, war veterans were still invading
farms, while MDC Roy Bennet has been kept out of office still to
answer frivolous charges of imaginary banditry against a ZANU-PF
government which itself has more than thirty thousand skeletons
in its proverbial cabinet.
Third and lastly,
two thirds of Zimbabwean citizens both at home and abroad have repeatedly,
since 2000, expressed their resentment of Mugabe and ZANU-PF through
the ballot box. Conversely, this means that there are more Zimbabweans
who hate a ZANU-PF presence in the GNU than those who like it. Isn-t
it therefore timely that Robert Gabriel Mugabe bids us farewell
to give Zimbabwe a chance to move ahead? If your imagination is
as fertile as this writer's, you can hear him, on a day not far
from now say: "My fellow Zimbabweans, I come to you today
with two heavy hearts. One full of sorrow that I have had to retire
from being your chief public servant but another joyful because
what you commissioned me in 1980, the dream of majority rule and
land ownership has been realised." Really?
"Oh yes!
I stand before you, proud that I leave a legacy of history against
British and American imperialism. My party and I have over the years
endeavoured to bestow to the children of Zimbabwe that which their
forefathers lost to the gang of mercenaries deployed by one Cecil
John Rhodes..." Notice that it is all about I, I, I!
"As I leave office today, my heart, though aching that things
could have been better, knows that you appreciate the odds against
which my government was pitted against. The evil forces of Western
intransigence and cruel neglect of the basic principles of humanity!
Nobody is perfect. The sour memories of regrettable events in Matabeleland
cannot be expiated without self-introspection by those who were
on the wrong side of the law..." Good Lord, he is never going
to accept responsibility! "But to those of us who lived through
that cruel experience, we are clear in our minds and conscience
that it was beyond our control since it looked expedient at the
time." I see, expedient.
"Let us
not today, throw away the baby with the bath water. The gains that
we have made by acceding to popular demands to unite under the framework
of the Global Political Agreement have to be preserved. Are we not
brothers from the same kith and kin? I leave office today with a
clean conscience that those who will come after me will learn from
my mistakes and carry forward the truncheon- sorry-
baton of revolutionary awakening to the end of our gruelling races
against racist forces of the British tyranny."
How possible is that a man who has presided over the highest child
mortality rate, highest inflation rate, highest decline in GDP,
highest unemployment rate, highest decline in school enrolment,
highest influx of economic refugees in South Africa and many other
'highests- - never admits he was wrong? How is
it that those who lost their children, brothers and sisters in violent
elections can never have a chance to respond? The answer is simple:
he is still protected by those who benefit from his patronage. When
their faith and confidence in him wane, and the taps of patronage
run dry, Mr. Mugabe will be left all alone, with no choice but to
exit gracefully from the throne of tyranny.
Mr. Rejoice
Ngwenya is President of Zimbabwean think tank, Coalition for Liberal
Market Solutions, an affiliate of www.AfricanLiberty.org
and a supporter of the Zimbabwe
Papers.
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.
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