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A
twin case of treachery in Southern Africa
Rejoice Ngwenya
May 15, 2010
South Africa
and Zimbabwe have a strong tradition of sharing not only borders,
business, culture and tradition but also weather patterns. The month
of May in Southern Africa is the beginning of winter so when dry
chilly winds blow over the Drakensberg Mountains in Kwazulu-Natal,
we citizens of Harare have to insulate our bodies in woolen apparel
just to remain barely alive! Whenever Cape Town is spewing thunderstorms
and hailstones, the people of Bulawayo wade in muddy roads. Such
is our bond with South Africa that Robert Mugabe even gloats about
'revolutionary ties- between his ZANU-PF and Mandela-s
ANC, another case of a dictator scrapping the bottom of the barrel
of companionship and acceptance! If the truth be told, it was Joshua
Nkomo-s ZAPU that had a working relationship with ANC, not
ZANU-PF. Who will save our children from an advanced case of distorted
facts and delusionary fables meant to prop up the ego of a fading
political party?
Last month
April saw Zimbabwe and South Africa experience unprecedented pollution
of Icelandic proportions, not volcanic ash, but an encounter with
two 'pollutations- who have mastered the art of repetitive
boredom. On the other side of the Limpopo River, one argues persistently
for singing a provocative 'wartime- song, going great
lengths to ignore and defy court judgment banning the haunting melody.
On my side of the great river, the other is bent on a refrain called
'Rob Paul to pay Peter- - an expropriation of corporate
assets as one way of empowering indigenous citizens!
South African
Mail & Guardian blog tracker "Haiwa Tigere" once claimed
that Julius Malema is arguably one of the most popular politicians
in South Africa today, yet senseless loudness in music parlance
falls clinically in the category of noise pollution. In Zimbabwe,
other commentators say Saviour Kasukuwere, a member of ZANU-PF-s
youth brigade, has assumed demigod status by defying and humiliating
MDC president and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirayi. But
as was with 'war veterans- Chenjerai Hunzvi and Joseph
Chinotimba, once he has served his political purpose, Mr. Kasukuwere
will be discarded like hot charcoal long before the proverbial cock
trumpets the last note.
The time-worn
socialist bigotry that you enrich the poor by destroying the rich,
as in year 2000, wrecked havoc in both countries last April. At
least Malema-s country has a semblance of rule of law, a non
compliant media and an inquisitive public, usually ingredients of
a vibrant democracy. He may sing 'Kill the Boer- all
he wants, but the legion of activists ruling supreme in that country
will always call him to account. When he threatens to expropriate
'white-owned- mines, no one in his party takes him seriously,
because his country-s constitution considers property rights
sacrosanct.
But just across
the river, the beat is slightly different. His counterpart is a
member of a political party that follows up rhetoric with a deluge
of whips, sticks and stones. In a country where ninety percent of
the laws are promulgated by and for one political party, a citizen
can wake up to discover that in fact his nightmare is real life!
Robert Mugabe, unlike Jacob Zuma, cares little about image, reputation
and global condemnation. Inevitably, his ministers are insulated
from prosecution, thus have a blank cheque to live their dreams.
And so when Kasukuwere says he will implement a policy of dispossession,
the entire ZANU-PF propaganda machinery not only echoes this statement
with nauseating repetition but also attempts enforcement.
Ironically,
the grand standing and posturing about 'successful-
indigenisation is directed at the African media, with the highly
partisan Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation unashamedly showing off
land in the hands of ministers and party apologists. Reserve bank
governor Gideon Gono once boasted to fellow fiscal plunderer King
Mswati of Swaziland that his [Gono-s] chicken farm is one
of the best in Africa. How, in a so-called democracy, a public official
who handles national reserves can make such damaging disclosure
without prosecution can only happen in my country! Jonathan Kadzura,
a onetime 'consultant- to the reserve bank, was once
featured as a shining example of indigenisation. His farm, no doubt
expropriated from some white man and a beneficiary of Gideon Gono-s
benevolent quasi-fiscal activities, is said to produce forty thousand
eggs per week and eight hundred thousand broilers quarterly. Mugabe-s
cronies are completely and utterly insulated from free market input
costs, so like Malema-s Black Economic Empowerment 'jewels-,
these are mere 'tenderpreneurs- whose liquidity is based
more on political patronage than business acumen.
The Iceland
volcano will no doubt one day stop erupting and recede back to molten
dormancy. Luckily, it has no army, police, ministers, youths and
a partisan media to keep its molten lava and hot ash spewing trouble
into the atmosphere. Zimbabwe is not that fortunate. Just when you
think ZANU-PF is dormant and defeated, they brew another storm.
South Africa is not far behind in the race for political self-destruction.
Jacob Zuma unleashed a blinder when he admitted to an extramarital
affair and soon after, Julius Malema poured scorn over the judiciary,
showing them the middle finger with his wartime song. Before the
ash settled on the trees, Malema threatened to 'Zimbabwenise-
South African industry, praising Mugabe and calling MDC and a BBC
reporter all sorts of names.
In April, when
Morgan Tsvangirayi told the world that Kasukuwere-s indigenisation
regulations were null and void, the Prime Minister was accused of
'lying- by Mugabe, with Kasukuwere adding that nothing
in the regulations was reversible. We waited with abated breath
for Tsvangirayi to take a political whip and discipline the errant
young minister but we should not have bothered starving our bodies
of vital oxygen. Another ZANU-PF 'young turk-, Philip
Chiyangwa, was jointly implicated with minister Ignatius Chombo
in a land grabbing scandal. Mugabe-s police commissioner had
the last laugh. The city mayor and his councillors were promptly
summoned to court to answer charges of defamation. Zimbabwe has
a new proverb: when a man is beaten by a poisonous snake, spare
the reptile and kill the man so he does strain public health facilities!
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