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Mugabe jingles reminiscent of Africa's worst dictators
Leonard
Makombe, The Independent (Zimbabwe)
July 22,
2010
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/local/27383-mugabe-jingles-reminiscent-of-africas-worst-dictators.html
Leaders, particularly
those whose source of power is disputed, have been known to rely
on intimidation, violence and selective application of the law to
crush dissent.
But claims to invincibility
have also been oft-used techniques by dictators to entrench their
authority.
Mobutu Sese Seko, the
tyrant who ruled the former Belgian Congo, later called Zaire, for
32 years between 1965 and 1997, forced his personality cult down
every citizen's throat, so much that every city and village
dweller developed a personal familiarity with his image.
A military commander-in-chief
before staging a coup in 1965, Mobutu, desperate to appear ubiquitous,
ordered thousands of his pictures printed and distributed to every
part of the country.
Villagers, even those
in the remotest parts of the vast country, felt his power through
these portraits in the aftermath of a 1965 coup that saw him take
power as president.
The country's state-controlled
television network was obliged to begin each broadcast with a vision
of Mobutu descending from cloud-filled heavens, an image way ahead
of its time given that this was before the days of savvy video editing.
Idi Amin, the buffoon
of a military dictator who ran Uganda from 1971 to 1979 and was
known to butcher critics, had his own jazzy way of winning the hearts
and minds of ordinary citizens. The Suicide Mechanised Brigade Jazz
Band, an outfit that included a dance troupe and occasionally led
by Amin himself in dance and song, played at parties praising the
eccentric leader. Radio Uganda was obliged to read out his full
title as - "His Excellency President for Life, Field Marshal
Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, VC, DSO, MC, CBE".
During the same period,
in 1976, President Robert Mugabe crossed into Mozambique to take
over leadership of Zanu, whose freedom fighters were fighting a
bloody war from the Mozambican front against white minority rule.
Anxious to win support from the combatants ahead of deposed leader
Ndabaningi Sithole, Mugabe incorporated his name into a number of
songs that praised his leadership.
Song became a powerful
instrument in Mugabe's drive to ingratiate himself with liberation
war fighters, a good number who were sceptical of his war credentials.
Three decades later,
and this time in a fashion similar to Amin, Mugabe has turned to
crude propaganda to prop up his waning image.
Zimbabwe's state
radio began announcing Mugabe's expanded title in full after
he lost the presidential election first round vote in March 2008
and was forced into a coalition government.
In a desperate bid to
show how Mugabe is still in charge, state-controlled print and broadcast
media have been referring to Mugabe as "Head of state and
government and commander-in-chief of the defence forces".
On Tuesday Tsvangirai
was forced to complain in cabinet about the resurfacing of jingles
on state television that he says are demeaning to the coalition
government. Lyrics to the jingles and songs, repeated after every
30 minutes on state radio, show a desperation to return to the old
order;
Pa'number one'
tarisa pana aniko ?.
(Who is in charge?)
Pana VaMugabe (It is
President Mugabe)
Pa'number two'
tarisa pana aniko ?.
(Who is the second most
powerful?)
Pana Mai Mujuru. (It
is Vice President Mujuru)
Pechitatu tarisa pana
aniko ?.
(Who is the third most
powerful?)
Pana VaNkomo (It is John
Nkomo)
Chimbotongai Makadaro.
(Continue ruling in that hierarchy)," go the lyrics, which,
on video are punctuated by lurid, sexually suggestive dance moves.
Analysts say the jingles,
which are still playing despite a reported order by Cabinet to ban
them following Tsvangirai's complaint, are more personality
than ideologically driven.
Trevor Maisiri, executive
director of the African Reform Institute, said it was not surprising
that Zanu PF was using the state-media to build hype around Mugabe's
personality given that he has announced his desire to contest future
elections. Mugabe's Zanu PF party this week said it was ready
to contest a general election next year, setting the tone for a
gruelling election period.
"What we must realise
is that we are already in the election campaign period. If you closely
look at the Zanu-PF internal politics, you will realise that their
centre is not as coherent as it has been in the past elections,"
said Maisiri. "The party is faced with a multiplicity of challenges
and cracks."
Until the formation of
the MDC, Zanu PF was the only dominant political party in the country.
Analysts said the praise-singing
jingles had become necessary for Zanu PF to stamp its authority
in the face of strong contention for power.
"The jingles are
meant to divert the nation from apparent weaknesses and they are
also to convince and demonstrate to their own supporters that they
still have the clout and power," Maisiri added.
"In leadership
they actually say that the moment you remind people that you are
their leader, that is the first sign of a lost leadership role.
How many times do we remind our children that we are their fathers
?.
The moment you do that
you exhibit traits of illegitimate parenthood."
Takura Zhangazha, a political
commentator, said Zanu PF needed to remind people of Mugabe's
invincibility in the face of growing support for the MDC in previously
pro-Mugabe communities such as the rural areas.
"It is literally
to assuage their supporters' egos and to make the Zanu-PF
department of information look like it is doing a good job,"
said Zhangazha. "It is unnecessary to remind those that you
lead of your leadership in democratic societies. Zanu PF is doing
this mainly for propaganda purposes and to place the MDC on the
back foot by creating a potential outstanding issue and by pre-empting
the debate on the election."
Another analyst, John
Kanokanga who chairs the Zimbabwe Movement for Peace, Reconciliation
and Unity, a pressure group, said viewing the jingles as an isolated
case would be to miss the point.
Kanokanga said in a normal
situation, the jingles would not have created uproar if the coalition
government had managed to ease boiling tensions between supporters
of different political parties.
"What is at stake
are the next elections and what we need to have is an environment
which allows those who lose an election to leave office with dignity
and not face a 'firing squad' because in such an environment,
people would use every trick to retain power," said Kanokanga.
Zhangazha said the abuse
of the state-controlled media made the case for the opening up of
airwaves to private players even more urgent.
"The only lesson
that we can draw from this is that the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings
(ZBH) Commercialisation Act needs to be repealed and in the process
establish an Independent Public Broadcasting Services Act that guarantees
the independence of ZBH and other private broadcasters who should
come on board," said Zhangazha.
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