Saturday, December 27, 2008

"The crisis is getting worse and worse in Zimbabwe and only SADC can pull the plug on the Zanu-PF government. "

From the Guardian:

"
Zimbabwe's neighbours must act

Forget the bombast, David Miliband. Concentrate on getting southern Africa to pull the plug on Robert Mugabe's regime

If the British government wants to help Zimbabwe, it would be better if the foreign secretary, David Miliband, refrained from making bombastic pronouncements and instead focused on petitioning legitimate political players in the region to act against Robert Mugabe. Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries are the ones who can cut off the supply line of luxury goods to the Zimbabwean regime just in time for Christmas, not Britain.

Of course, Britain as the former colonial power in Zimbabwe lacks the moral authority to intervene directly. It is too easy for Mugabe to respond by characterising Miliband's soundbites as hypocritical interventions, mainly concerned with preserving the land rights of the residual white diaspora.

By portraying Blair, and now Brown and Miliband, as machinating "racists", "imperialists" and "former settlers", Mugabe has been able to increase the level of solidarity and warmth felt towards the Zanu-PF government by a few degrees. Because nobody likes an interfering former colonial power.

In contrast to the British government, however, the British people have a magnificent record of fighting against injustice in southern Africa through the anti-apartheid movement. And one of the strategies of anti-apartheid that worked was to target those companies that sustained the apartheid regime.

Two of those companies were Barclays Bank and Anglo American. And just to prove that they are truly colour blind when it comes to supporting oppressive regimes, the same companies are also currently shoring up the Zanu-PF dictatorship.

Barclays provides the government with the lines of credit it needs and foreign earnings from mining provide the Zanu-PF elite with enough foreign currency to live comfortably. In June this year, British-based Anglo-American announced it would be investing £200m in its Unki platinum mine.

In another echo of former times, it was Peter Hain, one of the leaders of the anti-apartheid movement, who immediately spoke out against Anglo American's decision to make a major investment in Zimbabwe. These two companies should now be boycotted by the British people and targeted for their support of Mugabe in the same way that they were boycotted and targeted in the time of anti-apartheid.( HEAR HEAR )

But ultimately, of course, the solution to the problem is in the hands of the SADC countries. In fact, there are very few reasons for the governments of the other SADC countries to support Mugabe. There were always deep differences between them and the Mugabe government.

It had to be explained to me that Mugabe did not "go bad" after independence; he was always a conniving apparatchik scheming and murdering his way to the top.( TRUE )

Wilfred Mhanda has chronicled how he did this. Mhanda describes the reaction of African leaders to Mugabe seizing control of Zanu from Ndabaningi Sithole in 1975: "Robert Mugabe and his followers had staged a coup against Sithole while they were all in prison. Smith released Mugabe, who then led a Zanu delegation to meet with the leaders of the frontline states - Agostino Neto, Julius Nyerere, Samora Machel and Kenneth Kaunda. They were surprised and horrified to see Mugabe leading the delegation and asked how on earth he could stage a coup inside an enemy prison against the properly elected leader of the movement. They suspected the prison authorities had helped Mugabe."

Mugabe was even put under house arrest by Samora Machel, the president of Mozambique in 1977. Unlike the other African leaders, Mugabe was not a socialist, a nationalist or even a brave military commander. He was a tribalist, who we now know was responsible for the Gukurahundi massacre of an estimated 20,000 in Matabeleland.

The crisis is getting worse and worse in Zimbabwe and only SADC can pull the plug on the Zanu-PF government. It should put aside false loyalties and do so, and as soon as possible."

That he has remained in power is an international disgrace.

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