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NEWS & LETTERS, April 2002   

Zimbabwe's dictator Mugabe plays upon western hypocrisy

by Ba Karang

U.S. President George W. Bush, who came to power not through the ballot box but through a Supreme Court decision, was among the first Western leaders to condemn the recent Zimbabwean elections. The reaction of the British Prime Minister was not unexpected either.

One wonders why the people of Madagascar are taking to the streets to regain their stolen election victory while the West stands by and looks on. The people of the Ivory Coast fought and won back their stolen election, resulting in property destruction and loss of life, without the West reacting-other than to claim that the political victory of the Ivorians was undemocratic. And even after the U.S. State Department criticized the recent parliamentary elections in Gambia, it failed to react to the situation. Within a short period it announced a normalization of relations between the two countries.

Many elections on the African continent are criticized for not being free and fair-like Kenya's-without these countries suffering from talk of western-imposed sanctions. Western leaders are practicing a double standard. Mugabe himself will not suffer from any sanctions imposed on the country, and he cares little about the suffering of the Zimbabwean people.

Mugabe often says that the British Prime Minister suffers from a "colonial hangover." One could say that he made the best use of this colonial hangover, not only by bringing up the land issue so late in his rule but by making use of anti-colonialist rhetoric.

REACTIONS OF AFRICAN RULERS

The Zimbabwean elections pose a problem for the South African government. This is not only because South Africa is striving to become a superpower in African political and economic life. South Africa has not solved its own land problem, which was the backbone of the struggle against the apartheid regime. There is no doubt that the Zimbabwean land crisis is being followed by Black South Africans.

Sooner or later the South African government will have to react to the pressures building up on this issue.  

Daniel Arap Moi, Kenya's president, has always insisted that Western imperialism manipulates the opposition against his corrupt and brutal government. He was one of the first to congratulate Mugabe for his election victory. Whether Nigeria's half-hearted support for Mugabe is part of manipulating its relationship with both the West and Zimbabwe, or a line of confrontation with South Africa in its drive to assume the leading position in African political and economic affairs, will become clear sooner rather than later.

One thing is certain-South Africa and Nigeria have the economic potential to stand up to Western pressure. Nigeria is a significant trade partner of the U.S., mainly in oil. Nigeria and South Africa provide the West with a huge market. At the same time, they are growing industrial nations that look to the African continent as a potential market. Hence the importance, in their eyes, of having political influence in it.

If Nigeria or South Africa try to stand up to Western pressure in favor of Zimbabwe, they will do so for domestic consumption and their continental interests.

The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) failed to pose a tangible opposition to Mugabe's ZANU party. It seems to have shied away from the land issue and never took it as a serious problem for ordinary Zimbabweans, who mostly live in rural areas. Solving the land issue is seen by many of them as a way forward in dealing with the country's crushing poverty.

They have a right to believe this, since the white minority who took the land from them remain the most prosperous people in the country. Ordinary Zimbabweans are the laborers on these farms, the nannies and housekeepers for their owners, who though a minority remain the dominant economic force.

MUGABE'S COMPROMISED OPPOSITION

The MDC seems to have been more interested in addressing issues of concern to the white minority. These are without doubt serious concerns. But the MDC has not linked the land issue to poverty and political oppression. Mugabe's use of the masses' anger with the colonial/white minority rule of the past should not have prevented the MDC from defending the interests of the most deprived.

The white minority support for the MDC and the involvement of past colonial masters in the elections was a heaven-sent blessing for the dictator Mugabe. He made a calculated move by having MDC members arrested, detained, and charged on the eve of the elections, on the grounds that they were collaborating with the former colonial rulers. The failure of the MDC to provide a historical perspective to explain the suffering of the Zimbabwean people may be the reason we did not experience another Ivory Coast or Madagascar after the election results were announced.

Things are not going to get better for ordinary Zimbabweans, who have suffered a great deal even without sanctions. Sanctions would do no more than force Mugabe to use his powers to solve the land issue in a way that might not be in the interests of the legal owners of the land.

Redistributing the land to its rightful owners and turning them into private farms might be a shortcut to solving the economic problems facing Zimbabweans. Zimbabwe still would need new capital, which Mugabe does not have. The appetite of the corrupt bureaucracy might not survive sanctions, especially if Mugabe decides to interfere with its criminal activities. Even if he decides to do so, he will act with the full knowledge that his power will be undermined.

The elections and its results present a new objective situation to Zimbabweans. It only confirms a suspicion long held by many Africans, that Western imperialism is still alive.

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