Posted on 03/29/2002 12:38:28 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
Having conducted a terror campaign against his political opponents, beggared his country's economy, corrupted its courts, intimidated its press, alienated its entrepreneurs, widened its racial divide, presided over the armed robbery of thousands of farms and then rigged an election to assure his victory, President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe paid a small price last week: Zimbabwe was suspended for a year from the Commonwealth - a group of 54 nations, most of them former British colonies.
But it is not the British Commonwealth, or any other international organization led by Westerners, that is apt to deter Mugabe from his increasingly autocratic and destructive course and bring democracy and prosperity to Zimbabwe. What must sway Mugabe, if he is to be moved at all, is collective action by responsible African leaders.
The stakes go beyond Zimbabwe. International financier George Soros has pointed out that the phony elections in Zimbabwe cast doubt on the ability of African countries generally "to create suitable preconditions for private investment." The economic, political, legal and social degeneration of Zimbabwe, in short, is frightening off the kind of foreign investment that is needed for the entire region's economic development and political stability.
There is, mercifully, some small sign that critical African leaders are awakening to the danger. Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and South African President Thabo Mbeki stood at the side of Australian President John Howard, who announced Zimbabwe's suspension from the Commonwealth.
Thus far, however, Obasanjo, Mbeki and other African leaders have been squeamish about criticizing Mugabe harshly or in public, no doubt because they respect his role as a father of the liberation movement in southern Africa.
But their silence is risking the collapse of all that movement has achieved in Zimbabwe. Investors have fled the nation, and the International Monetary Fund has suspended loans, citing growing corruption in the use of state funds. Zimbabwe's annual inflation rate tops 115%, and more than 60% of the people are unemployed.
There is every reason to believe the downward spiral will continue if Mugabe is left to his own devices. Any notion that he might change course after the election, evince signs of magnanimity and establish some sort of legitimacy and credibility were demolished last week when Morgan Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe's opposition leader, was charged with treason.
It was unity that helped liberate southern Africa and send the region down the road to freedom and independence. Leaders in southern Africa need to demonstrate the same unity of purpose to rescue Zimbabwe and the region from the threat posed by one of their wayward and increasingly destructive brothers.
How could it get worse?
He's too busy planning his trip to Cuba to meet with Castro.
That's one way it could get worse. I'm sure there are others.
Tuor
Black Zimbabwe citizens overthrowing Mugabe? Will never happen.
In that s**thole of a continent, they seem to revel in such misery. They got exactly what they asked for. Every white in the country should hightail it outta there.
Nonsense. You don't look to leaders for freedom. Freedom comes from the ethics where an individual has a passion for self-interest and stands up for his rights by killing the Tyrant. There is no such ethic in Africa. It is a land where communal life is the norm. For that they are eternally damned.
And where, in Africa, will you find a "responsible" leader?
There is no easy solution to what is going on down there. The UN can wring their hands all they want, but it wont stop what is happening. If they send 'peace keepers', they'll just wind up caught up in the mess as well. As I said before, we should send material help, but not troops.
Tuor
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