| Mugabe, political enigma, keeps them guessing |
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| Written by Levi Obijiofor | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Friday, 04 April 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Mugabe, political enigma, keeps them guessing By Levi Obijiofor Friday, 4 April 2008 There were mouth-watering speculations this week that Robert Mugabe, the foxy and ageing president of Zimbabwe, was locked in negotiations with opposition groups that would possibly force him to concede defeat in last weekends presidential election and to step down from his presidential throne. Those who relied on the rumour to kick-start early celebrations to mark the end of Mugabes iron grip on Zimbabwes political landscape certainly under-estimated the mans obstinacy and his capacity for political grandstanding and mischief. Whether or not Mugabe steps down as president, he has already inflicted incalculable damage on his countrys economy, the health system and the living standards of the people. If and if Mugabe is forced to go, it would signal a humiliating and humbling end to the political career of a man who brought pain and poverty to his country. Zimbabweans would be smacking their lips at the news of Mugabes demise. But it may all be misplaced optimism. Mugabe doesnt give up easily. Certainly, for the past 28 years, he was used to having things done his own way. Thats why he has shut his ears to all forms of advice and developed absolute contempt for western leaders -- his adversaries. His kamikaze or suicidal leadership style has seen him drive to the ground his countrys economic resources. A country once renowned as the food basket of southern Africa has now become the basket-case of Africa and the rest of the world. In Zimbabwe, the political arena has been whittled down to solo performance by Mugabes one-man soul train. Things have really fallen apart in Zimbabwe, no thanks to Mugabes maniacal and delusional management style. In Zimbabwes political history, Mugabes name stands for cruelty, corruption and greed. His epitaph, written long before he contemplated relinquishing political power, reads thus: Here lies the carcass of a brutal dictator who dragged his country and region defiantly into the international hall of infamy. But Mugabe really doesnt need to worry or care how history would record his ghastly political career. Why should he? He has good company among other African dictators of repute. Mugabes brothers in dictatorship are scattered all over the African continent. In Cote dIvoire, Félix Houphouët-Boigny ruled for 33 years. In Togo, Gnassingbe Eyadema ruled for 38 years. In Zaire, Mobutu Sese Seko reigned for 32 years. In Zambia, Kenneth Kaunda held court for 27 years. In Kenya, Daniel Arap Moi reigned for 24 years. In Benin Republic, Mathieu Kérékou ruled for 19 years. And in Ethiopia, Haile Selassie, the man who took on the title of emperor, turned himself into a human gorilla and tormented his people and the media. Within the African Union, Mugabe sits delicately like a political hot potato or a loose cannon, something you dont know how to handle or when it would go off. At home and abroad, Mugabe is viewed as a political enigma, difficult to predict and even harder to contain. There are many lessons to be learned from the parable of Mugabe. The first lesson is about the impermanence of political power. Mobutu Sese Seko believed for 32 years that he would live and die with the state known as Zaire. But he found out later that the state, indeed every state, would live long after dictators have come and gone. Nature has ensured that every dictator has a use-by date, that is, an expiry date. When it is time to quit, African dictators must quit or be forced out by a combination of forces. Our own Olusegun Obasanjo found out painfully, when he tried to extend his tenure unconstitutionally through political guile, that Nigerians and the National Assembly wont be fooled by one mans juvenile tricks. Last weekends parliamentary and presidential elections in Zimbabwe have shown that Mugabe has exhausted his game plan. He cant pull off more white pigeons from his bag of tricks. By contesting the presidential election which would have seen him extend his rule for a sixth term, Mugabe tried desperately to defy nature and to thwart the will of the Zimbabwean people. Before the recent elections, he has ruled for 28 years, thus giving the impression that the Zimbabwean state was for him to do as he pleased. During the long and forgetful period of his grisly regime, Mugabe defied everyone. He suppressed political opposition and even applied diabolical means to silence those he perceived as his greatest threats. His endless regime was sustained by intimidation, constant arrests, illegal imprisonment, gross human rights abuses and suppression of press freedom. Over the years, his presidency wore the shameless badge of executive corruption. During his time, Zimbabweans were denied what the citizens of other democratic countries took for granted the benefits of true democratic experience. The tragedy of Mugabe is that, for the period of his dictatorship, African leaders failed to confront him, under the comfortable excuse that no one should meddle in the internal affairs of another sovereign country. A handful of African leaders who tried to engage Mugabe in diplomatic dialogue in order to resolve the Zimbabwean political gridlock were snubbed. Angered by growing cases of human rights abuses and political intolerance in Zimbabwe, the Commonwealth of former British colonies stepped in and applied the political pill known as coercion in order to subdue Mugabe. But the Commonwealth leaders found out too that Mugabe does not understand the language of coercion, whether it was conveyed to him in English or in his vernacular language. Mugabe refused to be caged, intimidated or overthrown by regional, continental and international forces. The Commonwealth also administered on Mugabe another pill known as economic sanctions and that pill had an unintended effect. Mugabe walked through the sanctions with ease while his countrymen and women suffocated and the less fortunate ones were incinerated by the economic sanctions. As I argued in this column four years ago, Mugabe has become increasingly distrustful of everyone around him, including African political leaders. His dark fear of Western leaders has affected his relationship with African leaders. As his grip on power slips or weakens, Mugabe has adopted more tyrannical measures to quell dissent at home. Within his fractious presidency, Mugabe feels the West and indeed some African countries have conspired with his enemies to get rid of him. Mugabes problem is that he is incapable of distinguishing his friends from his enemies. More significant, he is incapable of reading the political mood in his country. Many Zimbabweans do not want him as president but Mugabe believes he can still finish in another term what he couldnt accomplish in 28 years of authoritarian rule. Mugabe is a yesterdays man trying to fit his nation into the Stone Age ways of doing things. He reminisces a lot about how things were done when he first came into office 28 years ago. Mugabe has failed to realise that no country can isolate itself successfully in a globalised economic and geopolitical environment. This is the reality that Mugabe continues to ignore. As time runs out on this tireless tyrant, Zimbabweans must be tired of listening to Mugabes feel-good commentaries that have so far failed to provide food on their tables for nearly three decades. Its okay for Mugabe to stir up Zimbabweans with firebrand memories of pre-independence overthrow of British colonial forces during the so-called war of independence but to what extent would rhetoric alone solve the poverty and hunger that have wracked an entire nation? Mugabe is well and truly a disused politician in Zimbabwe. If he refuses to read the mood of his nation, if he insists on serving another rigged term in office, opposition forces in Zimbabwe must figure out a way to ease the old man out of office without resorting to physical violence or unconstitutional means. It is important to keep Mugabe intact so he would suffer the emotional trauma of re-living the brutal punishment he imposed on his countrymen and women.
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Posted by Robot| 03.04.2008 22:51