Tag: Mugabe

  • Mugabe: What legacy?

    After addictive medical trips to Singapore apparently in search of some immortality,   Robert Gabriel Mugabe (RGM) on September 6, heaved the last breath.  If he was mortal after all, what then remains of the legacy of the first sit-tight prime minister of liberated Zimbabwe, who in 1987 transformed into an executive president? This was also a frequently asked question while alive. He was born in 1924 in Kutama in the then British colonial possession: Southern Rhodesia, (now Zimbabwe). He was imprisoned together with some of his comrades in Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), later ZANU PF, between 1964 and 1974 for leading an armed resistance against British colonial rule.

    In prison, he lost the only son from his first Ghanaian wife, late Sally Hayfon (who died in 1992). He died at 95, some two years after he was pressured out of power in November 2017 replaced by Emmerson Mnangagwa, the man he had fired as his deputy. One clear legacy of RGM is longevity in life (by destiny) and power (almost by subterfuge and dictatorship). Robert Mugabe shared in common, long life with freedom fighters like Nelson Mandela who despite 27 years’ incarceration by accursed apartheid regime died in South Africa peacefully some few months after 95th birthday, precisely on December 5, 2013.  Kenneth David Kaunda, (Zambian President from 1964 to 1991) also known as KK, born same year with Mugabe on April 28, 1924, remains the only standing nationalist of his era! Liberation fighters like Samora Machel of Mozambique were not as lucky in longevity. He died in a plane crash, at the behest of South African racist regime on October 19, 1986, at 53 years.  Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana 1909-1972, was the first liberator to audaciously lower Union Jack in 1957. He died at 63 of what Amilcar Cabral at Nkrumah’s state burial called “cancer of betrayal” in an historic speech in Conakry on May 14, 1972. A year later, Cabral (precisely on January 20, 1973) was also brutally killed by agents of the Portuguese imperialism at the prime age of 48 years. The second legacy of Mugabe is leadership-by- controversy, disputation and notoriety (almost-in that-order). My reflections over the years on Zimbabwe under Mugabe (what I dubbed Mugabedom!) can make a chapter in the next revised edition of my Reflections  on Africa and Global Affairs  (2015) and  Friends, Comrades and Heroes (2015). They include Mugabe @ 80 (March 2004), Mugabe As History (APRIL, 2008), Zimbabwe For Beginners, (June 2008), Mugabedom, Not Yet Zimbabwe – (August, 2013), Robert Gabriel Mugabe (RGM) for Beginners– (August, 2013) and No Lessons from Zimbabwe (2017).

    While alive (just as it’s is now after his death), Mugabe once polarized the African continent and indeed the world. Either you’re   for him (in support of the so-called land reform through land grabbing from the historic white land robbers) or against Zimbabwe under him for denying free and fair elections. The combined imperial forces of UK’s Tony Blair/ America’s George Bush who concealed their racist uncritical support for few white land owners opposing land reform while remaining  hard on politics of free and fair elections gave Mugabe the ready excuses to repress his people and under-develop Zimbabwe. After death, there is a disputation as to whether Mugabe who died in faraway Singapore with better medical care was truly a liberator or another duplicitous African big man, with one set of rule for himself, family members, party members and miserable standard for his people. Following the crisis that trailed rigged elections in 2008 (Mugabe actually lost to opposition MDC), he declared that Zimbabwean crisis was “an African crisis” arguing that the success of Zimbabwe is the success of Africa. Yet he effortlessly dammed the same Africa Union (AU) following the latter’s suggestion for election postponement when opposition MDC alleged insecurity. Mugabe pointedly said the continental body has “no right to dictate to us what we should do with our constitution, and how we should govern the country”.  Former president of South Africa, Nelson Mandela, aptly described the ugly repressive events in Harare under Mugabe as manifestation of tragic leadership failure. The worst legacy of Mugabe is sit-tightism in office with drab speeches which often lacked substance like most boring speeches of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gadhafi.

    Mugabe came to power in 1980 in a popular election contested by notable nationalists like Joshua Nkomo. My findings show that in Nigeria, from President Shehu Shagari in 1980s to President Muhammadu Buhari in 2015, as many as 10 Heads of States had witnessed Mugabe’s serial self-inaugurations, sorry self-successions. If Mugabe were to be a British Prime Minister through sit-tight game, the British would not have known such prime ministers as Sir John Major, Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Prime Minister David Donald Cameron and Theresa May. Mugabe came to power almost same time Prime Minister Baroness Margaret Thatcher came to office. Of course if Mugabe were to be a Chinese, Li Xiannia,    Yang Shangkun, Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin Hu Jintao and incumbent Xi Jinping could not have been presidents of the fastest growing economy in the world compared to impoverished Zimbabwe. Mugabe came to power when Ronald Reagan was in power.  The two “Bushes” namely George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton met and left him in office. Indeed President Barack Obama was in the college in the 80s when Mugabe was already a president. By Mugabe’s design, Obama completed two terms in office before he completed his 7th tenure! If Mugabe were to be a South African, there would not have been a Nelson Mandela to succeed him! We would have been crudely denied a global moral authority on freedom, democracy, reconciliation and peace that Mandela represented. Since Mugabe came to office, as many as seven presidents have emerged in South Africa. Certainly Mugabe was not Nelson Mandela. He was a man with selective sense of justice. He   once accepted to be happily knighted in the 90s by the Queen under Lancaster House constitution. Paradoxically after almost 40 years in power, Mugabe’s selling point until end was still colonialism, not open unemployment as high as 80 per cent, multiple digit inflation and imaginable currency devaluation, dollarization and unprecedented human drain/ human flight in modern Africa!

    Whatever his legacy is, blessed are the dead, because Robert Mugabe would no longer be suspected of some African failings. The burden is on the living who must deepen democracy, generate wealth, overcome inequality, create mass decent jobs and banish poverty.

    • Aremu, is member National Institute, Kuru Jos.
  • Mugabe: Garlands for the old wizard of Harare

    The Iroko tree has fallen and there was tremor in Harare and the entire Zimbabwe stood in awe.  The echoes reverberate the length and breadth of the globe, the old wizard of Harare has gone home.  Comrade Robert Mugabe, the charismatic and eloquent  former President of Zimbabwe, un-arguably an accomplished revolutionary and about the only  pan- Africanist of the 20th Century still living has bowed out.  He has just been declared a national hero in Zimbabwe which is well deserving.  He came, he saw and he conquered.

    He was undoubtedly one of the most cerebral and educated Presidents the world has ever known.  He was brave, courageous, fearless, and confronted the colonial imperialists without consideration of his personal safety.   He paid the prize for it when he was jailed and remained in prison for over a decade and came out to become the first Prime Minister of Zimbabwe.  He was a founding member of the Zimbabwean African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU PF) which was the arrow head of the liberation struggle that fought for the independence of Zimbabwe; formerly Rhodesia.  Mugabe was therefore, a product of an ideological driven organization that was to pilot the affairs of his country.

    At independence, it was the determination of the ZANU PF to dismantle and drop the vestiges of the colonial heritage and named their  country Zimbabwe.  Zimbabwe took off on a very high note in the 1980s pricing education very highly and with Mugabe himself having a doctoral degree.  The country had almost 100% literacy rate becoming an example to many other African countries which to date has not been matched.

    Like every revolutionary with human frailties, Mugabe did not feel that anybody was capable of replacing him.  He became infected with African leadership malaise like a feudal overlord and did not groom any cadre for seamless succession.  Mugabe became too obsessed with power.  This became his albatross, diminishing his stature in the history of the greats in political leadership not just in Africa but the world over.  He became too obsessed with power.  His failure was the failure of the leadership cadre of the ZANU PF who did not find courage to give honest and objective advice to sustain the momentum of what the party represented.

    Comrade Mugabe remained inflexibly principled to the end as he was noted to have told his family members that whenever he dies, he would not like to be buried in the Heroes Pouch in Zimbabwe given what he perceived was a couple against him in 2017 when he was edged out of power through the military wing of his party.  He also became too gerontocratic with amnesia and started scheming for his young wife, Grace Mugabe to succeed him in defiance to the succession plan of the party which caught the ire of the hawkish element in the party; also hungry for power.

    Where other African leaders capitulated, Mugabe stood firm against the stormy sanctions of the west which virtually paralysed the economy of Zimbabwe.  He did not give up; he was loud.  He took a solo campaign to fight western conspiracies which made Zimbabwe a pariah state for many decades making the country’s currency to become worthless that workers started demanding their wages and salaries in United States Dollars.

    Mugabe rejected the hemlock of structural adjustment programme and other alien economic policies of the World Bank which the imperialists prescribed as remedy for African politico-economy.  We may not have found an alternative African economic model,  but the truth remains that you cannot transport the reality in one clime to another lock-stock-and-barrel.

    Of the few notable African revolutionaries, Mugabe was about the only one that succeeded in leading his country to independence and this remains to the credit of his uncompromising leadership quality. Apart from the African National Congress (ANC) in South Africa, ZANU PF remains one of the longest political parties in Africa that fought for the liberation of their countries from colonial oppression.

    There is decline in global leadership index.  There are no internationalists any longer who could stand for human essence and defend the atrocious onslaught of perverse leadership who slaughter their people to remain in power.

    Mugabe was in power for about 37 years of his country’s independence. It was a failure that he could not develop the health sector in his country after three decades in power and had to die in a hospital in Singapore.  I am not sure many of his countrymen and women other than the pilfering politicians could afford medical tourism in any Asian country like him.  Mugabe showed remarkable disdain to the imperialists west to the end of his life and did not bother to take solace in their health facility for whatever it represented.

    Today, just like Comrade Mugabe, there is hardly any African political leadership that has made deliberate and conscious attempt to build human capital and infrastructure to reduce capital flight and develop African economy and health sector.  Our leaders have gone beyond medical tourism to developing appetite for exotic foreign gastronomy to the neglect of the abundance nature has endowed us with.

    With the kind of political leadership that we have which has become an anathema, our youths will continue to die in the Mediterranean Sea and victims of xenophobic attacks even  in the back waters of African countries that were beneficiaries of our generosity and largesse in the recent past.  History may not judge Mugabe so harshly as he cannot be said to be a villain although he may not have been a hero to all.   The name Mugabe has since become synonymous with resistance, stubbornness and opposition to imperialist dominion.  Today, we are struggling with local insurgency that has blossomed into full fledge terrorism because of leadership lethargy.  Today, banditry and insecurity are the defining features of our countries across Africa and our leaders are busy cringing from coast to coast begging for aids to fight crimes and criminality that they have become complicit.

    Today, malaria is killing our people because of poor leadership that does not see the need to invest in infrastructure, human capital and healthcare.  Today, our leaders deliberately promote divisions amongst tribes and tongues and fuel ethno-religious tensions.  Today, the lives of citizens are not worth more than a cow as we slaughter ourselves at the slightest provocation.  Today, tribal leaders and activists   give evacuation orders to our brothers and sisters who had hitherto lived with them in harmony in their regions.

    While we send garlands to Comrade Mugabe, the old wizard of Harare, there should be a peer review mechanism of what leadership should be like to save the next generation of Africans from the infantile leadership that dots the continent.  Adieu comrade Roberts Mugabe ad infinitum.

    • Kebonkwu, a lawyer, writes from Abuja.
  • Zimbabwe’s parliament orders Mugabe to answer questions over diamonds

    Zimbabwe’s parliament has ordered former president Robert Mugabe to answer questions next month about whether the state was deprived of $15 billion in diamond revenue, a legislator said on Friday.

    It will be Mugabe’s first public appearance since last November when the army deposed him in a de facto coup after nearly four decades in power and he was replaced by President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Reuters reported.

    The 94-year-old gave his first television interview last month since he lost power and said Mnangagwa had betrayed him and assumed the presidency illegally.

    Mugabe said in March 2016 the country was robbed of wealth by diamond companies including joint ventures between Chinese companies and the army, police and intelligence services whose operations were shielded from public scrutiny.

    Specifically, he said Zimbabwe lost $15 billion in revenue from Marange gem fields, more than 400 km (250 miles) east of the capital. He expelled those firms last year and replaced them with a state-owned diamond company.

  • Zimbabwe has moved on from Mugabe’s era – Mnangagwa

    Zimbabwean President, Emmerson Mnangagwa, said on Friday Zimbabwe “has moved on’’ when responding to claims by former President Robert Mugabe that his ascendancy to power is illegal.

    Speaking for the first time in a television interview on Thursday night since his resignation in November 2017, Mugabe said Mnangagwa came to power via a coup and that he was willing to discuss with him to resolve the matter.

    “I don’t hate Emmerson. I brought him into government. I would want to work with him but he must be proper,” Mugabe said in the interview aired by the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC).

    “And if it is to correct that illegality that he would want me to discuss with him, I’m willing.

    “We must undo this disgrace which we have imposed on ourselves,” Mugabe said.

    In response, Mnangagwa said Mugabe was free to express his opinion like any other citizen.

    The President said in a statement that the government continued to honour its obligations towards the former President’s welfare and benefits.

    Mugabe has previously said the state was not giving him his full benefits.

    Mnangagwa said Zimbabwe had moved on and was focusing on preparations for free and fair elections set for mid-year.

    “This is a key step in the immense task at hand, which is to lift our people from the effects of years of severe economic regression and international isolation,” said Mnangagwa.

  • I never thought Mnangagwa will turn against me, says Mugabe

    Zimbabwe’s former leader, Robert Mugabe, said in an interview broadcast on Thursday that he never thought President Emmerson Mnangagwa would turn against him and denounced Mnangagwa’s move to oust him in 2017 as a coup.

    Mugabe, 94, ruled Zimbabwe from independence in 1980 until he stepped down under pressure from Mnangagwa’s allies in the army in November.

    Viewed by some as a liberation hero, others remember Mugabe for turning a promising country into an economic basket and international pariah.

    Mnangagwa, who was Deputy President under Mugabe, promised to open up Zimbabwe to foreign investment and mend ties with the West since assuming power.

    “I never thought that Mnangagwa, whom I nurtured and brought into government and whose life I worked so hard in prison to save as he was threatened with hanging, that one day he would be the man who would turn against me,” Mugabe said in the interview with South African state broadcaster SABC from Harare.

    Mnangagwa was convicted of sabotage under white minority rule and sentenced to death.

    But he was spared the noose because it was deemed that he was a minor when he committed the crime.

    Mugabe said he was ousted in a “military takeover” and that Mnangagwa had assumed the presidency illegally.

    “I don’t hate Emmerson, I brought him into government. But he must be proper; he is improper where he is. Illegal,” Mugabe said.

    “We must undo this disgrace, which we have imposed on ourselves. We don’t deserve it.”

    Since his fall from power, Mugabe has stayed at his Harare mansion with his wife Grace.

    His ousting was the culmination of a power struggle between Mnangagwa and Grace Mugabe, who was being groomed by her husband as his potential successor.

    Mugabe was granted immunity from prosecution and assured that his safety will be protected in his home country under a deal that led to his resignation.

    Mugabe quit as parliament began a process to impeach him, triggering wild celebrations in the streets.

    Zimbabwe was once one of Africa’s most promising economies but suffered decades of decline as Mugabe pursued policies that included the violent seizure of white-owned commercial farms and money-printing that led to hyperinflation.

    Mnangagwa has said Zimbabwe still wants to end discrimination between black and white farmers but will seek new ways to compensate those, who have lost their properties.

    Former colonial ruler Britain said in February that Harare should press on with transparent and fair land reform. (Reuters/NAN)

  • Zimbabwe ’s anti-graft agency investigates Grace Mugabe’s PhD

    Zimbabwe ’s anti-graft agency investigates Grace Mugabe’s PhD

    Zimbabwe’s anti-corruption agency is investigating whether former first lady Grace Mugabe was wrongly awarded a university doctorate more than three years ago, an official said on Tuesday.

    Grace, whose efforts to take over the leadership of the ruling ZANU-PF party prompted a de facto military coup against her husband, then-president Robert Mugabe, in November, graduated in 2014, just months after she had registered to study at the University of Zimbabwe.

    Up to now, her dissertation for the doctorate has not been published and is not available in the university library, as such academic qualifications usually are.

    Read also: New Zimbabwean Govt. declares Mugabe ’s birthday as public holiday

    “We indeed received a report from the sociology department at the university on how Grace Mugabe received her doctorate and that is what we are investigating,” said Goodson Nguni, the head of investigations at the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission.

    Local media reports say the sociology department told the commission that Grace’s doctorate was “suspicious” and needed to be investigated.

    Grace, who was called “Dr Amai” – or “learned mother of the nation” – by adulating followers, has previously defended her academic record and last September told a ZANU-PF rally that she had earned her doctorate even though her detractors thought otherwise.

    Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was on the receiving end of vicious attacks by Grace last year, succeeded 93-year-old Mugabe as president in November.

    Grace has not appeared in public since November 15, when army tanks rolled into the capital and confined Mugabe and his family at his luxurious mansion in Harare.

    NAN

  • Mugabe flies to Singapore for medical checks

    Mugabe flies to Singapore for medical checks

    Former president of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe has left the country for medical checks in Singapore, his first foreign travel since the army forced him from office in November, a state security official said on Tuesday.

    The 93-year-old, who ruled the southern African nation for 37 years, resigned after the army and his ruling ZANU-PF party turned against him when it became clear that his 52-year-old wife, Grace, was being groomed as his successor.

    Until recently, Mugabe had a reputation for extensive and expensive international travel, including regular medical trips to Singapore, a source of public anger among his impoverished citizens.

    The official said he left Harare with Grace and aides on Monday evening, the official said.

    He is expected to make a stop-over in Malaysia, where his daughter, Bona, is expecting a second child.

    “He has gone for a routine medical trip to Singapore,” said the official, who has organized Mugabe’s security protection but who is not authorized to speak to the media.

    “He was due for a check-up but events of the last few weeks made it impossible for him to travel.”

    The trip means Mugabe will not be in Zimbabwe when ZANU-PF endorses President Emmerson Mnangagwa as its leader and presidential candidate for 2018 elections during a one-day special congress on Friday.

    The security official would not say how Mugabe was traveling although the privately owned NewsDay newspaper said he was on a state-owned Air Zimbabwe plane.

    Mugabe was granted immunity from prosecution and assured of his safety under his resignation deal, a source of frustration to many Zimbabweans who accused him of looting state coffers and destroying the economy during his time in power.

    Another government official told Reuters in November that Mugabe had been due to travel to Singapore on Nov. 16 but was unable to leave because the military had confined him to his private home the previous day.

    George Charamba, a senior information ministry official, declined to comment.

    Under Zimbabwe’s Presidential Pension and Retirement Benefits Act, a former head of state is entitled to perks including limited foreign travel and medical insurance.

    “These are very standard features of a retired president,” another government official said, trying to head off any controversy.

    “You are making a storm out of nothing.”

  • Zimbabwe after Mugabe

    Zimbabwe after Mugabe

    “How do you think he would have been assessed if Robert Mugabe had either died or quit office two decades ago?” a leading comrade and progressive journalist asked me in a telephone conversation on the fate that had befallen Zimbabwe’s maximum ruler for over four decades who had been forced by the country’s army and liberation war veterans to quit office? The answer is, of course, obvious. He would have been celebrated as a worthy African leader, canonized by the West and lionized by the international community.  Unfortunately, Mugabe stayed too long in office, had become increasingly alienated from reality and was unfortunate to have fallen under the spell of his excessively power-thirsty wife, Grace, a veritable Jezbel of our time.  Some commentators have dismissed Mugabe as just another example of the myriad of sit-tight African leaders who only lust for power and do not have the interests of their people at heart. He validates for those who hold this view, the proposition that Africa’s most fundamental problem is that of poor and inept leadership. This is, however, a rather superficial viewpoint that oversimplifies a more complex situation.

    The truth of the matter is that many of the African leaders who like Mugabe started out well but some of whom ended up as villains in office, were leaders and able statesmen of the first rank. These include such first post-independence generation leaders as Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Sekou Toure of Guinea, Milton Obote of Uganda, Amilcar Cabral of Guinea Bissau, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, Patrice Lumumba of Congo, Abdel Nasser of Egypt, Julius Nyerere of Tanzania or Muammar Gaddafi of Libya to name a few. They were well read, cosmopolitan and highly patriotic leaders of their countries. Many of them courageously led the struggle for their countries’ liberation from colonial rule most times at great personal cost. Their sacrificial and pioneering roles in the nationalist struggle for independence unfortunately gave them a sense of entitlement of their right to lead their newly liberated countries; a feeling shared by a not insubstantial number of their fellow country men and women.

    It is so easy with the benefit of hindsight to blame these leaders for the rash of one- man and one-party dictatorships that erupted all over Africa in the immediate post-independence period.  However, the conventional wisdom in the aftermath of independence even in highly distinguished and respected intellectual circles was that liberal democracy was at that time a luxury which the newly independent African countries could hardly afford. A choice had to be made between a liberal democracy that could all too often be distracting, cacophonous, obstructive of swift and decisive decision making as well as divisive and what the ‘modernization theorists’ described as ‘developmental dictatorship’ if I can recall correctly.

    All these turned out with time to be completely wrong headed. For, African leaders could not be exempted from Lord Acton’s enduring and time tested maxim that ‘power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely’. That was the tragedy of Mugabe as that of several otherwise immensely talented African leaders who met their waterloo in power. For at least his first two decades in power, Mugabe was the toast of the western media and political establishment. He was even given a knighthood by the British Queen. He remained the darling of the West for as long as he left intact the grossly unjust and inequitable economic and social structure bequeathed to Zimbabwe by imperialism. This was particularly the case with the criminally untenable and abysmally unequal distribution of land with a minority of white farmers retaining control of large tracts of fertile land to the detriment of millions of deprived Zimbabwean peasant farmers and families.

    For over two decades after independence, Mugabe was reluctant to do anything about the historic injustice of asymmetrical land distribution in Zimbabwe. His stance was no doubt partly due to the kind of advice he was given by the radical political economist and revolutionary, Abdulrahman Babau, in an open letter to Mugabe in May 1980 shortly after his assumption of office and published in the New African magazine. In the words of Babu to Mugabe, “Experience elsewhere has taught us that the taking over of ongoing viable farms has invariably led to almost total collapse of agricultural production and has forced the countries concerned to incur heavy foreign debt to import food. As foreign borrowing without repayment cannot be sustained for a long time the countries are forced literally to beg for food on an international scale…It is a painful historical fact that in Zimbabwe such large-scale farms are owned by White settlers, some of whom are liberal and others incorrigibly reactionary. To expropriate them will amount to economic disaster, at least in the short run. To allow them to continue as before will amount to perpetuating a national injustice. This is a serious dilemma”.

    The popular perspective and conventional wisdom is that the Mugabe administration undertook the confiscation of White-owned farms and distributing them to its cronies as his dictatorial grip on the country tightened, his intolerance of opposition grew and his popularity at home plummeted. There may be some truth to this view. But the radical South African Political Economist, Professor Patrick Bond, gives us another no less instructive point of view. According to him, the same war veterans largely responsible for Mugabe’s eventual ouster from power, had earlier confronted him in Y2000 when they became fed up with his reluctance to take over the white farms, which as that year were mostly under-utilized.

    Consequently, over the Easter weekend in 2000, over 3000 large white farms were taken over by about 170,000 Zimbabwean families. This was obviously a carefully planned operation. Mugabe, who initially opposed the development, was forced to change his stance and support the takeover given the popularity in Zimbabwe of the occupation of the white farms. In any case, what choice did Mugabe have since Britain reneged on its pledge under the Lancaster House agreement to pay Zimbabwe 10 million pounds to buy back some of the white farms for redistribution to deprived black farmers?

    Zimbabwe’s efforts to move, through the forcible acquisition of unjustly acquired land, from mere flag or nominal independence to genuine economic emancipation instantly drew a furious and punitive reaction from the West. Stiff sanctions were imposed on the country that virtually brought the economy to its knees. Inflation soared. Food scarcity became the norm. The country’s currency became practically worthless. The British monarchy withdrew Mugabe’s knighthood. He became an international pariah and a persona non grata in the West overnight. It will be recalled that key western countries such as the US and Britain vigorously supported the apartheid regime in South Africa as well as white minority rule in the former Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). If they had their way, white supremacist rule would be alive and well in those countries today.

    Even though the compulsory acquisition and redistribution to thousands of black farmers of the huge white farms is widely regarded as a disaster with deleterious economic consequences, Professor Bond points out some little publicized gains of the exercise. He notes, for instance, that “The 146,000 smaller farmers with land of six hectares saved and reinvested and became highly productive, creating 800,000 jobs”. This is in addition to the several vibrant market towns which have reportedly grown around the land reform farms. Again, Zimbabwe reportedly produced more maize in 2017 than was ever grown by white farmers who have always been credited for making the country Africa’s food basket. This year, Zimbabwe produced 2.2 million tonnes of Maize, the highest in two decades. Compared to 2011, another good year for Maize production, an increase of about 700,000 tonnes was witnessed this year.

    Apart from favourable weather conditions, the United States Department of Agriculture has cited a special programme for import substitution known as ‘Command Agriculture’ as being responsible for the successes recorded in this respect. The ‘Command Agriculture’ scheme involves land reform farmers signing contracts for a certain number of hectares and agreeing to sell not less than five tonnes of maize per hectare to the Grain Marketing Board. On its part, government provides seedlings, fertilizer, tractors where necessary and fuel for ploughing with the cost deducted from the sale prize of the maize.

    Mugabe’s successor, former Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa has promised more support for the Land Commission set up under Mugabe to “ensure that all land is utilized optimally”. It will be prudent and wise for him to seek better relations between his country and the international community. Even as VP, Mnangagwa had reportedly been moving to curb corruption by using the army to check that agreed number of hectares were ploughed and planted as well as getting some senior figures of the ruling ZANU-PF arrested for selling fertilizer and diesel meant for other farmers. However, the truth is that what has taken place in Zimbabwe is only a palace coup. The discredited status quo remains intact. Mnangagwa and the military high command remain part and parcel of the rot of the Mugabe years. His prime task should be to liberalize the political space, legitimize political opposition, strengthen the integrity of the electoral system and perish any though of sit-tight, life dictatorship if the same fate that befell Mugabe is not to be his portion.

  • Ekwueme, Mugabe: Two contrasting exits

    Ekwueme, Mugabe: Two contrasting exits

    When former Vice President Alex Ekwueme passed on quietly on November 19 in a London clinic, the world, via cable TV, was following a strange drama unfolding in Zimbabwe on the southern tip of Africa.  Two days later, on November 21, the drama was essentially over, with the resignation of President Robert Mugabe.

    It was weird.

    After 37 years in power, 16-odd million Zimbabweans had come to terms with their grim fate: the old man would rather die in office than leave. Anyone who seriously coveted his seat regretted it. On November 6 Emmerson Mnangagwa, Mr Mugabe’s longtime ally and deputy with a dodgy past, was summarily sacked, and subsequently fled the country, amid claims that he was eyeing the president’s office.

    Mr Mnangagwa’s fate probably set the drama in motion. On November 14 the Zimbabwean army rolled out its tanks, placed Mr Mugabe under house arrest but would not call what it was doing a coup. The president was allowed a public appearance, though with a handful of security aides, at a university event, and would later give a bizarre speech in which he tried to maintain the facade that he was still in control of both the country and his party, ZANU-PF, both of which had clearly denounced him. Amid all this, tens of thousands of Zimbabweans were jubilating on the streets and hugging the same soldiers who had helped to keep the old man in power since 1980 when he led a successful uprising that ousted the white minority rulers of the country then called Rhodesia. On November 21 Mr Mugabe sent his letter of resignation to the parliament just before the lawmakers would impeach him as they promised. Mr Mnangagwa emerged from hiding and was sworn in to take Mr Mugabe’s office until next year when election is due.

    A nationwide gyration marked the end of Mr Mugabe’s political life and his iron-fist reign, a sad way to leave the scene, a lesson to all despots in Africa and the world. He and his scheming, ambitious wife Grace have obtained immunity from prosecution and will also keep what they called their personal properties, but the deposed despot will live out his days in ignominy. Enough said about the 93-year-old megalomaniac who once said Zimbabwe’s independence was procured with the gun, and whose departure Zimbabweans also procured with the gun.

    Dr Ekwueme did not fight the sort of battle that Mr Mugabe fought in the years leading up to 1980 but history will reserve its coziest living quarters for Dr Ekwueme, while leaving the dirtiest of rooms for Mr Mugabe. For at least a week after breathing his last, the former vice president had virtually every public figure singing his praise, hailing his good qualities and his accomplishments. It was not in mere adherence to the age-old practice of not speaking ill of the dead. Nigeria’s serving and retired leaders recalled he was a man of learning, with degrees in five fields, one of which architecture in which he took a doctorate. Dr Ekwueme’s mourners waxed lyrical on the subject of his cucumber-coolness and loyalty, pointing out that never did he betray his boss, President Shehu Shagari, with whom he served from 1979 to 1983 before the Buhari coup sacked them. Everyone sang of his patriotism, calling him a frontline nationalist. They said he was a firm believer in the unity of the country, and that he gave Nigeria the six geopolitical zones, an original restructuring masterstroke, that has stuck to this day, based on the principle of fair distribution of the nation’s resources. Many remembered that Dr Ekwueme was a man of peace, a few that he was also well-travelled, exposed and informed.

    Some said he left a pair of shoes too big to fill, and that his demise is a monumental loss to the country. The leadership of Ndigbo said Dr Ekwueme was a great leader of his people and an inspiration.

    Dr Ekwueme was probably a lot more than has been said of him, but it is about time Nigerians began to interrogate the sincerity of his mourners. From the picture they painted of him, Dr Ekwueme was probably one of the best presidents Nigeria never had, to borrow from the late Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, who coined the phrase back in the 80s while mourning Chief Obafemi Awolowo. But if they saw that much good and promise in him, why was he denied the presidency of the country? He was clearly a better candidate when he ran against former president Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999 at the primary stages of that election. Yet, he lost to the Owu chief, who went to on rule the country for eight years, and was also reported to be having some designs for another term before that ill-begotten project collapsed ignominiously.

    Ndigbo are now saying Dr Ekwueme was a rallying point in their zone, but how much have they learned from the master, and how much have they put to good use in their region? Are Ndigbo united in the true sense of the word? Do they really understand what regional unity means?

    Praising Dr Ekwueme in death and in such glowing terms brings to mind the typical Nigerian pastime of reserving their best for the funeral. The life of the average Nigerian is pretty much colourless until he dies. Then newspaper pages after pages and lengths of TV and radio airtime are bought up to announce his transition and interment. Finally, he appears in the most glittering casket money can buy, and is finally lowered to earth amid the loudest of party music, the best of food and the best of company on this side of the divide. How he lived or suffered before death is usually immaterial. It marks the hypocrisy of our time.

    How many in politics, and among those praising him today, are willing to emulate Dr Ekwueme? How many will play politics the way Dr Ekwueme played it? Though, hobbled with age, he remained with the Peoples Democratic Party, which he was credited with founding. In his home state Anambra, he supported Governor Willie Obiano’s reelection bid on the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) platform even though his daughter was a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) deputy governorship candidate in the same election in the state. Responding to a reporter’s question, Dr Ekwueme would later say his daughter was old enough to take her own decisions. Such wisdom, such maturity, such openness.

    Dr  Ekwueme left a lot to love, Mr Mugabe a lot to regret.  Surely, mourners have a lot to ponder, don’t they?

  • Mugabe not alone in Africa

    Mugabe not alone in Africa

    The world had literally come to a standstill for the two weeks ended on Saturday November 25. It is not a threatened world war or a worldwide political or civic disorder; rather, it is the story of a country tucked in Southern Africa that has held the world hostage for about 15 days. Even the Boko Haram story in Nigeria was demoted to a mere gossip notwithstanding the fact dozens of our country men, women and children were mercilessly slaughtered by these dare-devil extremists.

    Robert Mugabe who had held sway for 37 years and at age 93 has literally bedevilled the world. What is the short story of this enigma? He was a nationalist, suave, daring and committed during the Zimbabwe colonial era. He confronted Ian Smith, the notorious colonial master of Rhodesia. For his guerrilla struggle, he was kept behind bars for 11 years. Relief came in 1980 when Northern Rhodesia became the independent Republic of Zimbabwe and Mugabe appointed prime minister. He did not at first show his fangs until he later converted himself President of the Republic.

    Once adjudged the food basket of Southern Africa with more than 50% of the arable land owned and developed into large plantations by white settlers who have in fact become Zimbabweans, Mugabe’s ruthless land policy soon landed the unfortunate country into food chaos and economic disaster. He probably meant well with his land redistribution policy, but it was executed with vindictiveness and sly that the country soon ran into troubled waters.

    Robert Mugabe, unyielding, self-assured, and always-right, literarily ran the country aground. Moving from one economic and financial chaos to another, the country lost hold of her national currency which in any case has become useless. In all of this, Zimbabweans were reticent, if flabbergasted. Unable to raise a finger, they suffered the agony of a vanishing past.

    The African countries around Zimbabwe looked on and were unable to dialogue with the all-knowing Mugabe.

    Sometimes along the line, he saw himself creating a dynasty with his new wife succeeding him. Even though there is constitutional provision for succession, he ignored this and continued to work and hope to die in office, having nothing to do with resignation or retirement. With all these, the armed forces and the people looked on helplessly.

    With the above, can one conclude that Robert Gabriel Mugabe was a lone-ranger among African leaders? No, he was in good company. Near us in Nigeria, we have Togo where the incumbent president and his father have both spent 50 years on the political throne. The Gambia was recently ruled by a political clown, a sergeant who believed he was destined to be king of a country of less than three million people for life. We have Uganda whose fast talking President took over from Idi-Amin about 25 years ago. Both Idi-Amin the slave dealer and his successor have held Uganda in slavery.

    The story is not different in Angola where freedom fighters graduated into oppressors after the demise of the colonialists.  Liberia under Doe or Taylor is not different from others. Reprieve came to neighbouring Ghana only when J.J. Rawlings lined up eight political leaders and shot them to death. After this, Ghana became a liberal democracy.

    One can see from the above that Robert Mugabe has been in good company all along. The exceptions in African are Lesotho, Nelson Mandela’s South Africa and Nigeria.

    One must continue to ask the question, must African countries undergo this incessant political turmoil before they settle down to civilized governance or must we undergo such violent political surgery as occurred in many countries?

    It must be admitted that both the military and civilian population of Zimbabwe behaved well and out of fashion with the trend with other African countries. The political and professional dexterity displayed by the military is un-African, considering our experience on the continent. For about a week, the military was alleged to have taken over without spilling blood and without social dislocation that go with such practice elsewhere in Africa.

    The military manoeuvred the recalcitrant Mugabe and egged him-on for almost a week before the old man agreed to step down. As of the time of writing this report, Robert Mugabe continued to be a free man without the harassment of the military or the reprisal of the civilian population. Indeed most Zimbabweans are sympathetic to the old fox. Remembering his fight for independence and the land he grabbed from the white population, they seemed to have forgiven him for the atrocities he allegedly perpetrated in his past 37 years in office.

    Africans particularly Nigerians must learn from the behaviour of the Zimbabwean military and civilian population to learn to accommodate each other to enable our country move ahead. Zimbabwe is a lesson in modern political history.

     

    • Chief Fasuan, MON, writes from Ado Ekiti.