Tuesday, September 10, 2013

(NEWZIMBABWE, RUSSIA TODAY) Mugabe win: Dictatorship or decolonisation?
14/08/2013 00:00:00
by Nile Bowie I RT.com

FEW modern African leaders have been both so passionately supported and endlessly condemned as President Robert Mugabe, an ardent nationalist and black liberation figure who has ruled Zimbabwe since its independence in 1980.

Despite the hardships and crippling hyperinflation brought on by Western sanctions as a result of ethnically polarising land reform policies, Mugabe’s legacy as the country’s national liberator – as the man who laid down the core demands for national independence, and won – provokes an intense national fervour that has secured his victory in every election.

It wasn’t so long ago that every inch of Zimbabwe, once known as “Rhodesia” after the British mining magnet Cecil Rhodes, was owned by a clique of white colonialists who made up 4.3 percent of the population. The masses of black Africans were brutally enslaved and forced to live under punishing exploitation, while Zimbabwe’s land and natural resources were taken violently and divided amongst European settlers.

The landslide victory of Mugabe in the July 31 elections suggests that much of the population views him as the answer to the post-independence “black man's burden” – reaping meagre profits from resources exploited by multinationals while continuing to be subservient to non-Africans who monopolise the continent’s most arable land.

Mugabe’s ideology is that political independence is merely nominal without economic freedom, and thus argued during liberation negotiations in 1979 that Zimbabwe would only agree to a “willing buyer, willing seller” agreement provided that the United Kingdom offer black Zimbabweans the funds needed to purchase land forcibly taken from them by white landowners. The problem was that the UK never committed to the pledge made by Margaret Thatcher's government to raise hundreds of millions of pounds for long-term land reform, and many white landowners were unwilling to sell their land, which kept nearly the entire black population confined to less than a quarter of the country’s landmass.

Africa’s Hitler?

In 2000, in the midst of gouging austerity measures imposed by the IMF, Mugabe’s Zanu PF party did what no other post-independence government has dared to do – it fast tracked its indigenisation policies, leading to the forcible seizure of white-owned land, sometimes by violent means. Some 6,000 white farmers were replaced by 245,000 black farmers, and while the move initially created chaos and earned Mugabe titles like “Africa’s Hitler,” agricultural production has normalised to 1990s levels, and resettled farmers grow 40% of the country’s tobacco and 49% of its maize.

Today however, empowerment minister Saviour Kasukuwere, admits food production is only at about 50 percent of capacity, and there is no doubt that major challenges still need to be overcome before the land reforms can be seen as a viable policy for Zimbabwe’s neighbours to emulate. International condemnation and crippling sanctions only added to the chaos following the land seizures, resulting in a hyperinflationary crisis that saw the printing of one-hundred-trillion-dollar banknotes, and finally the abolishment of the national currency in favour of the US dollar and the South African rand.

Although there have been undeniable economic consequences, such as the loss of the national currency and monetary sovereignty, and sanctions imposed from European capitals as a result of the indigenisation policies, the latest round of elections were essentially a public referendum on Mugabe’s policies, which the majority of Zimbabweans feel is the only effective way to lift the centuries’ old burden of Mugabe proclaimed that, “we must re-write the economic books for our children. Those books were written to suite the West's agenda of exploiting our resources. Our children must know that our resources are more significant, more precious than their capital.”

Zanu PF’s next moves are to grant Zimbabweans at least 51% of controlling equity in foreign-owned businesses, resulting in what the party says will create a value of US$7.3 billion across 14 key sectors of the economy. Mugabe’s party is also planning a $5 billion investment in physical infrastructure including the energy, roads, and railway sectors, as well as in areas concerning health, education, housing, water, sanitation and security.

Squeeze the economy

Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the MDC-T and prime minister under the outgoing coalition government, declared the vote a sham even prior to the results being tallied. Mugabe, who won 61.09 percent of the vote to Tsvangirai’s 33.94 percent, refused to allow election observers from Western countries to monitor the polls. Despite claims from the opposition to the contrary, the United Nations, the African Union and other observer groups found the election results to be sound, free, and fair.

The only countries that have not recognised the vote results are the UK, Australia, and the United States – Secretary of State John Kerry claimed that the results did not reflect “a credible expression of the will of the Zimbabwean people,” an incredibly deceitful statement given the groundswell and undeniable campaign surge around Zanu PF, further putting the Obama administration at odds with the political judgment of both international and African institutions.

There is good reason why the West backed Tsvangirai to the hilt – he espoused an economic program that represents the direct opposite of Mugabe’s indigenisation policies. The MDC-T championed a foreign-investment-led growth agenda, promising one million new jobs by 2018, re-established relations with the West, a repositioning of the country as being “ready for business,” as well as renewing relations with the international financial community. Tsvangirai has been a consistent opponent of indigenisation, land reform, and even opposed the nationalisation of the lucrative mining sector – his poor showing in the polls reflects his endorsement of unpopular neoliberal policies.
The MDC-T leader lost significant public support after WikiLeaks documents showed that he urged the US to maintain sanctions against the country, while taking the opposite position in public. In a statement to the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights protesting the economic embargo, a Zimbabwean delegation made the case that they were being unjustly sanctioned, citing former US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Chester Crocker, who told the US Senate that, “To separate the Zimbabwean people from Zanu PF, we are going to have to make their economy scream, and I hope you, Senators, have the stomach for what you have to do.”

WikiLeaks cables also revealed statements made by former US Ambassador to Zimbabwe Christopher Dell, who said, “He [Tsvangirai] is the indispensable element for regime change, but possibly an albatross around their necks once in power.” Tsvangirai may have convinced many of the youth and downtrodden in Zimbabwe that his was the right agenda, but the significant majority clearly isn’t buying it.

Indigenisation blowback

From 2008, Zimbabwe operated under a coalition government with Mugabe as president and Tsvangirai as prime minister. Given Zanu PF’s strong mandate and two-thirds majority in parliament, however, Mugabe’s party is again firmly in the driver’s seat and set on making the country’s most ambitious indigenisation reforms yet. In this light, it can only be expected that Western pressure will be redoubled in an effort to sabotage coming reforms, in fear of other African countries emulating them if they yield success.

The last thing multinationals want is for other African leaders to look at Zimbabwe and Mugabe as a positive point of reference. One consequence of indigenisation reforms may result in a sharp decline in capital inflows and foreign-investment, simply because few investors, be they from the West or elsewhere, want to be stripped of half a business after pouring in the capital and know-how. Just as the land seizures created short-term instability and eventual normalisation, there is a strong possibility that further reforms will create turbulence and economic insecurity if Zanu PF fails to ensure a smooth and harmonised investment environment. That foreign-investment in the first quarter of 2013 amounted to approximately $36 million, compared to about $136 million in the same period in 2012 is telling.

China is the main international supporter of Zimbabwe, and Beijing has backed Mugabe since the pre-independence days. Since the diplomatic fallout with the West, Mugabe has relied on a “Look East” policy that offered priority to Chinese investment and capital from other Asian states. China, with its insatiable appetite for cigarettes, is the biggest buyer of Zimbabwean tobacco, and has sold Harare millions worth of military hardware. Beijing has furthermore spearheaded development projects which include everything from developing hydroelectric power to financing local cotton production.

The Chinese government sent an observer mission to monitor the recent elections, which noted that the voting process proceeded smoothly, and that China “appreciates the Zimbabwean people's patriotic zeal and independent consciousness.” Investment from China fell from $1 billion in 2011 to $667 million in 2012, and similar trends have followed between Harare’s key trading partners like South Africa. The challenge ahead will be ensuring key partners that the country’s investment climate will remain stable during the process of democratising the economic space, which should be done with care.

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