Waterloo Region Record

Mugabe’s looting machine remains

- Todd Moss Todd Moss wrote this for The Washington Post

President Robert Mugabe kept Zimbabwean­s guessing right until the bitter end, but his 37-year reign is finally over. Africa’s oldest head of state was last week placed under house arrest by his own military chief, Gen. Constantin­e Chiwenga. A mass demonstrat­ion followed on Saturday, Nov. 18, with thousands of people filling the streets to demand his ouster. Then, on Sunday, the ruling ZANU-PF party formally expelled Mugabe, his wife Grace, and many of their closest allies. That night, the president made a nationally televised address in which he was expected to resign. He did not.

After defying his opponents for nearly four decades, it was perhaps inevitable that the famously stubborn leader would have one last trick up his sleeve. But Mugabe’s time is finally up. He resigned on Tuesday, soon after the Parliament began impeachmen­t proceeding­s, according to Parliament­ary Speaker Jacob Mudenda.

Mugabe will cast a long shadow over his country’s politics for many years to come. The only leader the southern African nation has known since the end of white minority rule in 1980, Mugabe presided over Zimbabwe’s fall from a promising regional powerhouse into a predatory state that serves only the most corrupt and venal. The country once exported food, but today half the rural population relies on internatio­nal largesse to survive.

The massive anti-Mugabe protests that took place over the weekend were a clear rejection of that legacy. But with Mugabe’s ZANUPF party still firmly in charge, the prospects for real reform are bleak, though not completely barren.

Some hope that Emmerson Mnangagwa, the former vice president whose firing on Nov. 6 precipitat­ed the military takeover and who has since been installed as the party’s leader, will form an inclusive transition­al authority to manage the country until elections can be held, perhaps as early as next August. This would allow the military to return to the barracks, and the new authoritie­s to begin emergency negotiatio­ns with the country’s creditors. Zimbabwe’s economy is nearing free fall with a severe shortage of cash, but it won’t be righted until the government clears roughly $5 billion in unpaid arrears and secures a new line of credit.

To be credible, however, the transition­al authority would need to include figures like veteran opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, highly regarded former finance minister Tendai Biti, former vice president Joice Mujuru, and longtime politician Welshman Ncube, among others. No doubt these figures would require assurances that the transition­al authority will wield actual power — especially to reform the election system — before they agree to participat­e.

A more pessimisti­c — but far more likely — outcome is that Mnangagwa simply takes power. ZANU-PF has built a well-oiled machine for dominating the country and stage-managing elections. In fact, Mnangagwa is one of the creators of that system of repression and control, which has enriched a small cabal at the top through a vast empire of corruption. Mnangagwa may entice one or two opposition leaders to play a ceremonial role, but he is unlikely to cede any real influence. This is essentiall­y what happened during the last government of national unity, from 2009 to 2013, when the opposition was given a nominal seat at the table after Mugabe unleashed a campaign of killings, torture, and rape to steal the 2008 election.

This more pessimisti­c scenario — the junta with a fig leaf — can only survive in the long term if the internatio­nal community at least tacitly goes along. Sadly, South Africa and former colonial power Britain have reportedly already indicated that they prefer shortterm stability over long-term reforms. They might be willing to give Mnangagwa five years as president to show what he can do. As a result, their credibilit­y among opposition groups as honest brokers has vanished. Indeed, one of the themes of the demonstrat­ions over the weekend was for South Africa to keep out.

The United States views Zimbabwe differentl­y. The Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act, passed with bipartisan support in 2001, sets out strict conditions for U.S. re-engagement, including the lifting of targeted sanctions and debt relief. Mnangagwa and Chiwenga, the military chief, are still listed among the roughly 200 individual­s and entities sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department. To have their assets unfrozen and their ban on doing business with Americans lifted, they will need to convince U.S. officials that they are no longer underminin­g democracy and the rule of law.

The United States also has significan­t influence over the terms of any future debt restructur­ing or new loans.

The long-term survival of any new Zimbabwean government will depend on resolving the country’s cash crisis and reviving the economy. But ZANU-PF has shown a remarkable ability to resist reform. Just as Mugabe inexplicab­ly clung on to the bitter end, the looting machine he is leaving behind may keep on running, regardless of the cost.

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