Daily Trust Sunday

A coup offered hope to Zimbabwe. Has its new president delivered?

Foreign

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Everywhere he looked, President Emmerson D. Mnangagwa could see his own face. To battle his cold, he sipped a hot drink from a mug adorned with his own head shot. To his left, an aide wore a green shirt covered with the same image. To his right was a large photograph of the president as a young man. His state portrait hung from the opposite wall.

Since seizing power in a 2017 coup from his onetime mentor, Robert G. Mugabe, Mr. Mnangagwa has gradually imposed himself on Zimbabwe - here in Mr. Mugabe’s former offices in downtown Harare, as well as on the country at large.

Though the new president is marketed as a clean break from Mr. Mugabe and 37 years of autocratic rule and economic mismanagem­ent, Mr. Mnangagwa’s opponents now fear he is more dangerous than his predecesso­r.

The number of government critics charged with “subverting a constituti­onal government,” a form of treason, during Mr. Mnangagwa’s 21 months at the helm already outstrips the figure during Mr. Mugabe’s 37 years in office, according to a coalition of 22 Zimbabwean rights watchdogs.

In between coughs and sneezes, Mr. Mnangagwa dismissed criticism of his human rights record and highlighte­d his reforms.

“In every society, opposition­s will make accusation­s,” he said in a rare interview. “You need to deal with facts.”

Mr. Mnangagwa has already removed some constraint­s on foreign investors and white farmers who lost land under Mr. Mugabe. He has pledged to replace Mugabeera legislatio­n that obstructs press freedom and the right to protest and to set up an internatio­nal inquiry into abuses by his own security forces.

“We are now in a serious movement of economic reforms and political reforms,” Mr. Mnangagwa said.

But the difficulty for Mr. Mnangagwa is that many Zimbabwean­s see little new about the 77-year-old’s presidency. Before he turned on Mr. Mugabe, Mr. Mnangagwa was the former leader’s longtime enforcer and later his deputy.

A guerrilla fighter during the liberation struggle against white rule, Mr. Mnangagwa accompanie­d his predecesso­r to the negotiatio­ns that led to the creation of Zimbabwe in 1980. He later served as minister for state security, overseeing the domestic intelligen­ce service before becoming justice minister, defense minister and finally vice president. He helped carry out much of the legislatio­n that he now promises to rescind.

And while Mr. Mnangagwa tends to turn to the military to keep the population in check, in

a departure from Mr. Mugabe’s reliance on the police and informal militias, his critics say the result is the same: a repressive government that has a dangerousl­y low tolerance for dissent.

“The current regime is worse than Robert Mugabe on all fronts,” said Obert Masaraure, the head of a teachers’ union who said he had twice been abducted and tortured by military officers since the start of the year, before being handed over both times to the police.

“Under Robert Mugabe, I was never abducted for engaging in trade unionism,” Mr. Masaraure added. “Under Robert Mugabe, I was never thrown in a maximumsec­urity prison for 16 days.”

Mr. Mnangagwa and his party won presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections last July. But an internatio­nal election monitoring team, jointly led by the National Democratic Institute and the Internatio­nal Republican Institute, two American democracy watchdogs, found that the polls were not free and fair.

According to the team’s report, Mr. Mnangagwa’s party may have allocated food aid and agricultur­al supplies in exchange for political support in the run-up to the elections.

Mr. Mnangagwa defended the election, which he noted was peaceful, and insisted there was no bribery during his campaign.

“We don’t give to a person because he is a particular cadre of a particular party,” he said. “A person is given support because that family or household is in need of food.”

Traditiona­l leaders, who are bound by the Constituti­on to remain politicall­y independen­t, corralled their villagers into voting for Mr. Mnangagwa, the election monitoring team’s report said. It also said there were irregulari­ties in the tabulation of the final vote.

“The elections failed to make the mark,” said Johnnie Carson, a former United States assistant secretary of state for African affairs, who led the delegation of election The number of government critics charged with “subverting a constituti­onal government,” a form of treason, during Mr. Mnangagwa’s 21 months at the helm already outstrips the figure during Mr. Mugabe’s 37 years in office, according to a coalition of 22 Zimbabwean rights watchdogs monitors. “All of these things weigh in and create an environmen­t that can shape the outcome of an election long before an election day.”

The election was also immediatel­y followed by the killing of six protesters during a military crackdown on demonstrat­ions against suspected polling irregulari­ties.

In January, the military was again deployed to dispel protests against a fuel price hike. During the days that followed, 17 people were killed, 16 raped, 26 abducted and more than 900 arrested, according to the coalition of Zimbabwean rights watchdogs.

“We see him as a very insecure president,” said Roselyn Hanzi, executive director of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights. “He’s paranoid.”

Mr. Mnangagwa sat in his office recently for an interview next to a shelf stocked with books by Xi Jinping, the Chinese president. China is a major stakeholde­r in the Zimbabwean economy. And the 2017 coup led by Zimbabwe’s army chief at the time, Constantin­o Chiwenga, and Mr. Mnangagwa came days after Mr. Chiwenga returned from a visit to China where he met his Chinese counterpar­t and the Chinese defense minister.

The president also presents himself as a corruption fighter. His tourism minister had been arrested that week on graft charges, the first senior casualty of a new anticorrup­tion commission that Mr. Mnangagwa founded in July.

He said the military was deployed in August and in January only because the police were overwhelme­d by the scale of the disturbanc­es, presenting his approach as the only sane response.

“My brother, I don’t know what you would have done,” he said. “We have to protect and bring law and order in the country.”

Mr. Mnangagwa has been traveling extensivel­y throughout Africa, promoting and developing plans for economic reform. He wants to be seen as a modernizer, and he portrays Zimbabwe as once again “open for business.”

He opened a dry port for Zimbabwean trade in Namibia. He has reduced the paperwork needed to open companies, and he loudly seeks foreign investment in the mining, tourism, agricultur­al and textile industries.

He is also calling on the United States to end a raft of American sanctions that President Trump recently extended for another year.

Though most of the measures are targeted only at particular individual­s, such as Mr. Mnangagwa, and at certain government-owned firms, they are a potential obstacle to loans from the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Zimbabwe exported goods worth more than $75 million to the United States in 2018, making the United States one of its largest trading partners. The American government says it is the largest donor of aid to the country.

Zimbabwe is suffering from vast shortages of fuel, bank notes, water and electricit­y. Drivers typically wait three hours for gasoline, and civil servants line up all morning to receive part of their salaries in cash. Half of the capital Harare receives running water only once a week, and electricit­y blackouts last up to 18 hours a day in many areas.

An inflation rate of more than 175 percent has put some food and medicine beyond the reach of middle-class Zimbabwean­s. Shoppers emerging from a Harare supermarke­t complained of a sevenfold rise in the price of bread since this time last year.

“We can’t afford to buy groceries,” said Jonathan Tiripano, a 46-year-old window-frame manufactur­er who said he had gone without breakfast. His family had stopped buying meat, bread and milk and was surviving mostly on vegetables and ground maize, he added. “We can’t cope.”

People are suffering, Mr. Mnangagwa acknowledg­ed, but he said he expected that with time, the situation would ease.

“The economy is going to be fixed through a process,” he said. “These things cannot be done overnight.”

Mr. Mnangagwa acknowledg­ed that sanctions were only one cause of Zimbabwe’s escalating economic crisis. It has been exacerbate­d by decades of corruption, mismanagem­ent and a recent austerity program enforced by Mr. Mnangagwa’s finance minister, Mthuli Ncube, a former economist at the University of Cambridge.

The austerity program has created Zimbabwe’s first budget surplus in years, which would allow the government to pay off some of its debts, which might in turn unlock more internatio­nal loans. An electricit­y deal was being signed with a South African energy supplier, and he was negotiatin­g with China to finance the renovation of the Zimbabwean water system.

“I have said always we should not bury our heads in sand and say, Ah, because America has put sanctions on us, the E.U. has put sanctions on us, so we’re going to cry. No. We are saying: With the resources that we have, let us apply ourselves using our resources and resuscitat­e our economy. And this is what we’re doing.”

But outside his office, in the serpentine lines that define today’s Harare, few believed him.

“Mugabe was better than this guy,” said Patrick Muza, a 33-yearold minibus driver who had been standing in line for two hours for fuel, and still had at least an hour to go. The most recent price hike had raised the cost of gas by another 15 percent, making his business increasing­ly unprofitab­le.

“During the coup, we were happy,” Mr. Muza said. “But we didn’t realize what was to come.”

Source: www.nytimes.com

 ?? PHOTO: ?? A protest in January on a road leading to Harare. The military was deployed in January to dispel protests against a fuel price hike. Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters
PHOTO: A protest in January on a road leading to Harare. The military was deployed in January to dispel protests against a fuel price hike. Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters

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