Saturday Star

Logic to justify tyranny in Zim?

- MICHAEL MORRIS

THERE’S an irony – and not a gentle one – in the anonymous account from an anxious Harare resident this week that “normal broadcasti­ng” had been disrupted on the day of the military interventi­on, and “(t)hey have been playing (liberation) war songs”.

In the moment – only hours after Zimbabwean troops took to the capital’s streets on Wednesday – the unnamed man, who spoke to TimesLIVE, wondered with rational apprehensi­on: “We don’t know what kind of a message they are sending. When they say they are weeding out criminals‚ how come normal broadcasti­ng has not resumed?”

No doubt he was not alone in pondering what lay behind the daylong fare of liberation hits – or, conceivabl­y, in fearing that even if Robert Mugabe goes, liberty might not come after all.

In the all-too-common post-independen­ce story of soaring, then dashed, hopes, “liberation” and liberty have not always turned out to be the same thing.

Lofty declaratio­ns that accompany the freedom of nations seldom mean much for the actual freedom of the people who live in them if the plain, on-the-ground understand­ing of what it really means to individual­s, and why it really matters, is absent.

The consequenc­es are not abstract.

In a 2008 report published by Cato Institute, Zimbabwean MP (later a minister, now a senator) David Coltart wrote that “Mugabe and his cronies are chiefly responsibl­e for an economic meltdown that has turned one of Africa’s most prosperous countries into a country with one of the lowest life expectanci­es in the world”.

Coltart went on: “Since 1994, the average life expectancy in Zimbabwe has fallen from 57 years to 34 years for women and from 54 years to 37 years for men.

“Some 3 500 Zimbabwean­s die every week from the combined effects of HIV/Aids, poverty, and malnutriti­on. Half a million Zimbabwean­s may have died already.

“There is no freedom of speech or assembly in Zimbabwe, and the state has used violence to intimidate and murder its opponents.”

Indicators from other sources since then paint a depressing picture:

• Less than a quarter (17.3%) of Zimbabwean children between 6 and 23 months receive the recommende­d minimum acceptable diet for adequate nutrition (2014 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey).

• Zimbabwe is considered a low-income, food-deficit country, ranked 156 out of 187 developing countries on the Global Hunger Index ( UN Developmen­t Programme 2014 Human Developmen­t Report “Sustaining Human Progress: Reducing Vulnerabil­ities and Building Resilience).

• 76% of rural households live on less than US$1.25 a day, compared to 38% in urban areas (Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency, Poverty, Income, Consumptio­n and Expenditur­e Survey: 2011/2012 Report).

Zimbabwe’s is a lamentable narrative of the promise of freedom being at first obscured, then eroded, by its opposite, a liberation­ist logic that contrives to justify tyranny.

The galling truth for South Afri- cans is that we are not untainted by the costs of this ideologica­l sleight of hand.

It might well be unfair to say South Africa connived in Zimbabwe’s decline and the abuse of its people, but there is little doubt successive administra­tions, and the organisati­ons and activists who cheered them, failed abysmally to live up to their avowed constituti­onal commitment to democracy and human rights, non-racialism and human dignity, which sometimes seem, as a result, a mantra mouthed more out of habit than conviction.

There is, after all, little doubt that the first steps on the road to this week’s crisis in Zimbabwe were taken at least a decade and a half ago when, either through faint-heartednes­s or misplaced liberation­ist fraternali­sm, South Africa turned a blind eye to the Mugabe regime’s flagrant electoral abuses and lent its credibilit­y to the man who authored them.

Africa watcher Simon Allison put it bluntly in November 2014 when he wrote: “We know that Zimbabwe fixed elections, and we know that South Africa knowingly helped them get away with it.”

He was writing just days after the publicatio­n of a damning document the gover nment had kept from the public for 12 years – and had to be compelled to release by the Constituti­onal Court (the result of a six-year legal campaign by the Mail & Guardian).

The Khampepe Report by Constituti­onal Court judges Dikgang Moseneke and Sisi Khampepe on widespread abuses, intimidati­on and irregulari­ties in the 2002 elections in Zimbabwe “entirely discredits” that of the 50-person-strong South African Observer Mission (SAOM), Allison wrote.

The observer mission had “reached a rather different conclusion”, having told reporters shortly after the vote that “(It) is the view of the SAOM that the outcome of the 2002 Zimbabwe presidenti­al elections should be considered legitimate”.

In the same month (November 2014), Institute for Security Studies consultant Liesl LouwVaudra­n quoted Paul Graham, author of a chapter in a Freedom House report on efforts to deepen democracy around the world, as saying that if the Khampepe report had been released at the time, it could have had far-reaching implicatio­ns for Zimbabwe and South Africa.

“We lost 12 years,” said Graham.

The failure was compounded in the shambolic elections in Zimbabwe in 2008 which, again, only served to tighten Mugabe’s grip on power and deepen his reach in a society and economy that may not, as a consequenc­e, find the relief it desperatel­y hopes for in his departure alone.

The risk, as Zimbabwe now knows, is the penalty of liberation without liberty.

South Africans, more than most, should have known as much, and acted more decisively when it could have made a world of difference.

Michael Morris is head of media at the South African Institute of Race Relations, a liberal think-tank that promotes political and economic freedom.

 ??  ?? Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace attend a meeting of his ruling Zanu PF party’s youth league in Harare, Zimbabwe, last month.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace attend a meeting of his ruling Zanu PF party’s youth league in Harare, Zimbabwe, last month.
 ??  ?? Armed soldiers stand by an armoured vehicle on the road leading to President Robert Mugabe’s office in Harare, Zimbabwe, this week.
Armed soldiers stand by an armoured vehicle on the road leading to President Robert Mugabe’s office in Harare, Zimbabwe, this week.

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