Los Angeles Times

From hero to global pariah

How Zimbabwe’s respected liberation leader became a pariah

- By Ann M. Simmons ann.simmons@latimes.com

A timeline of the life and political career of revolution­ary Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe.

The rule of Robert Mugabe, a once-respected liberation leader turned feared dictator and internatio­nal pariah, came to an unf lattering end Tuesday when the Zimbabwean president was forced to relinquish his 37year hold on power in the face of possible impeachmen­t.

The future of the 93-yearold Mugabe, the world’s oldest head of state, now hangs in the balance. But his past paints a portrait of the dishearten­ing decline of a man once viewed as one of Africa’s most promising statesmen.

Here’s a look at the life and legacy of Robert Mugabe:

The early days of Mugabe’s life

He was born Robert Gabriel Mugabe in 1924 to a poor family in a town called Kutama in what was then known as Southern Rhodesia, a British colony.

Educated at Kutama College and at the University of Fort Hare in South Africa’s Eastern Cape, Mugabe studied history and English literature. He worked as a schoolteac­her after graduating in the early 1950s.

Mugabe is said to have seven academic degrees covering a range of discipline­s, including education and law, six of which were earned through correspond­ence courses and two earned while in prison for sedition against the colonial government, according to various news reports.

His early career as an educator took him to what was then Northern Rhodesia, now Zambia, where he worked at a teacher training college from 1955 to 1958, and then Ghana, where he undertook similar work. It was in Ghana where Mugabe met his first wife, Sally Hayfron, who died in 1992.

It was also in Ghana, the first African nation to gain independen­ce from European colonialis­m, where Mugabe reportedly became inspired by African nationalis­m and Marxism.

Politics take hold in home country

In 1960, Mugabe returned to his home country, where his opposition to white minority rule exploded as he joined calls for independen­ce and black-majority rule.

He embraced the Zimbabwe African National Union, later to become the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front, or ZANUPF. His antigovern­ment rhetoric landed him in jail from late 1963 to 1974 after being convicted of sedition.

Once released, Mugabe fled to neighborin­g Mozambique from where he led a guerrilla war to end British rule. Defeat of the colonialis­ts eventually came in a negotiated settlement. And in 1980, Mugabe defeated rival liberation leaders to become prime minister of the new Zimbabwe.

In a move to quash perceived dissent and consolidat­e power, Mugabe ordered a crackdown in the Matabelela­nd stronghold of his political rival, Joshua Nkomo, in which thousands of people were massacred.

A beacon of light turns to darkness

As prime minister from 1980 to 1987, Mugabe called for national unity and preached racial reconcilia­tion, but his focus became the betterment of the country’s poor and downtrodde­n black majority. He introduced free education and healthcare, built roads and opened the doors to black citizens in areas of business that were formerly reserved for whites.

Such policies won him praise as a father figure and a respected statesman, and he became a darling on the internatio­nal stage. But that would not last. In 1987, Zimbabwe’s parliament rewrote the country’s independen­ce constituti­on allowing Mugabe to become president shortly thereafter. The all-powerful position gave him the authority to dissolve parliament, institute martial law and run for as many terms as desired — essentiall­y giving Mugabe the potential to become president for life, propped up by his ruling ZANU-PF party.

White parliament­ary representa­tion was abolished and the government was allowed to nominate 20% of the 120 members of parliament. Critics cringed that the country appeared to have created a monarchy.

In the early 1990s, the Zimbabwean government passed an amendment allowing the expropriat­ion of about half of all whiteowned land with the aim of resettling black families. The policy gained traction in the early 2000s, when Mugabe sanctioned the takeover of white-owned farms by veterans of the liberation struggle. The plan met with backlash from the internatio­nal community that threatened to withhold foreign aid to Zimbabwe and by white farmers who warned that appropriat­ing their commercial farms would spell economic disaster. Mugabe refused to abandon the plan and Zimbabwe’s economy soon began to tank.

Economy plunges and violence erupts

The Zimbabwean dollar crashed, with inflation at one stage soaring to a reported 500 billion percent. Unemployme­nt skyrockete­d, gasoline shortages became the norm and there were food riots.

With his political survival at stake, Mugabe turned to two main weapons: land and race.

Mugabe blamed white Zimbabwean­s and his political rivals, whom he accused of being colonial puppets, for the grinding poverty and financial free fall. Critics said his government was largely to blame. Investigat­ions by news outlets and civil rights groups found that some of the expropriat­ed land was awarded to Mugabe’s ministers and cronies and not used to relieve the overcrowdi­ng of black citizens, who were crammed onto a tiny percentage of land.

The violence that erupted in the early 2000s when black liberation war veterans occupied and seized white-owned farms left scores dead, among them farmers, farm laborers and members of the political opposition.

In October 2000, efforts of opposition lawmakers to impeach Mugabe failed. That year, the constituti­on was amended to force Britain to pay reparation­s for the land it had seized from blacks during colonial rule.

In 2002, the British Commonweal­th suspended Zimbabwe from the intergover­nmental organizati­on made up mostly of former territorie­s of the British Empire, and Zimbabwe withdrew the next year. The European Union imposed sanctions, such as a travel ban and the freezing of assets, on dozens of members of Zimbabwe’s leadership as punishment for not being allowed to observe the country’s 2002 presidenti­al vote. The U.S. imposed similar restrictio­ns.

Mugabe lost the first round of presidenti­al elections in March 2008 to Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, but the longtime leader would not cede power. Instead he launched a campaign of violence in which scores were killed. Tsvangirai ultimately withdrew from the second round of voting but later agreed to a powershari­ng deal with Mugabe and became the country’s prime minister. But by 2011, Tsvangirai declared the agreement a failure.

The curtain begins to fall

In 2013, Mugabe won another term in office amid widespread allegation­s of election fraud. By then, his second wife, Grace, a former state house typist he married in 1996 after an affair, had her eyes set on succeeding her increasing­ly frail husband.

That did not sit well with ruling-party veterans of the liberation struggle, who turned on Mugabe.

The curtain began a fast fall on Mugabe’s reign when on Nov. 6 he fired his oncetruste­d deputy Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was considered Grace’s main rival to succeed Mugabe.

On Nov. 15, the military said it had taken control of the country, putting Mugabe and his wife in custody. Though urged to resign, the longtime leader continued to cling to power for almost a week — until Tuesday, when the threat of impeachmen­t gave him little choice.

 ?? Ben Curtis Associated Press ?? PROTESTERS MARCH toward the State House in Harare, Zimbabwe, on Saturday in a euphoric gathering that just days earlier would have resulted in a police crackdown. On Tuesday, the demonstrat­ors got their wish.
Ben Curtis Associated Press PROTESTERS MARCH toward the State House in Harare, Zimbabwe, on Saturday in a euphoric gathering that just days earlier would have resulted in a police crackdown. On Tuesday, the demonstrat­ors got their wish.
 ?? Keystone/Getty Images ?? NEWLY ELECTED Prime Minister Robert Mugabe speaks during a news conference in 1980 in his garden in the Mount Pleasant area of Salisbury, now Harare.
Keystone/Getty Images NEWLY ELECTED Prime Minister Robert Mugabe speaks during a news conference in 1980 in his garden in the Mount Pleasant area of Salisbury, now Harare.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States