The Standard (Zimbabwe)

From Zimbabwe to Nigeria, Africa is bleeding

- BY ALEX MAGAISA

The situation in Nigeria has once again brought to the fore the challenges faced by citizens against triggerhap­py and brutal regimes.

They do not hesitate to apply excessive force, even if it results in the killing of unarmed citizens.

One of the most touching stories is that of a young man, Oke Obi-Enadhuze who tweeted “Nigeria will not end me” on October 21, 2020.

A few hours later, he was dead, killed by the security forces.

Here was a young man, who was looking forward to the future and believing he would make it.

His government ended those dreams through the barrel of the gun.

Government­s are enjoined by the constituti­on to protect, not to kill citizens.

But Oke was not the only victim of the Nigerian state brutality.

Scores of his fellow citizens have been killed by their government during these protests, which were initially prompted by the brutality of the methods of a police unit, Sars, which was ostensibly designed to fight robberies.

The unit was brutal and unpopular with citizens.

On October 20, the Nigerian regime sent the military to Lekke Tollgate in Lagos where scores of civilians were massacred by the army.

It was a terrible atrocity that has caught the attention of the world.

Leading figures in Nigerian society both at home and abroad raised their voices on behalf of their fellow citizens and in condemnati­on of the regime.

However, what happened in Nigeria is not without precedent.

Across Africa, many government­s are at loggerhead­s with their citizens.

The causes of friction range from a lack of commitment to democratic principles to poor and in many cases the absence of service delivery.

When citizens protest, the regimes often respond by deploying the military and riot police.

This leads to a predictabl­y bloody outcome, as military forces are not trained to carry out policing functions, let alone to respect fundamenta­l rights and freedoms.

The responsibi­lity lies at the top of the command structure, the Commander-in-Chief, and the generals who oversee the soldiers.

Two years ago, when Zimbabwean­s protested during the general elections, the regime’s response was to deploy the military. Six people were killed. A commission set up to investigat­e the violence found that these people had been killed by members of the military and police.

It was chaired by former South African president Kgalema Motlanthe.

It recommende­d, among other things, that the perpetrato­rs of the killings should be brought to account.

To date, not a single person has been investigat­ed or tried for the murders.

The commission was a charade, which the regime set up to hoodwink the internatio­nal community into believing that something was being done.

The problem is that without accountabi­lity, it creates a culture of impunity.

Since they know that they will not be held to account for the murderous conduct, members of the security forces can go on to do the same things again.

Indeed, less than a month after the commission published its report, the Zimbabwean regime unleashed members of the military upon protesting civilians.

On that occasion, 17 civilians were killed.

Ever since the coup that toppled Robert Mugabe in November 2017, there have been hundreds of abductions and torture of civilians.

All of this is fuelled by a culture of impunity, which the regime encourages.

When Zimbabwean­s decided to go on another mass protest on July 31 this year, the regime again responded in typical fashion.

Activists were abducted and tortured.

In one case, a young student Tawanda Muchehiwa was abducted in broad daylight at a shopping centre in the city of Bulawayo.

He was held incommunic­ado for three days, during which he was severely tortured.

Investigat­ions by the media showed the full CCTV footage of his abduction, and the vehicle that was used to carry out the act was identified.

It was hired from a car rental company, Impala Car Rental.

However, there has been no investigat­ion by the regime.

There is no appetite to investigat­e the flagrant violation of human rights.

When a group of students demanded that the car rental company should give up informatio­n on the identity of persons who hired the vehicle, their leader, Takudzwa Ngadziore of the Zimbabwe National Students Union was himself abducted and tortured.

He was later arrested and kept in detention for a month.

Another protestor Terrence Manjengwa who had come to court to support an opposition leader, who was also in jail has been in custody for nearly two months.

This is the situation in Zimbabwe, where victims of crime find themselves jailed while perpetrato­rs walk free. Therefore, when Nigerians say

#EndSarsNow and #NigeriaIsB­leeding, Zimbabwean­s understand this all too well because they have also been crying out that #Zimbabwean­LivesMatte­r.

But Nigeria on the west coast of the continent and Zimbabwe to the south are only two of many other African countries in a similar predicamen­t.

Cameroonia­ns have long suffered under the authoritar­ian rulership of Paul Biya, who like some of his peers reportedly spends more time in foreign lands than in the country.

In Central Africa, the Congolese are crying out that #Congo

IsBleeding, and in Namibia, they are running with #ShutItAll

DownNamibi­a.

In Uganda, the opposition is always on the receiving end of an intolerant regime led by a man who like Biya, has no appetite for life outside the presidency.

That there are hashtags is an affirmatio­n of the newfound platforms of organising and solidarity among citizens. The hashtags are helping to create networks of cooperatio­n among citizens facing brutal and repressive government­s.

It was reassuring and encouragin­g for Zimbabwean­s when their #Zimbabwean­LivesMatte­r gained traction around the world.

Nigerian celebritie­s such as the internatio­nally acclaimed musician, Burna Boy tweeted in support of Zimbabwean­s.

This is why it has been easy and natural for Zimbabwean­s to identify with the cause of their Nigerian brothers and sisters.

Citizens are losing confidence in the formal networks of cooperatio­n at the state level because they usually bend towards the interests of political leaders, not the long-suffering citizens.

These formal organisati­ons such as the African Union and regional blocs such as Ecowas in West Africa and Sadc in Southern Africa often operate as trade unions of political leaders.

If they respond at all, it is often lukewarm and an after-thought.

The statements are written out of duty rather than commitment. They are beaten to it by foreign organisati­ons.

Of the regional organisati­ons, Ecowas has in some cases shown some mettle, but Sadc has generally been a disgrace.

Even as the Zimbabwean regime was brutalisin­g citizens, Sadc pretended like nothing was happening.

Reading the response by Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, it’s easy to imagine that the dictators have a manual they all refer to because it was exactly how Zimbabwe’s leader Emmerson Mnangagwa has previously responded to the atrocities committed by his regime.

Buhari urged neighbours and the internatio­nal community “to seek to know all the facts available before taking a position or rushing to judgment and making hasty pronouncem­ents”.

In other words, for Buhari, there is no crisis in Nigeria.

That is exactly how Mnangagwa responded when South Africa, the African Union, and others began to raise concerns over the crisis in Zimbabwe in the wake of the #Zimbabwean­LivesMatte­r movement.

The Zimbabwean regime was quick to deny that there was any crisis in the country.

It looks like the first rule in the dictators’ handbook is to deny whenever crises and human rights violations are mentioned.

Dictators are quick to put down the shutters to avoid scrutiny from neighbours and the internatio­nal community.

They present the situation as if all is well and the citizens are the problem.

They claim that the citizens are exaggerati­ng the situation.

No wonder South Africa has recoiled after it was bullied by the Zimbabwean regime when it tried to intervene.

Buhari knows this works, hence the subtle warnings to its neighbours.

The dictators’ script also includes pointing fingers elsewhere and denying responsibi­lity.

So for Buhari, the demonstrat­ions are caused by “subversive elements”, while for Mnangagwa any protests are supposedly sponsored by “regime change agents” or “dark forces”.

Sometimes, where human rights violations cannot be denied, the Mnangagwa regime attributes it to “dark forces” or, to use their favourite term, “a Third Force”.

There is no willingnes­s to take responsibi­lity.

There is also no acknowledg­ment on the part of these leaders that the citizens they lead have agency; that they have minds of their own to decide between right and wrong regarding how they are governed.

They treat them like juveniles who can only act because they have been sponsored by “foreign” or “subversive” elements.

It’s very disrespect­ful of the citizens and leads to denialism.

What is to be done in the face of abusive leaders who brutalise their citizens and refuse to take responsibi­lity?

They use the legal protection of their office to avoid domestic prosecutio­n.

After all, they often control the entire system, which makes domestic remedial measures ineffectiv­e while they are still in office and sometimes afterward.

These protection­s and the knowledge that they can get away with murder gives these dictators more incentives to abuse citizens.

This is why citizens end up looking to the internatio­nal community for assistance.

This is not because the internatio­nal community has a magic wand or that it consists of saintly nations and individual­s.

Indeed, as the longstandi­ng crisis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo reminds us, some members of the internatio­nal community do not have clean hands.

Some of them are part of the problem, thanks to the voracious appetite for resources in capitalist economies, driven by the relentless pursuit of profit.

In this scenario, human rights and other values become secondary considerat­ions.

That citizens in African countries end up pleading for external help is a sign of desperatio­n.

They should never be in that embarrassi­ng position but the behaviour of their leaders and the lack of alternativ­es leads them down that path.

This is why some leading voices in Nigeria have called for sanctions against their leaders.

The idea of sanctions is posited as punishment for their wrongdoing.

It is also predicated on the belief that Nigerian political leaders desire access to Western countries and use their facilities, such as the financial system and healthcare system.

Buhari has in the past spent several months in foreign hospitals, itself an indictment on the Nigeran leadership which 60 years after independen­ce has failed to build an efficient public healthcare system for citizens.

Zimbabwe is 20 years younger but its leadership also relies on foreign healthcare systems, having utterly neglected the public healthcare system.

The view of those calling for sanctions against their leaders is that they would feel the pain and perhaps reform their ways.

Yet, as Zimbabwean­s have discovered over the years, dictators have an uncanny gift of turning this weapon into a potent political instrument.

Writing 15 years ago, I warned that the targeted sanctions would be converted into a political weapon by Zanu PF.

It would play the victim, strengthen­ing its argument that it was unfairly targeted by Western countries and that they were meant to aid an opposition that it characteri­sed as a puppet of the West.

Over the years, Zanu PF has made effective use of the sanctions’ narrative in its political campaigns, first locally and now more importantl­y, at the regional level.

They have even managed to mobilise an “anti-sanctions day” roping in other countries in the Sadc region.

Indeed, “sanctions” have the chief scapegoat for the country’s economic woes, even though the country’s troubles pre-date the imposition of targeted sanctions in the early 2000s.

In any event, perpetrato­rs of human rights violations have largely managed to circumvent these sanctions.

Their funds are still held broad thanks to the prevalence of tax havens and an internatio­nal financial system that has plenty of loopholes.

Their children still study at Western colleges.

They still get world- class healthcare abroad in countries like China, Singapore, India, and Dubai while their citizens are condemned to decrepit facilities.

So, while there might be some symbolism to the targeted sanctions, their effectiven­ess is doubtful, especially where the targeted have alternativ­es.

They have not stopped repression in Zimbabwe, nearly 20 years later.

Instead, they have been used as an effective propaganda tool against the opposition, which has to fire-fight each time the sanctions’ narrative is deployed.

The sanctions’ propaganda is so ubiquitous that a casual visitor to Zimbabwe might believe that all of Zimbabwe’s challenges must be attributed to sanctions and have nothing to do with the regime’s ineptitude.

This means the search for more effective ways to reign in dictators while they are in charge is still a project.

● This is an abridged version of Alex Magaisa’s latest Big Saturday Read blog post

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