The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Democracy is clearly a huge scam

THE gates of hell have been swung open in Haiti — a country that is part of a scattering of islands in the Caribbean — and the devil and his acolytes are well and truly on the prowl.

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WARLORDS have now overrun the capital, Port-au-Prince. To say that Haiti has become a banana republic is an understate­ment; it is now anything but a republic.

It is a failed state.

After the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse, the 43rd president of Haiti, on July 7, 2021 by a group of 28 highly trained foreign mercenarie­s, the presidency remains vacant. Worse, the terms of lawmakers have since expired.

As if this is not enough, cholera, a medieval disease, has returned.

The centre cannot hold.

In all this political melee and intrigue, a gang leader, Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, who is a police officer turned gang banger, has seemingly usurped power.

And this chap, who is under sanctions from the United Nations and other countries, is called “Barbecue” for a reason.

They say he sadistical­ly derives pleasure from braaiing his victims.

He is really a piece of work.

You might have seen a grossly disturbing video last week of a Haitian gang member who was happily munching pieces of human flesh he was plucking from a sizzling corpse that had been set on fire.

It made Bishop Lazi sick to the stomach. While fact-checkers establishe­d that it was an old video, believed to have been recorded during clashes between rival gangs a couple of years ago, it still showed the depraved, debased, evil and gratuitous violence that now stains Haiti’s political and social culture.

Where priests fear to tread

For well over a century, this dirt-poor Caribbean nation, which is regarded as the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, has been convulsed by periodic episodes of violence and instabilit­y precisely because of its indigence.

Yet, as Bob Marley once sang, the world simply stands aside and looks.

Who cares?

For starters, its people — predominan­tly descendant­s of Africans shipped from our continent by Spain and France to be enslaved on plantation­s on the island — are blacks who are disdainful­ly viewed by the Western world as the scum of the earth, who innately neither have the agency nor sophistica­tion to run an ordered and productive life.

You see, the Western world, through its Rabid gangs have taken over Haiti far-reaching polished media arsenal, has mastered the witchcraft of spinning the narrative and blaming the victims for the wretched circumstan­ces that they themselves would have created.

The endless cycles of violence in Haiti, just like elsewhere around the world, are due to one thing, and one thing only — poverty.

In their desperatio­n for a saviour, Haitians elected a Catholic priest, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, in 1990, but he was ousted in a military coup on September 30, 1991 and fled to exile.

The Americans subsequent­ly invaded the island and returned Aristide to power on October 15, 1994. Two years later, in 1996, he stepped down from the presidency. He was re-elected again in 2000.

But on February 29, 2004, the man of the cloth fled Haiti again amid anti-government protests that morphed into a rebellion over the country’s parlous economic state. Kikikiki.

For the next seven years, Aristide lived in neighbouri­ng South Africa before returning to his home country in 2011.

The colour of poverty

But what caused Haiti’s stubborn poverty? What the X, Facebook and Instagram generation might not know is the fact that when the country officially declared its independen­ce from France in 1804 after a rebellion, the then-French King, Charles X, issued a decree on April 17, 1825 ordering the fledgling administra­tion to pay a humongous fee of 150 million francs — about US$150 million at the time — to “compensate” it for lost property, including slaves.

On July 11, 1825, Haiti grudgingly signed the agreement, which meant they literally paid for their freedom.

And here is the catch: They were forced to borrow from French banks to pay their “debt”.

All in all, they ended up paying twice the value of the claim to their former colonisers, which is absurd. As early as 2020, even one of their own, French economist Thomas Piketty, acknowledg­ed that France should repay at least US$28 billion to Haiti in restitutio­n for this egregious injustice, which continues to condemn the island nation to this day.

How insulting that as Haiti, which is just a little over 3 000 kilometres from the US, teeters on the brink, the best that Washington can do is to pledge US$300 million towards a United Nations-backed multi-national police force to quell the current violence and a pitiable US$33 million in humanitari­an aid!

This is the same US that has supplied more than US$253 million — more than a quarter of a billion dollars — worth of lethal aid that has been used to slaughter innocent Palestinia­n women and children in the Gaza Strip in the past five months.

They are even planning to provide an additional US$17,6 billion to Israel on top of the US$3,3 billion they provide to Tel Aviv annually. And this is the same Americans who have also spent a staggering US$75 billion to support Ukraine in its war against Russia.

Why Zimbabwe?

In Hosea 4: 6, the Lord says: “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.”

Proverbs 18: 15 adds: “An intelligen­t heart acquires knowledge, and the ear of the wise seeks knowledge.”

As Haiti sinks deeper into the abyss and conflicts rage in other parts of the world, such as Ukraine, Libya, Sudan, the Sahel, eastern DRC and Mozambique, it is Zimbabwe — a peaceful teapot-shaped Republic ensconced deep in Southern Africa — that finds itself on the agenda in Western capitals.

Only last week, old men in the United Kingdom House of Lords were discussing ways of addressing “the reduction of poverty for millions of long-suffering Zimbabwean­s?”

How prepostero­us!

And, of late, the US State Department has been indefatiga­bly churning out statement after statement on Zimbabwe.

But why Zimbabwe?

Bishop Lazarus recently told you that to understand the current geopolitic­al dynamics, insofar as Zimbabwe is concerned, one has to read the article jointly authored by former US Ambassador to Zimbabwe Charles Ray and Michael Walsh, which essentiall­y advises Washington how it can reinvest its relationsh­ip with Harare.

“Congress would likely be receptive to innovative approaches for partnering with a country (Zimbabwe) known to have large deposits of rare earth metals that are used in the manufactur­e of electronic­s, batteries and magnets. Members do not want these important resources to fall under the control and direction of major-power competitor­s,” they wrote.

Adding: “The Government of Zimbabwe has strong relationsh­ips with major-power competitor­s of the United States and other authoritar­ian revisionis­t states who have expressed a manifest desire to change the world order.

“The ICS (Integrated Country Strategy) Zimbabwe acknowledg­es that China has ‘expanded its influence’ in Zimbabwe, and this is providing Beijing with ‘near-unfettered access to Zimbabwean natural resources’, including base minerals that are critical to the global clean-energy transition.”

This, folks, is why the country currently finds itself in the crosshairs of resourceth­irsty and greedy “rulers of our world”.

With Washington, Brussels and London playing politics, Chinese investors have gained a foothold on local lithium resources.

In a five-month period from November 2021 to April 2022, they swooped on four key local lithium assets — Sabi Star Mine, Arcadia Lithium Mine, Bikita Minerals and Zulu Lithium Mine.

Overall, they spent close to US$700 million in acquisitio­ns, as well as more than US$630 million in their respective expansion projects.

For example, in March 2022, Shenzhen Stock Exchange-listed Suzhou TA&A Ultra Clean Technology Co Ltd — one of the biggest Chinese firms, with a market capitalisa­tion of US$6,7 billion — bought shares worth about US$15,7 million from Premier African Minerals in Matabelela­nd North.

The firm has a 75 percent holding in lithium hydroxide producer Yibin Tianyi Lithium Industry Co Ltd, as well as China’s largest electric vehicle battery manufactur­er Contempora­ry Amperex Technology.

And in their great-power rivalry with China, the US, as a fading superpower, is losing.

The signs are many.

Recently, China’s electric carmaker BYD outsold US billionair­e Elon Musk’s Tesla.

And last week, US political mandarins and hawks were frenetical­ly trying to ban China’s popular social media applicatio­n TikTok, despite the fact that it is used by about half (170 million) Americans.

Other Chinese social media platforms such as Temu and Shein are also popular in the US.

The fact that Harare is showing convincing signs of revival under the leadership of President ED, what with the demonstrab­le signs of developmen­t that are increasing­ly being acknowledg­ed by friends and foes alike, puts the Western world in a pickle.

With their quislings and proxies degraded by Zimbabwe’s formidable security apparatus, they are hard-pressed to find reproachme­nt with Zimbabwe under whatever guise just to have their hands on our minerals.

The more they talk about our teapot-shaped Republic, the more we should be satisfied as this intimates that we are in the right direction.

Forget the chatter about democracy; it is a scam.

This land of Mutapa is sacred. Bishop out!

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