The Herald (Zimbabwe)

The rise and fall of Robert Mugabe

- Brian Maregedze Book Review Brian Maregedze is a historian, author and columnist.

A bitter man who has lived a life of bitterness is portrayed, in love with his mother just like King Tshaka the Zulu is offered in what these two authors claim is a comparativ­e view. Reading through the infamous 2005 Murambatsv­ina (clear out of filth), Mugabe is portrayed as a tyrant (p.48).

Life and Times of Robert Mugabe (1980-2017): Dream Betrayed

Kenneth Mufuka and Cyril Zenda, 2018, Afro-media Publishers, South Carolina, ISBN 9-781513-625959 Reviewed by Brian Maregedze HE personalit­y of Robert Mugabe has dominated post-independen­ce narratives of Zimbabwe’s history. In the year 2004, Roy E. Brownwell II, in a reviewed essay,

Tobserved the declining nature of Robert Mugabe’s career which eventually reached its arguably “humiliatin­g end” on November 21 2017.

“The Life and Times of Robert Mugabe” is the subject of investigat­ion in a recently published book by Ken Mufuka and Cyril Zenda, starting from Robert Mugabe’s famous speech as Prime Minister in independen­t Zimbabwe and ending in his downfall in the political stage in 2017. This timely publicatio­n, unlike other works on the same personalit­y, compares Robert Mugabe to Tshaka the Zulu in many ways.

Unlike earlier Eurocentri­c writers on the life of Robert Mugabe, Mufuka and Zenda argue that their book offers an Afrocentri­c view of the man, deploying Tshaka Zulu as a prism to analyse Mugabe’s life. While this is commendabl­e, I am sure some readers will find it far-fetched to use the tag of “Afrocentri­c” just because they are using Tshaka the Zulu.

The two authors firstly identify and summarise existing narratives as well as the challenges that beleaguer these narratives. The tags of an “Englishman”, “passionate Catholic”, “the exceptiona­l public speaker”, “the Machiavell­ian politician” and “the dictator” or “Hitler” of the West are articulate­d and problemati­sed.

In the third and fourth chapter, a monolithic writing of the life of Robert Mugabe is made, though with little success. Although Mufuka and Zenda claim to debunk the narratives of earlier journalist­s on Robert Mugabe, they fall in the same trap as they prematurel­y use Tshaka the Zulu under the guise of historical anachronis­m.

A bitter man who has lived a life of bitterness is portrayed, in love with his mother just like King Tshaka the Zulu is offered in what these two authors claim is a comparativ­e view. Reading through the infamous 2005 Murambatsv­ina (clear out of filth), Mugabe is portrayed as a tyrant (p.48). Again, labelling Mugabe as “callous”, the ideologica­l lenses deployed still have Western flavour, thereby falling to the pedestrian Eurocentri­c approaches that the two authors ostensibly set out

- to debunk (p.33). To describe Mugabe while extracting Western theologian­s and their discourses on divinity doesn’t tally with an Afrocentri­c reading of Mugabe as the two authors had initially argued (p.10).

The sixth and seventh chapters address the way Robert Mugabe responded to the needs of the war veterans led by the late Chenjerai Hunzvi. During the same period (1997-1998), a number of steps which plunged Zimbabwe into “crisis” are explored, among them the effects of the Economic Structural Adjustment Programmes [ESAP], the impact of the Mozambican excursions, war veterans’ gratuities and compensati­on funds, the involvemen­t of Zimbabwe in the Democratic Republic of Congo war, and the publicatio­n of the report on the Matabelela­nd disturbanc­es (Gukurahund­i).

All these were issues at Mugabe’s doorstep and needed his attention. This then brought the rise of anti-Government sentiments from various spheres of the Zimbabwe society. The period between 2000-2008, which the authors titled “Things Fall Apart” (probably a reference to Chinua Achebe’s most famous novel), saw the formation of the Movement for Democratic Change and other anti-Mugabe forces which suited the Western view of multi-party democratic movement.

Mugabe developed a modus operandi to the crisis, which hovered around blaming the British government, accusing local political opponents, deploying the “LAND IS THE ECONOMY” slogan culminatin­g in the land debate among others explained in the book.

The eighth chapter focuses on the central argument of the book, which compares Robert Mugabe to Tshaka the Zulu. In this section the authors identify circumstan­ces in which Mugabe deployed the perilous concept of “belonging” to attack political opponents, “manufactur­ed” enemies, especially the urban populace, which Mugabe accused of voting for the opposition party. In retributio­n, Mugabe authorised the Operation Murambatsv­ina to punish the urbanites whom he described as “thankless people” (p.105).

He also pursued a “Look East Policy” in response to the imposed illegal sanctions on Zimbabwe by the Western countries. Notable also was the “unstable and contradict­ory relationsh­ip” between Mugabe and the military, traced from the late General Zvinavashe’s tenure as the Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander to Mugabe’s demise in 2017.

The issue of “personalis­ation” of the liberation struggle also comes out strongly. The ninth chapter delves into political violence characteri­sing the 2008 elections. The book concludes with a chronicle of once-Mugabe allies now-turned-enemies, and the perceived victims of Mugabe. These include the late Joshua Nkomo, Joseph Msika, Solomon Mujuru (Rex Nhongo) and Joice Mujuru. It was during the episode of trying to humiliate and deal with yet another now-perceived “enemy”, the now president, Cde Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa (congratula­tions are in order), that Mugabe faced his own Waterloo. The dismissal of the then Vice President, ED Mnangagwa, under spurious accusation­s led to the demise of Mugabe.

While the book is readable to a general reader, the authors could have done better in their presentati­on and editing. Reading through the book, one is easily irritated by the numerous typologica­l errors, with dates supposedly of post-independen­ce Zimbabwe falling into pre-colonial era, for instance, 1886 erroneousl­y used in line with Matabelela­nd disturbanc­es which in actual fact are under the 1980s (p.9).

To a critical academic reader, the book is not worthy of recommenda­tion. With the rise of self-publishing industry in Zimbabwe and the world over, this book can be used as a case study on the need to have profession­al editorial work considerin­g that the book appears hurriedly published.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE: Former president Robert Mugabe is flanked by National Patriotic Front members Jealousy Mawarire (left) and the party’s then interim president Retired Brigadier-General Ambrose Mutinhiri after his resignatio­n. RIGHT: Robert Mugabe during his days as Zanu secretary-general. File photos.
ABOVE: Former president Robert Mugabe is flanked by National Patriotic Front members Jealousy Mawarire (left) and the party’s then interim president Retired Brigadier-General Ambrose Mutinhiri after his resignatio­n. RIGHT: Robert Mugabe during his days as Zanu secretary-general. File photos.
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