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Africa: Subsaharan | |
Mugabe pulls the strings to stop plotters | |
2005-10-31 | |
ZIMBABWEâS president, Robert Mugabe, has ordered his ministers to disclose all their assets in a move aimed at blocking any plots against him as the country descends into economic collapse. âMugabe has files on everyone,â said a source close to the 81-year-old leader. âHe encourages those around him to stick their hands in the till so the moment anyone gets cold feet about what heâs [Mugabeâs] doing and wants to quit â or starts thinking heâs a liability â he pulls out their file.â The order has left ministers scrambling to divest themselves of assets such as apartments in Johannesburg, houses in Cape Town and diamond holdings in Congo. Some properties, such as farms in Zimbabwe itself, have simply been grabbed. Others have been acquired with the aid of a differential in exchange rates that allows government and ruling party officials to buy US dollars at less than a quarter of the market rate. However, sources of foreign exchange are drying up. The countryâs main foreign exchange earners â tobacco, agriculture and tourism â have been largely wiped out by a government land grab that began five years ago and has left only about 200 of 4,500 commercial farmers operating. With few foreign heads of state willing to be linked with a brutal dictatorship, Mugabe is rapidly running out of friends. Even his closest allies were horrified by Operation Murambatsvina (drive out the filth), which saw the demolition of at least 700,000 homes and livelihoods last summer and has resulted in mothers and babies squatting in cardboard shelters. South Africa has refused to give a $1 billion bailout unless conditions aimed at restoring democratic government are met. China, which has provided buses, passenger planes and fighter jets in the past year, gave only $30m after it received warning telephone calls from the presidents of Nigeria and South Africa. Some companies have been forced to make âdonationsâ to the ruling Zanu-PF party to continue operating. Those which fail to do so are well aware of their likely fate. In the past two years seven private banks have been âspecifiedâ â closed down and their assets seized. âMugabe is willing to downsize the whole economy just to feed the political elite, a few hundred thousand at most,â said a European diplomat. âItâs a mafia state.â During his 25 years in power Mugabe has become extremely skilled at drawing people from all sectors into his web of patronage. Among those handed farms that had been seized were High Court judges, police chiefs, military officers and the Anglican bishop of Harare. However, Mugabe is now running out of the means to do this. According to Zimbabwean bankers, the Central Bank has had no foreign exchange available for weeks. Mugabeâs lieutenants are increasingly resorting to criminality in the scramble for the countryâs remaining assets. Apart from extortion, many have launched get-rich-quick schemes. Residents of Harare were astonished when signs suddenly appeared all over the city earlier this month threatening fines of 1m Zimbabwe dollars for parking illegally. A government minister had apparently acquired a tow-truck and hundreds of people have since had their cars clamped. Other forms of profiteering include buying fuel or flour at the official low price and then re-exporting it to Congo, Zambia or Mozambique, where prices are much higher. Leo Mugabe, the presidentâs nephew, was caught smuggling flour into neighbouring countries earlier this month. Shortages of fuel are so severe that the top prize in the national lottery is a tank of petrol while the plummeting Zimbabwe dollar â now standing at almost 200,000 to the pound, makes spiralling school fees of Z$17m a term almost unattainable. Teachers and civil servants earn Z$3m a month. Mugabeâs recent announcement that he will not stand for re-election when his term ends in 2008 has seen bitter jostling for position within the ruling party, with many ministers already referring to this as a transitional period. Last month Patrick Chinamasa, the minister of justice, revealed that the government was considering changing the constitution to synchronise presidential and parliamentary elections. This could extend Mugabeâs term to 2010 or beyond.
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Posted by:Fred |
#2 "Files on everyone"....? how very Congo-Clintonian. I thought Bad Bob's problems would be over when all those nasty colonials aka white farmers left Zim. "China has provided busses....?" Did anyone tell Ray Nagin? Mugabe is "out of friends" and it all started out as... the lovely Lancaster House Agreement, democracy and nation building, etc, fully embraced by the all knowing US State Dept, and Washington political set. All the very best egalitarian intentions gone bad/mad on another African mulitcultural experiment. With or without Leo's flour, they'll all be eating one another soon. Just a point of trivia... Rhodesia supplied more troops per head of population to the allied war effort than any other country in the empire. One in ten of the 8500 Rhodesians of all races who served overseas were killed or died on active service. Suspect we'll not be able to count on those lads again eh? |
Posted by: Besoeker 2005-10-31 10:42 |
#1 âMugabe is willing to downsize the whole economy just to feed the political elite, a few hundred thousand at most,â said a European diplomat. âItâs a mafia state.â But evidently not quite enough of a "mafia state" to prevent European leaders from inviting and applauding Mugabe's anti-coalition tirade at the FAO meeting in Rome. I detect a distinct Trotting out this demented hyper-corrupt poster boy for overt governmental decap operations speaks volumes about Europe's anti-American agenda. They might as well praise Iran's Ahmadinejad for his attempts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Pretentious f&%king pansy-@ss wankers. |
Posted by: Zenster 2005-10-31 01:45 |