A teenage
memory filled my mind this week as I read about the bashing and
intimidation of opponents of PM Robert Mugabe. The memory is of a
civilian airliner shot down by a missile launched by colleagues of
Robert Mugabe.
The world should have taken notice when Mugabe and Robert N'komo
resorted to criminal and malicious indiscriminate murder.
Fast forward 25 years and Mugabe is still a murderous thug. He remains
in power because he has compliant police and military forces. The
rule of law and democratic principles have been abandoned.
One way that the world can respond is to impose selective economic
sanctions. Sanctions that will harm the population to a minimum yet
deny Mugabe and his henchmen access to resources.
The sole aim would be to punish these despicable people. Anyone who
orders or tolerates the murder and maiming of opponents is
despicable.
Whatever arguable case there may be for land share reforms, there can
be no excuse for attacks on the people.
Impose sanctions without delay to force the ultimate defeat of Mugabe
and his bands of criminals.
Selected extracts from
Wikipedia
Robert Mugabe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Mugabe
Robert Mugabe and Canaan Banana, who in 1980 were Prime Minister and
President respectively
2nd President of Zimbabwe
Incumbent
Assumed office
31 December 1980
Preceded by Canaan Banana
Born 21 February 1924 (age 83)
Kutama Mission, Harare
Political party Zimbabwe African National Union -
Patriotic Front
Robert Gabriel Mugabe (born 21 February 1924) is a Zimbabwean
politician and the current President of Zimbabwe. He has been the head
of government in Zimbabwe since 1980, first as Prime Minister and later
as first executive President. Throughout his career, Mugabe has
espoused pan-Africanism and African interdependence and unity.
In recent years, Mugabe has attracted international criticism for
corruption, mishandling of land reforms, economic mismanagement, and a
deteriorating human rights situation in Zimbabwe. According to most
outside observers his policies have led to economic collapse and
massive starvation over the course of the last ten years.
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Early life
* 2 Anti-colonial conflict
* 3 Government of Zimbabwe
o 3.1 Prime
Minister
o 3.2 President
o 3.3 Social
programmes
o 3.4 Second
Congo War
o 3.5 Land
reforms
o 3.6 2000
referendum
o 3.7 Elections
o 3.8 Criticism
of and opposition to Mugabe
o 3.9 Succession
* 4 Honours
* 5 Personal
* 6 Movies
* 7 Relevant contemporaries
* 8 Events
* 9 Parties
* 10 References
* 11 External links
* 12 Further reading
[edit] Early life
Growing up without a father, Robert Mugabe was raised at Kutama
Mission, Zvimba District, north-west of Harare (then called Salisbury),
in then Southern Rhodesia. He was raised as a Roman Catholic, and was
educated in Jesuit schools. He qualified as a teacher but left to study
at Fort Hare in South Africa, a notable university at the time,
graduating in 1951 while meeting contemporaries such as Julius Nyerere,
Herbert Chitepo, Robert Sobukwe and Kenneth Kaunda. He then studied at
Driefontein in 1952, Salisbury (1953), Gwelo (1954), and Tanzania
(1955–1957).
Robert Mugabe also holds several honorary degrees and doctorates from
various international Universities, although many of them are in the
process of being rescinded. Subsequently, Mugabe taught at Achimota
College (now Achimota Secondary School) in Accra, Ghana (1958–1960)
where he met Sally Hayfron, who later became his first wife.
[edit] Anti-colonial conflict
See also: History of Zimbabwe
Returning to Southern Rhodesia in 1960 as a Marxist, Robert Mugabe
joined Joshua Nkomo and the National Democratic Party (NDP), which
later became the Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (ZAPU), both
immediately banned by Ian Smith's government. He left ZAPU in 1963 to
join the rival Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) which had been
formed in 1963 by the Reverend Ndabaningi Sithole, Edson Zvobgo, Enos
Nkala and lawyer Herbert Chitepo. It would have been easy for the party
to split along tribal lines between the Ndebele and Mugabe's own, the
Shona tribe, but cross-tribal representation was maintained by his
partners. ZANU leader Sithole nominated Robert Mugabe as his Secretary
General.
ZANU was influenced by the Africanist ideas of the Pan Africanist
Congress in South Africa and influenced by Maoism while ZAPU was an
ally of the African National Congress and was a supporter of a more
orthodox pro-Soviet line on national liberation. Similar divisions can
also be seen in the liberation movement in Angola between the MPLA and
UNITA.
He was detained with other nationalist leaders Joshua Nkomo and Edson
Zvobgo, in 1964.On his release, he left Rhodesia for Mozambique in 1974
and led the Chinese-financed military ZANU army, the Zimbabwe African
National Liberation Army (ZANLA), in the war against Ian Smith's
government.
On 18 March 1975, Mugabe allegedly plotted the assassination of Chitepo
by a bomb placed in his car while in Zambia. Mugabe unilaterally
assumed control of ZANU from Mozambique. Later that year, after
squabbling with Ndabaningi Sithole, Mugabe formed a militant ZANU
faction, leaving Sithole to lead the moderate Zanu (Ndonga) party,
which renounced violent struggle.
[edit] Government of Zimbabwe
See also: Lancaster House Agreement
Persuasion from B.J. Vorster, himself under pressure from Henry
Kissinger, forced Smith to accept in principle that white minority rule
could not continue indefinitely. On 3 March 1978 Bishop Abel Muzorewa,
Ndabaningi Sithole and other moderate leaders signed an agreement at
Governor's Lodge in Salisbury, which paved the way for an interim
power-sharing government, in preparation for elections. The elections
were won by the United African National Council under Bishop Abel
Muzorewa, but international recognition did not follow and sanctions
were not lifted. The two 'Patriotic Front' groups under Mugabe and
Joshua Nkomo refused to participate and continued the war.
The incoming government did accept an invitation to talks at Lancaster
House in September 1979. A ceasefire was negotiated for the talks,
which were attended by Smith, Robert Mugabe, Nkomo, Edson Zvobgo and
others. Eventually the parties to the talks agreed on a new
constitution for a new Republic of Zimbabwe with elections in February
1980. Mugabe had to concede to accepting 20 seats reserved for whites
in the new Parliament and to the inability of the new government to
alter the constitution for ten years. His return to Zimbabwe in
December 1979 was greeted with enormous supportive crowds.
[edit] Prime Minister
After a campaign marked by intimidation from all sides, mistrust from
security forces and reports of full ballot boxes found on the road, the
Shona majority was decisive in electing Mugabe to head the first
government as prime minister on 4 March 1980. ZANU won 57 out of 80
Common Roll seats in the new parliament, with the 20 white seats all
going to the Rhodesian Front.
Robert Mugabe, whose political support came from his Shona-speaking
homeland in the north, attempted to build Zimbabwe on a basis of an
uneasy coalition with his Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU)
rivals, whose support came from the Ndebele-speaking south, and with
the white minority. Mugabe sought to incorporate ZAPU into his Zimbabwe
African National Union (ZANU) led government and ZAPU's military wing
into the army; and ZAPU's leader, Joshua Nkomo, was given a series of
cabinet positions in Mugabe's government. However, Robert Mugabe was
torn between this objective and pressures to meet the expectations of
his own ZANU followers for a faster pace of social change.
An abortive ZAPU rebellion and discontent in Matabeleland spelled the
end to this uneasy coalition. In 1983 Mugabe dismissed Nkomo from his
cabinet, which triggered bitter fighting between ZAPU supporters in the
Ndebele-speaking region of the country and the ruling ZANU. Between
1982 and 1985, the military brutally crushed armed resistance from
Ndebele groups in the provinces of Matabeleland and the Midlands,
leaving Robert Mugabe's rule secure (see "Gukurahundi"). Mugabe has
been accused by many reputable sources of committing mass murder during
this period of his rule[1]. A peace accord was negotiated in 1987,
resulting in ZAPU's merger (1988) into the Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF). Mugabe brought Nkomo into the
government once again as a vice-president.
More than 20 000 innocent Ndebele civilians were murdered by Mugabe's
North-Korean trained 5th Brigade during the Gukurahundi ethnic
massacres. This brigade was answerable only to Mugabe. Their leader was
Perence Shiri who called himself 'Black Jesus'. Black Jesus has been
personally implicated in the rape of surviving villagers.
[edit] President
In 1987, the position of Prime Minister was abolished, and he assumed
the new office of executive President of Zimbabwe gaining additional
powers in the process. He was re-elected in 1990 and 1996, and in 2002
amid claims of widespread vote-rigging and intimidation. Robert
Mugabe's term of office is due to expire in 2008. There have, however,
been calls from some in the ruling Zanu-PF party to extend it until
2010[2]. Succession is a thorny issue - Mugabe would lose immunity
enjoyed by heads of state, but jockeying for a replacement invites
instability. [3]
He is the Chancellor of the flagship University of Zimbabwe and has
remained in power until now.
[edit] Social programmes
In 1991, amid international pressure and short on hard currency,
Zimbabwe embarked on a neoliberal austerity program, but the
International Monetary Fund suspended aid, claiming that the reforms
were "not on track".
According to statistics from the World Health Organization (WHO),
Zimbabweans have the shortest life expectancy worldwide, listed as 37
years for men, and 34 years for women [4]. Also of note is that
inflation has escalated to the point where it is now the highest rate
in the world. During Zimbabwe's latest economic crisis the BBC reports
that officially inflation hit 1,000% for the month of September 2006.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) reports an inflation figure for
2006 of 1,216.0% and estimates an inflation of 4,278.8% for 2007 in its
World Economic Outlook Database.
At the same time he pursued a "moral campaign" against homosexuals
making "unnatural sex acts" illegal with a penalty of up to 10 years in
prison. This included the arrest of his predecessor as President of
Zimbabwe, Canaan Banana, who was convicted of gay sex offences.
[edit] Second Congo War
Robert Mugabe was blamed for Zimbabwe's poorly justified participation
in the Second Congo War in the Democratic Republic of the Congo at a
time when the Zimbabwean economy was struggling. The Democratic
Republic of the Congo had been invaded by Rwanda that sought to
institute a change of government, and Uganda that claimed that its
civilians, and regional stability, were under constant threat of attack
by various Congo-based terrorist groups [5]. The war raised accusations
of corruption, with officials alleged to be plundering the Congo's
mineral reserves. His Defense Minister Moven Mahachi said, "Instead of
our army in the DRC burdening the treasury for more resources, which
are not available, it embarks on viable projects for the sake of
generating the necessary revenue."[6]
[edit] Land reforms
Main article: Land reform in Zimbabwe
When Robert Mugabe became prime minister, approximately 70% of the
country's arable land was owned by approximately 4,000 descendants of
white settlers. However, he reassured white landowners that they had
nothing to fear from democracy. Mugabe accepted a "willing buyer,
willing seller" plan as part of the Lancaster House Agreement of 1979,
among other concessions to the White minority. As part of this
agreement, land redistribution was locked up for a period of 10 years.
By 1997, the "willing buyer, willing seller" land reform program had
broken down after the new British government led by Tony Blair
unilaterally decided to stop funding it on the basis that the initial
£44 million allocated under the Thatcher administration was used
to purchase land for members of the ruling elite and not landless
peasants. Furthermore, the Labour party felt themselves under no
obligation to continue paying White farmers compensation, or in
minister Clare Short's words, "I should make it clear that we do not
accept that Britain has a special responsibility to meet the costs of
land purchase in Zimbabwe. We are a new Government from diverse
backgrounds without links to former colonial interests. My own origins
are Irish and as you know we were colonised not colonisers." [7]
As of September 2006, Mugabe's family owns three farms: Highfield
Estate in Norton, 45 km west of Harare, Iron Mask Estate in Mazowe,
about 40 km from Harare, and Foyle Farm in Mazowe, formerly owned by
Ian Webster and adjacent to Iron Mask Farm, renamed to Gushungo Farm
after Mugabe's own clan name. [8] These farms were seized forcibly from
their previous owners.
[edit] 2000 referendum
On 12 - 13 February 2000, a referendum was held on a new constitution.
The proposed change would have limited future presidents to two terms,
but as it was not retroactive, Mugabe could have stood for another two
terms. It also would have made his government and military officials
immune from prosecution for any illegal acts committed while in office.
In addition, it allowed the government to confiscate white-owned land
for redistribution to black farmers without compensation. It was
defeated, after a low 20% turnout, by a strong urban vote, fuelled by
an effective SMS campaign. Mugabe declared that he would "abide by the
will of the people". The vote was a surprise to ZANU-PF, and an
embarrassment before parliamentary elections due in mid-April. Almost
immediately, self-styled "war veterans", led by Chenjerai 'Hitler'
Hunzvi, began invading white-owned farms. On 6 April 2000, parliament
pushed through an amendment, taken word for word from the draft
constitution that was rejected by voters, allowing the seizure of
white-owned farmlands without due reimbursement or payment. Since then,
agricultural production has plummeted and the economy is crippled.
Zimbabwe now depends on food programs and support from outside to feed
its population.
[edit] Elections
Robert Mugabe faced Morgan Tsvangirai of the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) in presidential elections in March 2002. Amid violence and
that large numbers of citizens in anti-Mugabe strongholds were
prevented from voting, Mugabe defeated Tsvangirai by 56% to 42%. This
was singularly viewed by the western nations as a dictatorial move.
Mugabe was helped by an unprecedented turnout of 90% in his rural
stronghold of Mashonaland (55% of the population voted overall),
although there are credible claims that the turnout may have been
rigged. When election observers from South Africa claimed at a press
conference that they had found no evidence of vote rigging, the
assembled press burst out with laughter.
On 3 July 2004, a report [9] adopted by the African Union executive
council, which comprises foreign ministers of the 53 member states,
criticised the government for the arrests and torture of opposition
members of parliament and human rights lawyers, the arrests of
journalists, the stifling of freedom of expression and clampdowns on
other civil liberties.
It was compiled by the AU's African Commission on Human and Peoples'
Rights, which sent a mission to Zimbabwe from 24 June to 28 June 2002,
shortly after the presidential elections.
The report was apparently not submitted to the AU's 2003 summit because
it had not been translated into French. It was adopted at the next AU
summit in 2005.
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party rorted the 2005 parliamentary elections
with an increased majority. The elections were said to "reflect the
free will of the people of Zimbabwe" by the South African observers,
despite accusations of widespread fraud from the MDC.
[edit] Criticism of and opposition to Mugabe
In recent years, Robert Mugabe has emerged as one of Africa's most
controversial leaders. His critics accuse him of being a 'corrupt
dictator', and an 'extremely poor role model' for the continent.
Nevertheless, Mugabe retains some popularity throughout Africa. For
example, in 2004 the monthly magazine New African had its readers vote
for the "100 greatest Africans" last year, Mugabe won a third-place
finish, topped only by Nelson Mandela and Ghanaian independence hero
Kwame Nkrumah. In addition, in December 2005, Kenneth Kaunda, Zambia's
former long-time leader, voiced support for Robert Mugabe, stating that
the Zimbabwean president "would pull through because he enjoyed the
support of ordinary Zimbabweans who were punished for claiming back
their land." Mugabe's supporters tend to dismiss much of the criticism
as being racially motivated, and characterize it as being little more
than the bitter remarks of those who have been disadvantaged by his
policies.
Demonstration against Mugabe's regime in London in Summer 2006.
Demonstration against Mugabe's regime in London in Summer 2006.
Since Mugabe began to redistribute white-owned landholdings, he has
faced harsh attacks, externally from mostly Western countries including
the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada, and internally from
trade-unions and urban Zimbabweans, who overwhelmingly support the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change. In addition, he has been
condemned by prominent African figures, such as Archbishop Pius Ncube,
the South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu (who called Mugabe a
"caricature of an African dictator"), and writer Wole Soyinka (who
called Mugabe's regime "a disgrace to the continent" [10]), while
Botswana President Festus Mogae distanced himself from the SADC
statement opposing the Commonwealth suspension. Mugabe has been
condemned by Western non-governmental organizations such as Amnesty
International, charging that he has committed human rights abuses
against minority Ndebeles, the opposition MDC, white landowners, and
homosexuals. Mugabe and a list of members of his government are now
banned from entering the European Union [11].
On 9 March 2003, U.S. President George W. Bush approved measures for
economic sanctions to be leveled against Mugabe and numerous other
high-ranking Zimbabwe politicians, freezing their assets and barring
Americans from engaging in any transactions or dealings with them.
Justifying the move, Bush's spokesman stated the President and Congress
believe that "the situation in Zimbabwe endangers the southern African
region and threatens to undermine efforts to foster good governance and
respect for the rule of law throughout the continent". The bill was
known as the "Zimbabwe Democracy Act" and was deemed "racist" by Mugabe.
On 8 December 2003, in protest against a further 18 months of
suspension from the Commonwealth of Nations (thereby cutting foreign
aid to Zimbabwe), Mugabe withdrew his country from the Commonwealth.
According to reports, Robert Mugabe informed the leaders of Jamaica,
Nigeria and South Africa of his decision when they telephoned him to
discuss the situation. Zimbabwe's government said the President did not
accept the Commonwealth's position, and was leaving the group.
Many African nations who are Commonwealth members, led by South Africa,
want Zimbabwe to be brought back into the fold to encourage dialogue
between Mugabe and domestic foes, while members of what many Africans
charge is the "white Commonwealth" – the United Kingdom, Australia and
New Zealand – led the hard-line stance on the suspension of Zimbabwe.
Pius Ncube, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo, leads a
consortium of Christian faiths opposed to Mugabe. Ncube has won human
rights awards for opposing the alleged torture and starvation used as a
political weapon by the Mugabe government. In 2005, Ncube has called
for a "popular mass uprising" in the style of the Orange Revolution or
Tulip Revolution to remove Mugabe from power.
On 8 April 2005, Mugabe attended the funeral of Pope John Paul II, a
move which could be seen as defiance of a European Union travel ban
that does not apply to Vatican City. He was granted a transit visa by
the Italian authorities, as they are obliged to under the Concordat.
Twice, Peter Tatchell of the gay rights group OutRage! has tried to
place Mugabe under citizen's arrest for human rights abuses during the
leader's visits to the United Kingdom.
In reaction to human rights violations in Zimbabwe, students at
universities from which Mugabe has honorary doctorates have sought to
get the degrees revoked. So far, student bodies at Michigan State
University (ASMSU) and the University of Edinburgh (EUSA) have each
unanimously passed resolutions calling for this. The issue is now being
considered by the respective universities.
In June 2005, Mugabe and his government attracted unprecedented
international criticism, including greater church condemnation than
ever before, when over 200,000 people from urban areas were left
homeless due to their homes being bulldozed as part of Operation
Murambatsvina that reminded people of his Gukurahundi massacres of more
than 20 000 innocent civilians in Matabeleland
On 17 November 2006 the Independent Newspaper revealed that female life
expectancy is now 34 as opposed to 63 ten years ago.
On 6 February 2007, Mugabe orchestrated a cabinet reshuffle, ousting
ministers including five-year veteran finance minister Herbert Murerwa.
On 11 March 2007, opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai was arrested and
beaten following a prayer meeting in the Harare suburb of Highfields.
Another member of the Movement for Democratic Change was killed while
other protesters were injured. [12]
[edit] Succession
As one of Africa's longest-lasting leaders, speculation has built over
the years as to the future of Zimbabwe after Mugabe leaves office. His
age and recurring rumors of failing health have focused more attention
on possible successors within his party as well as the opposition.
Also, the 11 March crackdown against a religious gathering sponsored by
the opposition attracted scrutiny. [1]
In June 2005, a report that Mugabe had entered a hospital for tests on
his heart fueled rumors that he had died of a heart attack; [13] these
reports were dismissed by a Mugabe spokesman. This coincided with
Operation Murambatsvina (or "Drive Out Trash"), a police campaign to
demolish houses and businesses that had been built without permission
on land previously taken from white landholders and intended for
redistribution. Opponents called this an attempt to disperse urban
centers of dissent into rural areas where the government had more
control. Former information minister Jonathan Moyo attributed the
events to a power struggle within the party over who would succeed
Mugabe.
Joyce Mujuru, recently elevated to vice-president of ZANU-PF during the
December 2004 party congress and considerably younger than Joseph
Msika, the other vice-president, has been mentioned as a likely
successor to Mugabe. Joyce Mujuru's candidacy for the presidency is
strengthened by her husband Solomon Mujuru's backing who is the former
head of the Zimbabwean army.
In October 2006, a report prepared by Zimbabwe's Ministry of Economic
Development acknowledged the lack of co-ordination among critical
government departments in Zimbabwe and the overall lack of commitment
to end the crisis. The report implied that the infighting in Zanu-PF
over Mugabe's successor was also hurting policy formulation and
consistency in implementation. [14]
A plan is under consideration to postpone the next presidential
election until 2010, at the same time as the next parliamentary
election, thereby extending Mugabe's term by two years. It is said that
holding the two elections together would be a cost-saving measure.[15]
Thus far the plan has not been approved, and there are reportedly
objections from some in ZANU-PF to the idea. In March, Mugabe said that
he thought the feeling was in favor of holding the two elections
together in 2008 instead of 2010. He also said that he would be willing
to run for re-election again if the party wanted him to run.[16] Other
leaders in Southern Africa are rumoured to be less warm on the idea,
recently, at the independence celebrations in Ghana, South African
President Thabo Mbeki was rumoured to have met with Mugabe in private
and told him that "he was determined that South Africa's hosting of the
Football World Cup in 2010 should not be disrupted by controversial
presidential elections in Zimbabwe."[17]
[edit] Honours
Robert Mugabe was created an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of
the Bath in 1994 by Queen Elizabeth II. This entitles him to use the
postnominal letters KCB, but not to use the title "Sir".
[edit] Personal
His well-respected Ghanaian first wife, the former Sally Hayfron
(1933-1992), died from a chronic kidney ailment (their only son
Nhamodzenyika, born 27 September 1963 died on December 26, 1966 from
cerebral malaria, while Mugabe was in prison). Sally Mugabe was a
trained teacher who asserted her position as an independent political
activist and campaigner. This she clearly demonstrated from as early as
1962 when she was active in mobilising African women to challenge Ian
Smith's Rhodesian constitution which resulted in her own imprisonment.
When she became Zimbabwe's first lady in 1980, she served as Deputy
Secretary and later as Secretary of the ZANU Women's League. She also
founded the Zimbabwe Child Survival Movement. Sally Mugabe launched the
Zimbabwe Women's Cooperative in the UK in 1986 and supported Akina Mama
wa Africa, a London-based African women's organisation focusing on
development and women's issues in Africa and the UK. Upon her death she
was laid to rest at the National Heroes Acre in Harare, Zimbabwe.
About two years before Sally's death, Mugabe married his former
secretary, Grace Marufu, 40 years his junior and with whom he already
had two children, in a tribal ceremony. Abandoning his previous claim
of a Christian background, Mugabe justified the marriage under a
traditional African law which allows him to take a junior wife.
On 17 August 1996, Mugabe and Marufu were married in a Roman Catholic
wedding Mass at Kutama College, a Catholic Mission School he previously
attended. Nelson Mandela was among the guests. A spokesman for Catholic
Archbishop Patrick Chakaipa, who presided over the ceremony, said the
diocese saw "no impediment" to the nuptials.
Grace Marufu Mugabe has three children: Bona, Robert Peter Jr.
(although Robert Mugabe's middle name is Gabriel) and Bellarmine
Chatunga. As first lady, she has been the subject of much criticism for
her lifestyle. When she was included in the 2002 EU travel sanctions on
her husband, one EU parliamentarian was quoted as saying that the ban
"will stop Grace Mugabe going on her shopping trips in the face of
catastrophic poverty blighting the people of Zimbabwe."[18] The London
Telegraph called her "notorious at home for her profligacy" in 2003
coverage of a trip to Paris.[19] Their children however are not
included to the EU travel sanctions.
In March 2007, Mugabe was to have reported to say that he would run as
president for another 7 years , and then would give power to his two
sons.
[edit] Movies
Mugabe's office forbade the screening of the 2005 movie The Interpreter
claiming that it was propaganda by the CIA and fearing that it could
incite hostility towards him. [20]
[edit] Relevant contemporaries
* Ian Smith – leader of White minority government of
Rhodesia
* Rev Ndabaningi Sithole – ZANU founder with Mugabe
and Chitepo
* Herbert Chitepo – torch-bearer for ZANU while
Mugabe was interned
* Josiah Tongogara – Zanla military general for
Mugabe's ZANU political wing. Robert Mugabe ordered his death having
become jealous of the fact he was the most respected politician in the
ZANU PF camp.
* Canaan Banana – President in Mugabe's first
government
* Joshua Nkomo – Leader of ZAPU, often rivals
* Bishop Abel Muzorewa – Leader of government before
Mugabe
* Kenneth Kaunda – Zambian leader who supported
African nationalists
* Edgar Tekere – one-time colleague who opposed
Mugabe in the 1990 Presidential election
* Morgan Tsvangirai – Leader of the current
opposition party Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
* Samora Machel – Leader of FRELIMO; political
friend and influence
[edit] Events
* Unilateral Declaration of Independence – Ian
Smith's break away from Britain
* Lancaster House Agreement – paved the way for
elections that brought Mugabe into power
* Gukurahundi – War between Mugabe's Fifth Brigade
and the Ndebele people of Matabeleland after the failed merger between
ZANU and ZAPU political parties.
* Operation Murambatsvina (or Operation "Drive Out
Trash"), a controversial 2005 government campaign to forcibly clear
many slum areas across the country
[edit] Parties
See also: Politics of Zimbabwe
* Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (ZAPU) – founded by
Nkomo, mostly Ndebele, often rivals to ZANU
* Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) – founded
by Sithole, Chitepo and Mugabe, mostly Shona
* Patriotic Front – Umbrella group formed by Nkomo
and Mugabe as rebel representation at the Lancaster House Agreement
* Zanu-PF – party merged from ZANU and ZAPU after
Nkomo's fall from grace
* Movement for Democratic Change – current
opposition led by Morgan Tsvangirai
[edit] References
1. ^ Mugabe: The price of silence, BBC, 10 March 2002
2. ^ Mugabe: Presidential aspirants wait like 'witches',
Mail & Guardian, 1 November 2006
3. ^ Mugabe expected to share power in extended term
Reuters
4. ^ Country Health System Fact Sheet 2006 Zimbabwe (pdf)
World Health Organisation
5. ^ Congo At War: A Briefing of the Internal and External
Players in the Central African Conflict, International Crisis Group, 17
November 1998
6. ^ Mugabe's costly Congo venture BBC
7. ^ Zimbabwe: The Spark...Claire Short's letter of
November 1997, by Baffour Ankomah, 31 March 2003
8. ^ Mugabe seizes third farm for himself, IOL, 10
September 2006
9. ^ Zimbabwe races to answer repression charges, Sunday
Times (SA), 11 July 2004
10. ^ Soyinka urges Zimbabwe sanctions, BBC, 21 July 2005
11. ^ Council Common Position 2004/161/CFSP, European Union, 19
February 2004
12. ^ Zimbabwe's Tsvangirai Has Brain Scan, Was Hurt While in
Custody, Bloomberg, 14 March 2007
13. ^ Zimbabwe denies reports Robert Mugabe is dead, CTV, 7 June
2005
14. ^ Zim government in chaos, says secret report IOL
15. ^ "Mugabe set to rule until 2010", IRIN, 14 December 2006.
16. ^ "Mugabe ready for 2008 elections", DPA (IOL), 12 March
2007.
17. ^ http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/6451349.stm
18. ^ Mugabe's wife on EU sanctions list, BBC, 22 July 2002
19. ^ Truffle dinners for £190 at the Mugabes' glittering
hideaway, Telegraph, 2 February 2003
20. ^ Rainbow Banned From Screening "Anti-Mugabe" Movie,
ZimDaily, 23 September 2005
[edit] External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Robert Mugabe
* "GROM-X" (The campaign to Get Rid of Mugabe)
* "Mugging Mugabe" (a commentary in defence of
Mugabe)
* "The truth about Mugabe" (an anti-Mugabe
commentary)
* "Zimbabwe election – a defeat for imperialism"
* "Zimbabwe's silent selective starvation"
* "Robert Mugabe's War to Crush Press Freedom in
Zimbabwe"
* Reporters Without Borders profile on Mugabe
* Freedom House report on Zimbabwe
* IFEX - Media Coverage Favours Mugabe
* "Robert Mugabe at UMass" from the WGBH series, Ten
O'clock News
* Indict Zimbabwe's demagogue before the
International Criminal Court
* "Zimbabwe and the Politics of Torture"
* Human Rights Watch on Zimbabwe