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13th
Feburary 2010
Cry for
Zimbabwe
In
what is clearly an act of madness the Robert
Mugabe government in Zimbabwe published on February
9th regulations governing “Indigenization
and Economic Empowerment” making it compulsory
for white-owned companies in Zimbabwe to hand
majority control to black persons.
Authoritative reports state that “the
regulations require every existing business,
partnership, association or sole proprietorship
with an asset value of US$500,000 or more to
submit a report to the Indigenization and Economic
Empowerment Minister Saviour Kasukuwere by April
15, outlining their operations and plans for
ensuring that they will be owned or controlled
by indigenous persons within five years”.
Failure to do so, after a further 30 days of
reminder, would render the owner of the business
or every director guilty of an offence and liable
to a fine and or imprisonment for up to five
years.
The new regulations demand that all foreign
and locally owned companies hand over at least
51 per cent ownership to black Zimbabweans.
Thousands of firms, including the Zimbabwean
operations of firms such as Barclays Bank, Standard
Chartered Bank and the mining company Rio Tinto,
will be affected.
These developments come on top of other property
seizures. Sue Lloyd Roberts of the British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC) reports that in the last year,
“four thousand white commercial farmers
have now had their farms confiscated and given
to black farmers, many of whom are supporters
of Mr Mugabe. A diamond mine has been taken
from its white Zimbabwean owner and is being
operated by a government-owned company, protected
by soldiers”.
Amazingly, the Prime Minister in the Zimbabwe
coalition government, who has responsibility
for policy formulation, knew absolutely nothing
about the new regulations until they were published.
The Prime Minister, Morgan Tsvangari, who is
the leader of the former opposition party, Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), said the move had
been made without his knowledge. He said: “They
were published without due process and in contravention
of the global political agreement [which set
up the coalition] and constitution of Zimbabwe
and are therefore null and void.”
Tsvangari may consider the regulations null
and void but they are being implemented anyway
demonstrating his complete impotence as Prime
Minister and Mugabe’s utter disregard
for him.
This is not the first time that Mugabe has openly
shown his contempt for Tsvangari, nor is it
the first time that Tsvangari has displayed
the powerlessness of his position as Prime Minister.
The most glaring example of Tsvangari’s
weakness is the fact that a top MDC leader,
Roy Bennett, is still being prosecuted on charges
widely believed to be trumped up, and many other
MDC members have been arrested or harassed –
cases well documented by Amnesty International
and human rights groups within Zimbabwe.
While some of these human rights violations
strike at property owned by white people, they
are perpetrated mostly against Zimbabwean blacks,
including women, who are perceived to oppose
the Mugabe regime, but, in reality are simply
demonstrating for better lives for their families
and for an end to physical abuse by the military
and gangs organised by Mugabe ZANU-PF party.
Amid the farce of a coalition government in
which Mugabe is President and Tsvangari Prime
Minister, ZANU-PF and MDC have been holding
talks to implement the “Global Political
Agreement” brokered since September 2008
by South Africa’s government. ZANU-PF
has given nothing of any substance and MDC holds
on in the hope of a breakthrough.
The South African government continues to chair
the deadlocked negotiations with no favourable
end in sight.
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In 2009, the
Zimbabwean economy, which had sunk into a
deep morass with the Zimbabwean dollar less
than worthless, grew by an estimated 4% on
the back of a virtual abolition of the Zimbabwe
dollar and the adoption of the US dollar as
its currency. Last year’s growth was
the first in ten years and came after a 60
per cent decline.
Experts report that much of last year’s
growth was due to good rains and a decent
harvest. This year the rains have been sporadic,
crops are failing and a poor harvest is expected.
By the end of 2010, as many as three million
Zimbabweans could again be dependent on food
aid.
Before the announcement of the new regulations,
the Zimbabwe Minister of Finance, Tendai Biti,
had been seeking new foreign investment in
Zimbabwe. The chances of this happening now
are pretty remote except from the government
of the Peoples Republic of China.
In November last year, the Zimbabwe government
announced that China Sonangol, a Chinese-Angolan
joint venture company, would invest US$8 million
in five deals involving gold and platinum
refining, oil and gas exploration, fuel purchase
and distribution, and housing. It will be
interesting to see if the Chinese owned company
will be exempt from the new regulations to
give 51% of foreign owned companies to black
Zimbabweans.
So where is all this going? Zimbabwe has always
required a complete restructuring of land
ownership. Five per cent of the Zimbabwean
population, mostly white, owned 80 per cent
of the arable land at the time of independence
in 1981. Only the most resolute white racists
would have objected to reformation of land
ownership to correct the ancient wrong by
which black Zimbabweans were deprived and
denied land ownership in the country of their
birth. The failure to achieve this reformation
resides squarely with the British government
and to a lesser extent the US government who
reneged on their promise to provide the funding
that would have affected this transformation
when Mugabe was elected President in 1981.
Instead of seeking international support for
his just cause against the UK and US, Mugabe
turned the issue into a means of retaining
domestic support in the face of his increasing
unpopularity among black Zimbabweans. Two
rigged elections and atrocities, including
savage beatings, against his political opponents
kept him in power but not in favour with the
majority of Zimbabweans.
Instead of transferring farms to capable people
with the knowledge and capital to keep them
productive, they were seized and given to
political cronies including the top brass
of the military who keep Mugabe in power.
The latest regulations appear to be more of
the same. It will drive even more talent,
knowledge and money out of Zimbabwe and contribute
little if anything to the investment of nearly
US$10 billion desperately needed to reconstruct
the economy.
The international community should act together
to curtail Mugabe’s abuse, and Morgan
Tsvangari should give them the lead. He should
start by abandoning the farce that parades
as a coalition government, putting an end
to Mugabe’s claim of racism against
him and his policies. That claim seems to
paralyze European governments and limit the
actions of Africans ones while Zimbabwe withers.
Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com
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