Headline of the Year
The Daily News this week carried a headline that simply said “They are Clueless” against a backdrop of a montage showing all the Cabinet Ministers. It was totally apt and never more right than now. The SADC heads of State held a summit in Harare this week and this simply served to increase the mayhem and confusion.
The Heads of State (spurred by Mr. Mugabe) had adopted the theme for the summit of industrialization and he punted the idea that the way forward was a strange animal they call “beneficiation”. This means adding value to raw materials before they are sold or consumed. The debate took place against the backdrop of the near total collapse of industry in Zimbabwe and the beginnings of a recession in South Africa with little progress if any, in the rest of the region.
In reality the summit took place against the backdrop of a crisis of governance in Africa, associated with political and armed conflicts which are driving tens of millions of people into the stream of economic and political migrants trying to make their way to greener pastures. Nowhere is this more dramatically illustrated than in the present migration crisis in the Mediterranean region and the flood of refugees from all parts of the continent into South Africa.
Mr. Mugabe and Mr. Zuma both took the opportunity to insult different ethnic groups and say that the African Diaspora in South Africa had no right to be there and should “go home”. Although they condemned the xenophobic violence levied against migrants in South Africa, they also fueled the situation by talking about migrants being uneducated and criminal. Only the President of Botswana, Mr. Khama talked about the causes of such migration as being the failure of good governance in many countries and Zimbabwe in particular.
Mr. Khama was correct; between 1983 and 1987 Mr. Mugabe had mounted an intensive and sustained campaign against the Zapu structures in the South West and Central provinces. Spearheaded by a unit of the Army known at the time as the 5th Brigade and all other armed forces and the Police and called “Ghukurahundi”, the campaign resulted in tens of thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands fleeing the country – mainly to South Africa where this early wave of migration was quietly absorbed because they often spoke the same language and were difficult to identify.