Zimbabwe heading towards a Rwandan genocide
by Alex Matthews
Once upon a time there was an African country that after several years of instability seemed to be moving shakily towards reform and democracy. Its ageing despotic president had signed a power-sharing deal with the opposition that created a unity government that would precipitate a new constitution and elections.
Sounds rather like Zimbabwe, doesn't it? But I was actually describing Rwanda in early 1994 - only months before a genocide that would claim almost a million lives. While the Arusha Accords were being haphazardly implemented (but more often than not being ignored), fanatics in the countryside were setting up militia training bases.
Arms and military advisers were being flown in to train and equip these ragtag groupings. President Habyarimana's assassination in April 1994 was the catalyst for a hundred days of massacres, rape and torture.
Zimbabwe is in an eerily similar situation to the one that Rwanda was experiencing before its genocide. After a decade of brutality and economic devastation, it is tempting to hope that Zanu PF's "partnership" with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) shows that Zimbabwe is irreversibly on the road to recovery.
Sadly, however, what we see in Zimbabwe is nothing but a false dawn: a Potemkin peace designed to lure us into the same indifferent complacency with which the world viewed Rwanda in 1994.
The violent repression that has characterised Zanu PF's rule continues, flouting the provisions of the Global Political Agreement (GPA), the power-sharing agreement signed with the opposition in September. Zanu PF considers the unity deal after its defeat at the March 29 polls last year as a mere speed bump in its path of continued authoritarian rule - a speed bump which creates the illusion that it is prepared to accept reform and genuine democracy.