Ocnus.Net
The West is Conspiring to Unseat that Valiant Warrior, Mugabe
By Mohau Pheko .Sunday Times (SA) 11/5/08
May 13, 2008 - 9:31:53 AM
In the
meantime, President Thabo Mbeki gives Western powers the finger at the United
Nations Security Council, signalling that Africa will handle its own problems.
In the
cacophony of Mbeki’s critics, we missed the pronouncement he made in a briefing
to religious leaders that his mediation process was dogged by the interference
of the US and the UK governments.
Is this
plausible? Can we unapologetically begin to find some truth in his statement
without the debate deteriorating to how Africans always blame the West?
Jonathan
Powell, Tony Blair’s longtime chief of staff, argued that Britain should not be
afraid to intervene in Zimbabwe to defend “our interests” and promote “our
values” because “intervening in another country no longer risks tipping the two
superpowers into global war, because there is only one superpower”.
On the
other hand, the US government passed the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic
Recovery Act, which among other things decreed that President Robert Mugabe
could restore relations with international financial institutions on condition
that he restore Zimbabwe’s rule of law, withdraw his troops from the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, and change the conduct of internal elections.
Why does
this only apply to Zimbabwe?
Uganda, a
far less open and democratic country, also had troops in the DRC and has
successfully annihilated all opposition parties and freedom of the press — but
has not been subjected to the same conditions because it’s happy to do the US’s
bidding.
The Act
authorised US President George Bush to fund opposition media and “democracy”
and “governance” programmes in Zimbabwe aimed at “discrediting” Mugabe.
It’s
instructive to note that the MDC vigorously lobbied for sanctions against its
own country, prompting this US law to have the power to instruct all US members
of international financial institutions to oppose and vote against any
extension of loans, credits or guarantees to Zimbabwe.
According
to Gregory Elich, author of Strange Liberators: Militarism, Mayhem and the
Pursuit of Profit, “Western financial restrictions made it nearly impossible
for Zimbabwe to participate in international trade”.
Mugabe, we
are made to believe, unilaterally brought Zimbabwe’s economy to its knees,
bringing about widespread poverty, a reign of terror and despotism.
On the
other hand, Morgan Tsvangirai is spoken of as the author of a noble
“revolution” against Mugabe and Zanu-PF.
This hides
the fact that the MDC is in collusion with the US administration and the
British government, who both acknowledge that they are working with the MDC to
bring down the Mugabe government.
Neither the
US nor Britain would tolerate outside interference in their internal politics.
The fairy
tale that presents a clash between the “evil king” Mugabe and the “heroic
prince” Tsvangirai fails to recognise the geopolitical interests surrounding
Zimbabwe and the SADC region.
Allowing
into our back yard the same coalition of countries (Britain and the US ) that
brought destruction to Iraq — under the guise of a UN Security Council
resolution on Zimbabwe — would plunge the SADC region into a human disaster of
enormous proportions.
The anatomy
of falling out of favour always follows the same pattern: elected officials who
defy the White House and 10 Downing Street are denounced as dictators despite
winning free and fair elections.
The
credibility and legitimacy of the elections is deemed suspicious.
Then it is
said these leaders govern in an anti-democratic way.
The
opposition calls for Western countries to apply economic sanctions detrimental
to their own people.
The US and
Britain fund civil society, media and the opposition to begin the regime-change
agenda and bring down the “dictator”.
Election
campaigning is used to force the “dictator” to step down.
The fact
that the “dictator” is holding elections at all is considered a sham.
There is a
declaration of victory by the opposition party even before the election results
are announced, supported by local media mimicking the Western media and
promoting a narrative of rigged elections.
Western
media repeat this mantra in all their broadcasts just in case you are too dense
to comprehend the message.
Predictably,
official results contradict the opposition’s claim and the elections are deemed
fraudulent.
Forecasts
from the opposition that blood will spill begin to do the rounds in the
capitals of the world, and of course end up at the UN Security Council — where
regime change can mean bombs falling on the heads of the very people to whom
democracy and “change” is being brought.
Mugabe no
doubt has made gross mistakes in governing, but this is not why he has been
singled out as a “tyrant” and an “African Hitler”.
Western
governments detest Mugabe’s impertinence — in particular, his audacity in
daring to seize white farms; in meddling in the DRC without consent from the
US; and his criticism of Western colonialism, which has gained him the
reputation of valiant warrior against Western superiority in Africa.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008