Opinion / Columnist
Barrack Obama and the blame game: it is a dark and twisted Zanu-PF fantasy
15 Dec 2017 at 16:36hrs | Views
Ahead of an emotional and historic visit to Ghana in 2009, Barrack Obama criticised the theatrical blame game African leaders employ all the time to disclaim their failings and debunked the extensively disseminated myth that the West and not Zanu-PF is responsible for the economic tribulations that afflict Zimbabwe.
Obama said: "I think part of what's hampered advancement in Africa is that for many years we've made excuses about corruption or poor governance, that this was somehow the consequence of neo-colonialism, or the West has been oppressive, or racism - I'm not a big - I'm not a believer in excuses."
Whenever a ruling party in Africa faces tough electoral accountability for its economic and political failures, undue responsibility is swiftly heaped on the US and EU nations.
While the evidence to substantiate allegations of electoral interference and secret participations in African affairs is characteristically scant - African leaders always tag themselves faultless for a rash of reckless policies, wasteful expenditures and high-levels of corruption.
Obama alluded to this African skulduggery when he added: "And yet the fact is we're in 2009. The West and the United States has not been responsible for what's happened to Zimbabwe's economy over the last 15 or 20 years.
"It hasn't been responsible for some of the disastrous policies that we've seen elsewhere in Africa. And I think that it's very important for African leadership to take responsibility and be held accountable."
Olusegun Obasanjo expressed comparable thoughts in May at the launch of the book Making Africa Work in Durban. He said, "We have heard enough talk. We have had enough of the blame game. Yes, the colonial powers did not do it right - but we have been independent now for almost 60 years. What have we done? The fault lies with our leaders."
In Zimbabwe the so-called economic sanctions did not stop former First Lady Grace Mugabe from acquiring super extravagant properties. And Doha-based news channel Al-Jazeera has described President Emmerson Mnangagwa as a successful businessman. Interestingly, how did a 37-year long civil servant become a wealthy businessman, anyway?
This is just it: how has the West advanced unethical conduct by state officials? Take your pick from an appalling collection of local catastrophes that have emptied the Zimbabwean treasury over the years and decipher this: how did the West instigate the War Victims Compensation Fund debacle, the ZINARA scandal, the NRZ crisis, the Chiadzwa diamond scandal, the Harare Airport scandal and the Ziscosteel scandal?
You can blame the West for the devastating electoral woes all you want. But how did the West prevent Zimbabwe from conducting free and fair elections in the past?
Did the West sanction electoral violence in 2000 and 2002? Did the West fail to provide Zimbabwe with a credible voter's rolls in 2008 and 2013?
Did the West halt the privatisation of Zimpapers and ZBC? Did the West enact dubious laws such as AIPPA and POSA?
Before we overthink the causes behind the deplorable situation we find ourselves in, we must deal with the blame game. A few weeks ago Mnangagwa and the self-styled Team Lacoste were the local villains on the run.
But after the November 14 coup Zanu-PF shifted all the blame for the never-ending economic and social challenges on the so-called G-40 faction. Yet before that military invention happened it was all the fault of the MDC, white commercial farmers, ZUM and ZAPU in that order.
All hope is not lost though: we can look to West Africa for electoral inspiration. Ghana has shown that holding trustworthy elections and actively supporting a functional democracy go hand in hand with economic growth in a post-independent African nation.
And we can refer to flawless representations of African dictatorships to appreciate what an undemocratic state looks like. Equatorial Guinea, DR Congo, Egypt, Libya, Mali, Burundi, Burkina Faso and Central African Republic have after celebrating military coups all failed to establish viable states.
Although democracy is not a prerequisite for economic development: China is the only state that has managed to develop a modern, market-oriented economy without political openness.
Elsewhere - in places such as North Korea, Venezuela, Zimbabwe and DR Congo - a lack of democratic liberties has facilitated state-level corruption and debilitating poverty.
With a sycophantic state media and repressive security sector in place, corrupt and totalitarian representatives find it easy to obfuscate the incapacitating actuality of state thuggery.
North Korea is ranked 174 out of 176 countries on the Transparency International Corruption Index for 2016. Venezuela is ranked 164. DR Congo, on 156, is just above Zimbabwe on 154.
But that is not all.
As things stand, the despotic Nicholas Maduro has evolved to become a tougher and grimier opponent than opposition parties in Venezuela reckoned a few years ago.
So has Joseph Kabila in DR Congo.
And with time: so will Mnangagwa in Zimbabwe.
People must demand substantial reforms and free and fair elections.
Only the people can free themselves from the crushing weight of the African blame game.
Twitter: @tafimhaka / Facebook: @Tafiranyika
Obama said: "I think part of what's hampered advancement in Africa is that for many years we've made excuses about corruption or poor governance, that this was somehow the consequence of neo-colonialism, or the West has been oppressive, or racism - I'm not a big - I'm not a believer in excuses."
Whenever a ruling party in Africa faces tough electoral accountability for its economic and political failures, undue responsibility is swiftly heaped on the US and EU nations.
While the evidence to substantiate allegations of electoral interference and secret participations in African affairs is characteristically scant - African leaders always tag themselves faultless for a rash of reckless policies, wasteful expenditures and high-levels of corruption.
Obama alluded to this African skulduggery when he added: "And yet the fact is we're in 2009. The West and the United States has not been responsible for what's happened to Zimbabwe's economy over the last 15 or 20 years.
"It hasn't been responsible for some of the disastrous policies that we've seen elsewhere in Africa. And I think that it's very important for African leadership to take responsibility and be held accountable."
Olusegun Obasanjo expressed comparable thoughts in May at the launch of the book Making Africa Work in Durban. He said, "We have heard enough talk. We have had enough of the blame game. Yes, the colonial powers did not do it right - but we have been independent now for almost 60 years. What have we done? The fault lies with our leaders."
In Zimbabwe the so-called economic sanctions did not stop former First Lady Grace Mugabe from acquiring super extravagant properties. And Doha-based news channel Al-Jazeera has described President Emmerson Mnangagwa as a successful businessman. Interestingly, how did a 37-year long civil servant become a wealthy businessman, anyway?
This is just it: how has the West advanced unethical conduct by state officials? Take your pick from an appalling collection of local catastrophes that have emptied the Zimbabwean treasury over the years and decipher this: how did the West instigate the War Victims Compensation Fund debacle, the ZINARA scandal, the NRZ crisis, the Chiadzwa diamond scandal, the Harare Airport scandal and the Ziscosteel scandal?
You can blame the West for the devastating electoral woes all you want. But how did the West prevent Zimbabwe from conducting free and fair elections in the past?
Did the West sanction electoral violence in 2000 and 2002? Did the West fail to provide Zimbabwe with a credible voter's rolls in 2008 and 2013?
Did the West halt the privatisation of Zimpapers and ZBC? Did the West enact dubious laws such as AIPPA and POSA?
Before we overthink the causes behind the deplorable situation we find ourselves in, we must deal with the blame game. A few weeks ago Mnangagwa and the self-styled Team Lacoste were the local villains on the run.
All hope is not lost though: we can look to West Africa for electoral inspiration. Ghana has shown that holding trustworthy elections and actively supporting a functional democracy go hand in hand with economic growth in a post-independent African nation.
And we can refer to flawless representations of African dictatorships to appreciate what an undemocratic state looks like. Equatorial Guinea, DR Congo, Egypt, Libya, Mali, Burundi, Burkina Faso and Central African Republic have after celebrating military coups all failed to establish viable states.
Although democracy is not a prerequisite for economic development: China is the only state that has managed to develop a modern, market-oriented economy without political openness.
Elsewhere - in places such as North Korea, Venezuela, Zimbabwe and DR Congo - a lack of democratic liberties has facilitated state-level corruption and debilitating poverty.
With a sycophantic state media and repressive security sector in place, corrupt and totalitarian representatives find it easy to obfuscate the incapacitating actuality of state thuggery.
North Korea is ranked 174 out of 176 countries on the Transparency International Corruption Index for 2016. Venezuela is ranked 164. DR Congo, on 156, is just above Zimbabwe on 154.
But that is not all.
As things stand, the despotic Nicholas Maduro has evolved to become a tougher and grimier opponent than opposition parties in Venezuela reckoned a few years ago.
So has Joseph Kabila in DR Congo.
And with time: so will Mnangagwa in Zimbabwe.
People must demand substantial reforms and free and fair elections.
Only the people can free themselves from the crushing weight of the African blame game.
Twitter: @tafimhaka / Facebook: @Tafiranyika
Source - Tafi Mhaka
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