Tribute to Robert Mugabe (1924-2019)

The African continent last week lost one of its revolutionary leaders and pan-Africanists, Robert Mugabe. The former president of Zimbabwe, who died at the age of 95, was a rebel leader who led his country to independence in 1980 and ruled with an iron fist until his own army ended his almost 40-year tenure in 2017.

The death of the former president on Thursday night in a clinic in Singapore marks the definitive end of an era in the former British colony. Though initially admired as a hero of Africa’s independence struggle, Mugabe’s long rule descended into tyranny, corruption and incompetence, earning him international pariah status. His death prompted mixed reactions in Zimbabwe, Across Africa and around the world.

Educated at Catholic missionary schools, Mugabe became a teacher in Ghana then returned to Rhodesia in 1960 to fight white minority rule. Eventually, freedom was won and Mugabe promised to embrace the country’s white population. He led the country through a golden period of economic growth and educational development that was the envy of Africa. The international community turned a blind eye, however, to human rights abuses, notably, the 1980s ethnic cleansing of at least 20,000 people in Matabeleland province.

Opposition rose again in 1999 as the economy floundered and trade unions organised around the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). Mugabe rigged elections and began a programme of land reform in which white farmers were forcibly evicted to make way for Zanu-PF party cronies or black Zimbabweans who lacked the skills and capital to farm. This helped throw the economy into disarray. Hyperinflation ran riot and supermarket shelves were empty. The once-proud school and health systems began to crumble.

The political environment also became increasingly hostile, with activists and journalists persecuted, jailed or murdered. More than 200 people died in political violence around the 2008 election, which Mugabe was widely seen as having stolen from the MDC’s Morgan Tsvangirai.

His final years in power were characterised by financial collapse, surges of violent intimidation and a vicious internal power struggle pitting his second wife Grace, 41 years younger than him, against Mnangagwa, his former right-hand man. The rivalry was resolved when Mnangagwa, a Zanu-PF stalwart, took power when Mugabe reluctantly resigned after a military takeover. The news of his decision prompted widespread rejoicing.

On Friday Mnangagwa thanked “former first lady Grace Mugabe for standing by her husband until the end”. Grace Mugabe became known for her lavish lifestyle and joined the Zanu-PF politburo by virtue of her leadership of the party’s influential Women’s League in 2014. She became a political liability for the ageing autocrat, however, and her outspoken criticism of Mnangagwa was one of the triggers for the military takeover that ousted her husband.

But Mugabe remained devoted to his wife, calling her “my Grace” in his last press conference and demanding better treatment for his spouse from Zimbabwe’s new rulers. After his fall, Mugabe was granted the status of a respected father of the nation and a generous pension by the new government. The move angered his many opponents and upset many victims of his regime.

However, Mugabe’s own frustration and humiliation over his ousting were clear, and voiced with typical rhetorical force at an extraordinary press conference on the grounds of his residence in Harare days before elections in July 2018. Mugabe, flanked by his wife, suggested he would vote for the opposition MDC, a party he had brutally suppressed before co-opting it in 2008 to form a supposed unity government that he still dominated.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who took power after Mugabe’s fall, called his predecessor “an icon of liberation, a pan-Africanist who dedicated his life to the emancipation and empowerment of his people”. He said Zimbabwe would be in official mourning until the former leader’s remains were brought back from Singapore and buried.

Tendai Biti, a prominent opposition politician, said that though he had been tortured on Mugabe’s orders, he was not bitter. “He brought massive destruction to Zimbabwe but was a product of his era. He did not know how to make the transformation from liberation leader to national leader.”

The ruling African National Congress party in neighbouring South Africa described Mugabe as a “friend, statesman and revolutionary comrade”. In a statement, the ANC acknowledged that it had sometimes “differed vociferously” with him, but remembered “an ardent and vocal advocate of African unity and self-reliance” whose struggle had been an inspiration.

Flags in Kenya were flown at half mast. But in the UK, Downing Street said that while “we of course express our condolences to those who mourn the former leader represented a barrier to a better future. Under his rule the people of Zimbabwe suffered greatly as he impoverished their country and sanctioned the use of violence against them,” a spokesman for prime minister Boris Johnson said.

As preparations gear up towards laying the remains of Mugabe to rest on Sunday, September 15, 2019, we join President Muhammadu Buhari and the international community to commiserate with family members, friends and political associates of the political activist who fought for the independence of his country from colonial rule, and lived most of his life in public service. Mugabe’s sacrifices, especially in struggling for the political and economic emancipation of his people, will always be remembered by posterity.

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