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You don’t say, Mr. Mugabe!

E. Ablorh-Odjidja

October 8, 2007

 

If I allowed myself a moment to think that President Mugabe said what he was reported by News24 to have said, I would say to myself that something serious had gone wrong with our esteemed revolutionary leader.

 

“Stop stealing our skills!” our once illustrious leader was reported to have said.

 

President Mugabe or members of his government are asking neighboring African countries in Africa to stay off poaching for professionals, experts, and skilled workers from Zimbabwe, at least those still left in his country.

 

The surprise is that there are still professionals left in Zimbabwe, despite the overwhelming difficulties of the past ten years, brought on this nation by the disastrous policies of the Mugabe government.

 

Those professionals left in Zimbabwe must be the most ardently patriotic, given the tough times that many of the old nationals went through.  Many of these stood shoulder to shoulder with Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo during the “Bush Wars.” 

 

Despite the hardships, the built-in patriotism of these nationals lasted.  Even so, there is still a limit to what one could do for a country.  So, many left when Mugabe exerted his control over the country.

 

As a result, thousands of skilled workers left Zimbabwe; both Blacks and whites.  They eft the farms, the factories, the workshops, and the school buildings.  Some left wives, families, and properties because of the acute economic crisis that Mugabe brought and which left Zimbabwe tethering on the brink of a failed state.

 

So, to read News24’s recent quote that Culture Minister Aeneas Chigwedere says that “the government would approach its southern African neighbors to ask them to stop taking Zimbabwe's teachers,” is to wonder why the minister doesn’t understand why the professionals are leaving in the first place.

 

However, factors that are now seriously at work against the maintenance of a stable skilled labor force, and consequently, the viability of the economy at home.

 

The “pull factor” from the neighboring countries, that is aiding the migration, the minister will soon realize, is aided hugely by internal conditions at home in Zimbabwe.

 

But, there are some in the West, comfortably at rest in the Diaspora, who do not believe that there is anything harmful about Mugabe's policies in Zimbabwe.  The thinking is that Mugabe is a hero and that he is the most progressive African leader since Nkrumah. 

 

I suppose this kind of accolade must post a problem for those of us who love Nkrumah since the result of Mugabe’s policies are not the same as Nkrumah’s.

 

“What we need is to sit down with the neighboring countries and make sure that they apply to the government for teachers, instead of poaching the teachers," the reportage on Culture Minister Chigwedere continued.

 

But why should these neighboring countries bother? They are practicing policies that are different from Mugabe’s.  The exodus of skilled workers from Zimbabwe benefits them.  There are already too many of them in these countries working as economic refugees - to and for the benefit of these host countries!

 

Zimbabwe was once a place where other Africans fled for succor.  Zimbabwe was stable and doing well. 

 

Early in the eighties, when Ghana had a problem, many of her citizens fled to Zimbabwe.  South Africa, not yet independent then, looked to Zimbabwe as a model for a future post-apartheid state. 

 

A land that was once more prosperous than the majority of many states in Africa has now been reduced to a chronic shortage of almost everything.  The inflation rate alone is soaring towards 8000%. 

 

And President Mugabe, at 83, is said to be going nowhere, at least not in any direction away from the presidency.

 

The recent rumored attempt about some from his inner circle to oust him was given credence by Mugabe when he told reporters that some of his sides have consulted “traditional healers under the cover of darkness,” to get rid of him.  That attempt has effectively been quashed.

 

One of the beneficiaries of the rumored ouster said then to be a sure-shot replacement for the Mugabe throne, is current Vice-President Joyce Mujuru.

 

Mujuru is a member of Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party. She also happens to be the wife of a very influential former general of the Zimbabwe army, Solomon Mujuru.  It must also be noted that it is Mugabe who brought Joyce to public prominence, at least politically.

 

Two days ago, Joyce Mujuru came out to declare that she would not contest against Mugabe under any circumstance and to also proclaim her devotion to the aging ruler.

 

"I was groomed by Mr. Mugabe to what I am,” according to Mujuru, so please “don't force me into the presidential throne. Don't force me where I don't fit. Mr. Mugabe appointed me to my current position so that I could help him."

 

With her loyalty sadly pronounced, she is welcome to stay out of presidential politics.  But is there any chance in the future that she and her army general husband will be forced into exile because they represent a threat?

 

In the meantime, Cultural Minister Chigwedere is said to be promising new graduates and current teachers improvement in wages and conditions of employment, while the same teachers are on strike, marching in the streets of Harare.

 

Teachers, magistrates, prosecutors have all lined up ready for strikes and to demand huge pay increases amid an economy that is dwindling fast.

 

The push factors continue to rage.  It remains to be seen how Zimbabwe can realistically prevent these skilled professionals from drifting out of the country.

 

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publsiher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, October 8, 2007

 

Permission to publish:  Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited.  

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