mugabe

International News Round Up: Mugabe’s Diamond Fever

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

If diamonds are forever, so is the pain they cause. Though this strain of diamond fever—with its corresponding blood diamonds—doesn’t call Sierra Leone and Guinea home, it does bear a strong resemblance to the one(s) found there a decade ago. This time, however, it’s hit Zimbabwe, as Mugabe’s sickening government looks to one of the country’s natural riches to spice things up economically.

But diamond fever’s not the only illness plaguing Zimbabwe’s borders. The country’s hoping to gather international aid in its fight against a cholera epidemic, which has been declared a national emergency. When will someone cut this oppressed, violent, inflation-stricken, refugee spawning, utterly ravaged country a break?

And on another side of Africa lies Rwanda, stirring up trouble for its neighbor, the Congo. The beleaguered former Belgian territory is preparing for an internal rebellion, and neighboring Rwanda, harboring a series of “strategic interests” is content to fuel the fire by sending over hundreds “if not,” as The New York Times put it, “thousands of troops to rebel front lines.”

A blood-spattered Mumbai has led many—powerful and otherwise—to ask whether Pakistan is doing what it can (or, worse, what it shouldn’t) to battle militancy. The most recent carnage has raised questions of how effective the country’s current government is when fighting that extremist-spawned violence.

More than a half a year since the disastrous Sichuan earthquake struck China, couples victim to a one-child policy are trying to rebuild. While still in mourning, many middle-aged couples are seeking government-funded medical help—such as reversing vasectomies—to start again by having another child now that so many of the country’s single children were lost during calamity.

Talking points leadership: Zimbabwe

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

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More than a week after Zimbabwe’s latest presidential elections, President Robert Mugabe’s administration has yet to release the results. Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has appealed to the High Court, the president of neighboring democracy South Africa and the U.N. to pressure the president to make an announcement.

Word on the street seems to be that Mugabe had 43 percent of votes — not enough to win a majority — and that a runoff between the him and Tsvangirai, with 47 percent of votes, may be necessary. Meanwhile, the country sits on edge as fears of violence breaking out grows by the day. Riot police and water cannons appeared in Harare last weekend, reported the Washington Post.

Every bit of this week’s news reads as if it were recycled from reports of the legislative and presidential elections in 2000 and 2002.

Take this example of Mugabe’s enduring association of capitalism with colonialism.

“President Robert Mugabe launched a make-or-break election campaign Friday by describing a controversial new law allowing seizure of white-owned farmland without compensation as a ‘victory over colonialism.’” — Agence France-Presse, April 7, 2000.

“… President Robert Mugabe on Monday called on veterans of the nation’s fight for independence in the 1970s to ’safeguard’ the land seized from ‘the former colonizers,’ …” — New York Times, April 8, 2008.

The resemblance is downright uncanny, though few would be surprised. After all, Mugabe has been in power for nearly three decades, and he hasn’t really changed his spots.

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