I am someone who was involved in the whole process of transition from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe and I am now deeply embroiled in the subsequent transition from tyranny to democracy in the new Zimbabwe. In the intervening period covering some 50 odd years, a great deal has gone under the bridge and a lot has gone wrong. A friend from the early days in Zimbabwe wrote to me the other day and asked, ‘Where did we go wrong?’ I thought that question needed an answer.
Obviously the historical background was the failure by the successive governments after 1923, to recognise that their tenure was limited and that without broad based democratic support, their grip on power was eventually doomed to fail. Had they grasped that reality early on and started to work on the future based on that assumption, the outcome would have been very different.
As Nelson Mandela said in his autobiography, it was the whites that decided how power was to be transferred. In failing to recognise the basic realities, we created the conditions for the armed struggle and in doing so we created the coterie of leaders who would eventually take over power and rule in their stead. In our case, we were ‘saved’ from the worst effects of this shortsightedness and stubbornness by international intervention but as always, those responsible for managing events during that era were unable to totally overcome the effect of our own political behavior in the previous decades.
At Lancaster House we made further mistakes, imposing on Zimbabwe a British style of constitution and failing to consult the majority. We found ourselves in the aftermath, with a government led by people with no experience of government, few entrenched principles and no commitment to democratic values or basic human rights. They did not like the constitutional dispensation forced on them by the international community and the region but had no choice in the matter.
We compounded these mistakes by ignoring and condoning the subsequent abuses of democratic principles and human rights when the new government was obviously violating these. When Mugabe committed genocide from 1983 to 1987 under the guise of ‘Gukurahundi’, the rest of the world looked the other way and continued to receive him as a respected leader in western capitals. When he violated democratic principles and crushed domestic opposition, there was no outcry or even support for civil society or the fledgling opposition. One by one, successive opposition groups were allowed to suffocate and die.
Growing corruption, nepotism and flagrant violations of all the norms of good governance simply went uncontested, embolden by this and seeing only disinterest and unconcern, the Mugabe regime went on a spree, abandoning fiscal prudence and restructuring the constitution to entrench their hold on power. The steady erosion of the legal system and the principle of equality before the law and the independence of the Judiciary followed these developments and still the criticism from international organisations and States and African countries remained muted.
Then, when finally the people of Zimbabwe decided that they had had enough, the MDC came into being and delivered the first democratic defeat on Zanu PF since 1980. Infuriated by this defeat, the leadership of the Zanu PF and the security branches of the regime unleashed a well organised and funded ‘total onslaught’ against the democratic forces that had combined to make the MDC defeat of the regime possible.
They carefully analysed the electoral defeat and found that they had lost the urban areas, won in the rural peasant districts and that the majority of the 350 000 workers on commercial farms and estates together with their families had also voted MDC. This ‘swing vote’ became the key objective. Over the next five years, the regime simply smashed the entire agricultural industry in a brutal effort to crush the opposition forces located on commercial farms.
This marked the next mistake we all made. We failed to see what they were doing and to understand why. Even the farmers did not fully grasp the reality and right to the bitter end the CFU and the ZTA argued for the farm community to be ‘apolitical’ and to ‘co-operate with government’ even while they were being targeted politically and their assets stolen and the industry they had built up at such great cost over the previous 100 years, was being systematically destroyed. The international community also made the mistake of accepting that this was ‘land reform’ when in fact that slogan was just a smoke screen for their real intentions. African States, including South Africa, made the mistake of taking Mugabe’s claims about the ‘African credentials’ of the MDC and the right of the State to plunder the assets of the white farmers under the guise of ‘land reform’, at face value.
Even though 95 per cent of the farmers affected by the ‘fast track land reform programme’ were Africans in all respects except the pigment of their skins, they were treated as second-class citizens and foreigners. Even though the race issue had dominated the struggle for freedom and democracy in southern Africa for most of the previous century, this outrageous, racially based criminal act went uncommented on in African dialogue. The abuses were simply brushed aside by most as being justified as correcting an historical wrong. This view persisted even when it became known that over 80 per cent of the targeted population had acquired their farms after Zimbabwean independence in 1980.
This failure to call a spade a spade and the inevitable subsequent collapse of the Zimbabwean economy led to the present situation where our GDP has shrunk to 15 per cent of tiny Botswana and the great majority of Zimbabweans are displaced and desperately poor. We have become the quintessential example of how not to do things in the 21st Century; a model that will be used in Universities and Colleges throughout the world to teach what happens when you do dumb things.
But the list of our failures does not stop there. After a bitter and protracted campaign for freedom and justice, the people of Zimbabwe finally saw their votes overcome tyranny in 2008, a victory made even more remarkable by the fact that this was achieved without a stone being thrown or a shot fired. Instead of greeting this victory with the relief and celebration that was due, the region, led by South Africa, allowed this corrupt and brutal regime to hang onto power and forced the MDC into an unholy alliance with their defeated oppressors that is expected to bring forth a new democratic dispensation in 18 months. It’s a tall order.

moron eat sh-i-t and die.tyranny is you and all you rhodesians stand for.
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Rhodesia is super.
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It’s curious that you write about the transition in 1980 as, from “rhodesia to zimbabwe”. It was tyranny of the worst variety. You woudn’t know because you were cocooned in your make belief white world. The up and short of this is you r**** created zanu. Nothing beautiful could come out of your ugly system. I don’t see MDC as any different either.
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Why put asteriks on rhodie? That’s not a rude word!! It’s the racist white people who are/were in zim.
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And what has come out of the tyranny of zanu.Nothing but hardship,death and hunger.You are stuck in your zanu cocoon.Now the so called warvets who fought for the land are being kicked off the farms.What a joke.Buch of numbskells.
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What? me sheltered by zanu? Goodness gracious. Listen Ian smithy or whatever your name is; nothing good has come out of zanu just as nothing came out rhodesia front. You owe my people an apology for creating the monster that is zanu.
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I owe no one an apology. If you want an apology then ask that numbskell mugabe and his illiterate party for an apology for destroying what was once the greatest country in the world.I want to see one of these idiots who have stolen farms try and sell one.Then you will understand who the land belongs to.When they reallize that they are failures in farming, they will not be able to sell the land because it does not belong to them.What idiots.
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I was expecting too much from a dyed-in-the- wool bigot anyway. “Rhodesia was never super”. Say it after me you poor excuse of a human being.
It is unusual for me to step between protagonists, but on this occasion I need to remind people who hold different views, that a well presented and argued case is far more successful and persuasive than hurling insults and epithets.
DFE
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Rhodesia is Super and always has been.Can’t say the same for Zimbabwe.One of the main reasons why ex Zimbabweans ( both black and white ) will not return to Zimbabwe is because they hold fantastic memories of Rhodesia and the early Zimbabwe.To return to what is now a ruined and destroyed country would be to sad so we will remember Rhodesia for the images that we all still have in our heads and will never forget.It is your choice to choose to live in the ruins that your idiot president and his dilinquent party have created in such a short time.No sane person will return to that mess.We will live our lives in free countries where we can voice our opinions freely with out been arrested and beaten up for opposing that mad dog dictator who could not run a piss up in a brewary due to his lack of brain power.This is the millenium yet these idiots are still living in their tribel days.They will never advance untill they can get out of that era.
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