 | Zimbabwe's brutality is our business| Politics Discuss Zimbabwe's brutality is our business in the Current forums; If there's any justice, the photo that ran on the front page of yesterday's New York Times will ... |
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06-27-2008, 01:41 AM
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#1 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Nelspruit, Mpumalanga
Posts: 403
Country: | Zimbabwe's brutality is our business If there's any justice, the photo that ran on the front page of yesterday's New York Times will be used as evidence against Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe when he is finally put on trial in The Hague.
The four-column photo shows a crying 11-month-old boy. Because it is winter in Zimbabwe, he is dressed in a tiny blue romper suit. Below the knees, the boy is wearing what at first glance looks like a pair of ill-fitting white socks.
Tipped off by toes sticking out of an opening in the left one, a closer look reveals them to be a pair of tiny white casts.
Titled "Suffering Great and Small," the cutline reads: "An 11-month-old with broken legs found shelter in a church in Harare, Zimbabwe. His mother said youths with the governing party shattered his legs while trying to make her disclose the whereabouts of her husband, an opposition supporter."
Zimbabwe descended into hell a long time ago thanks to the madness of its ostensible "liberator" and his ruling party of thugs, goons and sadists known as ZANU-PF.
In the pantheon of living African despots, Mr. Mugabe has been first among equals for nearly 30 years. Once upon a time, he was even considered a hero because he helped pry the country, then known as Rhodesia, from under the oppressive lash of its apartheid-style government.
Few nations have had as precipitous an economic collapse after liberation from colonial rule as Zimbabwe.
Since the fall of the white minority government in 1980, the country has gone from being the breadbasket of southern Africa and one of the continent's biggest exporters of food to its most appalling failure.
Mr. Mugabe blames his country's troubles on a conspiracy by the former colonial powers incensed by his track record as a "liberator" and traitors at home he insists are nostalgic for white rule.
After faring badly in a recent election against an opposition party leader, Mr. Mugabe and his goons imposed a presidential runoff.
For several weeks leading up to today's election, the ZANU-PF have scoured the country for political opponents -- jailing some and killing others.
If he can't win fairly at the ballot box, Mr. Mugabe is content to "win" through intimidation and terror. He vowed to hold on to power, regardless of what the voters consider to be in their best interests.
Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition leader, pulled out of the race several days ago, citing the danger to his supporters by Mr. Mugabe's thugs.
Since then, regional African leaders have called on Mr. Mugabe to cancel today's runoff, arguing that it is illegitimate even by the standards of quasi-democratic African states.
Former South African president Nelson Mandela said on Wednesday that the crisis represented "a tragic failure of leadership in Zimbabwe." Mr. Mugabe told Mr. Mandela and every other African leader who dared criticize him to mind their own business.
If ever an anti-apartheid-style protest movement needed to catch fire in the West, it is now. Mr. Mugabe is, arguably, as big a human-rights abuser as the regime he displaced in Rhodesia.
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To that end, it is gratifying to see that Pittsburgh's City Council has declared today "Zimbabwe Freedom Day."
City Council member Patrick Dowd sponsored the proclamation presented earlier this week, expressing our solidarity with "those in Zimbabwe fighting peacefully for their freedom."
It is a thoughtful proclamation that honestly describes the deteriorating situation in Zimbabwe with urgency and compassion.
True, there isn't much the average Pittsburgher can do about Mr. Mugabe, beyond becoming aware of what's going in Zimbabwe. But Mr. Dowd and his colleagues should be congratulated for caring enough to make a gesture of solidarity.
One day, Robert Mugabe will be compelled to answer to an international tribunal for crimes against humanity. On that day, I hope the 11-month-old boy his goons tortured will be old enough to understand that justice has finally come.
It will also be satisfying to know that Pittsburgh, in its own small way, stood up when it mattered and identified with Zimbabweans in their hour of need.
Today's proclamation of "Zimbabwe Freedom Day" here is just the beginning. There are many dark days ahead, but victory is assured. Tyrants, no matter how long they're around, have a very short shelf life.
edd |
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06-27-2008, 10:49 AM
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#2 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: British Columbia
Posts: 1,864
Country: | Mugabe is turning {turned} into another Saddam or Hitler, a dictator holding onto power by brutality.
Zimbabwe is a disaster, inflation is at several million percent, to buy lunch there costs several billion {zimbabwe} dollars!
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06-27-2008, 11:30 AM
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#3 | | IP/Mech THE GREAT GAZOO
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Colorado, USA
Posts: 13,228
Country: | What infuriates me over this is where are all the anti-apartied protesters and celebrities of the 80s? Is this not injustice??????
__________________ "IF ITS RED OR DUSTY, DON'T TOUCH IT" |
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06-27-2008, 11:42 AM
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#4 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: British Columbia
Posts: 1,864
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by FLYBOYJ What infuriates me over this is where are all the anti-apartied protesters and celebrities of the 80s? Is this not injustice?????? | I can give George Clooney a half-credit, at least he is critical of Darfur & other abuses, not just harping on Iraq. But you are right, most "notables", especially in Africa are silent.
Do you suppose they could drop "Delta Force" in there for a surgical strike?
But then if they turned Mugabe & his thugs over to the UN to prosecute, the "Dictator's Club" would probably send him home with a handshake & a slap on the back.....
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06-27-2008, 02:34 PM
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#5 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Prescott Arizona USA
Posts: 496
| Quote:
Originally Posted by freebird
Do you suppose they could drop "Delta Force" in there for a surgical strike?
But then if they turned Mugabe & his thugs over to the UN to prosecute, the "Dictator's Club" would probably send him home with a handshake & a slap on the back..... | Or some other wack job would get in power.. This has been going on for so long is going to be hard to clean up... |
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06-27-2008, 02:58 PM
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#6 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Jersey Shore
Posts: 2,112
Country: | Let someone, anyone else, take care of Zimbabwe.
We're up to our ass in alligators with bigger fish to fry. Let all the countries that don't like what we are doing in ME handle the problem.
TO
__________________ “Let's get Enterprise and Hornet turned into the wind." |
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06-27-2008, 03:00 PM
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#7 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Prescott Arizona USA
Posts: 496
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Originally Posted by ToughOmbre Let someone, anyone else, take care of Zimbabwe.
We're up to our ass in alligators with bigger fish to fry. Let all the countries that don't like what we are doing in ME handle the problem.
TO | Aman............And whats been done about him .......................JACK |
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06-27-2008, 03:28 PM
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#8 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 3,548
Country: | Agreed, the African nations are meeting in Sharm el shek and have said virtuly nothing. Its on their doorstep let them sort it out, if western powers went in pound to a penny the African nations would be crying like stuck pigs on how nasty the west was. Mugabe is a toss pot and needs a bullet in the head but it should be an African one. |
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06-27-2008, 03:43 PM
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#9 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: NIAGARA
Posts: 4,601
Country: | Its only recently (weeks and months) that the neighbouring countries have started to react to Mugabe
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06-27-2008, 05:28 PM
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#10 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 927
Country: | How much longer can Mugabe hang around. After all he is 84. I wonder what happens after Mugabe has gone from the scene. Is there an heir apparent. If he croaks mid ter, wont there be a new election required? Or is there a comittee of shadowy figures in the background, supporting him.
If the opposition can hold it together, I am predicting that ZANU-PF will desend into anarchy once Mugabe croaks it
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06-27-2008, 06:39 PM
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#11 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,448
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by freebird million percent, to buy lunch there costs several billion {zimbabwe} dollars! | I set my clock-radio for 0600hrs, for work. I awoke yesterday to an interview between an ABC correspondent and the Zimbabwe Minister for Tourism, and the figure of 2 million percent was mentioned. I thought I must have been still half asleep, but later on, it was quoted again. Incredible.
The interview could have been with Goebbels...
"There is no problem in Zimbabwe"
"It will be a fair, democratic election"
"The opposition leader is still working, from the Dutch Embassy"
"Why do you overseas journalists believe such lies? I am here, you are not. How could you possibly know what is happening here? Why would I lie to you"? |
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06-27-2008, 06:42 PM
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#12 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,448
Country: |
Last edited by Graeme : 06-27-2008 at 06:45 PM.
Reason: Double post - think quick!
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06-27-2008, 07:14 PM
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#13 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Prescott Arizona USA
Posts: 496
| Is there any African country's that can do anything to help..?.. All I ever here is bad about African governments.. Not that "I" pretend to know anything about the governments over there..Not like some here who think they do here..
I "think" there's like four countrys right around each other that are just out of control..Sad..
We have some Africans on here...
What are the countrys that are properest and getting along ?...And do they have the means to help..??
The dump American is showing up in me ..And not know alot (but bad) about Africa..
Africa is going to make other holocaust look tame.. And maybe all ready has..  |
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06-27-2008, 09:35 PM
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#14 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Colorado, USA
Posts: 1,506
Country: | Worse than Castro.....but at least Castro is leaving power.
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06-28-2008, 04:03 AM
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#15 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 606
Country: | Quote:
Originally Posted by FLYBOYJ What infuriates me over this is where are all the anti-apartied protesters and celebrities of the 80s? Is this not injustice?????? | Hello FLYBOY,
Very good point. It is exactly what I keep telling those people who in the first place rallied against countries and its governments such as Rhodesia and South Africa in the 80,s.
Very busily engaged and involved in regards to destroying functional societies and governments, who they didn’t know anything about and now standing by and doing nothing.
Regards
Kruska
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