12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152 |
- ZIMBABWE It was over twenty years ago when Zimbabwe received its
- independence, and the country had likelihood to become an African success
- story: “good soil, lots of mineral resources and a new government that spoke of
- modernization and reform.” Although today Zimbabwe looks to be caught in a
- downward fall in economics and politics (TIME).
- “In April 1980, the former British colony of Southern Rhodesia was internationally
- recognized as the independent state of Zimbabwe. The country's new
- government was headed by the Zimbabwe National African Union-Patriotic Front
- (ZANU-PF), a group of African nationalists that had fought for a different kind of
- independence from that declared by Ian Smith's white regime in 1965”(TIME).
- Robert Mugabe, ZANU-PF's former leader, became the first head of
- Zimbabwe, calling for a new spirit that must unite and not divide. Although while
- Zimbabwe had a fresh name and a fresh leader, it still had its former problems.
- The racial inequalities induced by white rule continued in the feud between black
- and white incomes and black Zimbabweans wanted their fair share of the chief
- farming territory that had been previously owned by the white settlers from the
- 1890’s till today (TIME).
- Zimbabwe went bankrupted after the long war for freedom and the
- economy was even weakened by the huge emigration of Europeans and a
- drought in the early 1980’s (TIME). The slow pace land reform led to tension in
- Matabeleland in southwestern Zimbabw and Zanu. But now, they were rivals and
- the tensions between them and their ethnic groups increased as the government
- accused ZAPU's leader, Joshua Nkomo, of induced violence in the region. The
- government began a military campaign against the dissidents that claimed
- thousands of lives.
- In 1987, Mugabe and Nkomo resolved there feud, agreeing to merge the
- two factions into a single-party Marxist-Leninist government (TIME ). Mugabe
- became Zimbabwe's first executive President and the larger ZANU-PF went on to
- win the 1990 elections. After a decade in office Mugabe had come closer to his
- vision of a one-party socialist rule, and he demonstrated this by cracking down on
- student protests in the early 1990s(TIME).
- Constant food and fuel shortages, inflation, unemployment, corruption,
- government inertia and the stalled program of land resettlement sparked
- widespread discontent in 1992. Another drought in Southern Africa added to the
- country's economic difficulties (TIME). Despite the continuing problems,
- ZANU-PF won a fourth general election in 1995 and Mugabe was returned to
- office as President in 1996. His government was not popular, although no other
- opposing party was able to pose a serious challenge.
- Mugabe is still holding onto power, perhaps by holding elections in May.
- But he presides over a country in disorder. “After 20 years in power, Mugabe has
- delivered neither the economic stability or the social unity he promised when he
- first took office. The country is still plagued by chronic shortages of food and fuel,
- and white farmers live in fear that their farms will be seized. Mugabe's promise of
- a new spirit that must unite and not divide seems as distant as ever” (TIME).
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- Work Cited
- Shields, Elinor. Mar 2000, TIME. http://www.time.com/time/europe/
- timetraits/zmbabwe/index.html.
- <br><br>
- Words: 508
|