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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
12.06.2008
Zimbabwe's Continuing Tragedy

Newspaper reports from Zimbabwe generally do not have the power to shock us anymore, but read this from today's New York Times:

Zimbabwean authorities confiscated a truck loaded with 20 tons of American food aid for poor schoolchildren and ordered that the wheat and pinto beans aboard be handed out to supporters of President Robert Mugabe at a political rally instead.

It's an excellent piece, particularly this surreal back-and-forth, which apears to be almost directly lifted from Evelyn Waugh's Scoop:

The food aid that was confiscated was on a truck that began its rounds last Thursday, but that had a mechanical breakdown and wound up seeking a safe haven by parking overnight at the Bambazonke police station, American officials said.

At one of the schools on those rounds, the truck’s driver, a Zimbabwean, was approached by police officers and war veterans led by an army colonel. They informed him that they had been sent by the governor of Manicaland Province, Tinaye Chigudu, and accused the driver of trying to bribe people with food, Mr. McGee said.

“The group threatened the driver and forced him to return to the Bambazonke police station,” Mr. McGee said, calling it a hijacking.

Mr. McGee said officials with the nongovernmental organization, which he declined to name publicly for fear it would be harassed, arrived within hours. They were not allowed into the station until the rally was over. They were not allowed to file a report either, but were instead referred to the Mutare rural district police headquarters.

At that station, the officials told the police what had happened, but were given no copy of any report to document their complaint.

Wayne Bvudzijena, spokesman for Zimbabwe’s national police, did not respond to the substance of Mr. McGee’s charge when contacted on his cellphone on Wednesday, but instead contended that there was no place named Bambazonke in Zimbabwe.

“If you can go back to the honorable ambassador and verify your facts, madam,” Mr. Bvudzijena said, then hung up.

In an interview, Mr. Kagurabadza, the former mayor of nearby Mutare, confirmed that Bambazonke did exist. It also appears on a recent report of parliamentary constituencies by election monitors. But when the American ambassador, Mr. McGee, and Karen Freeman, the Usaid mission director in Zimbabwe, met Tuesday with a senior official at the Foreign Ministry, they were presented with a similar denial.

Mr. McGee said the official told them, “I’ve never head of this place Bambazonke." [Italics Mine]

Over to you, Alex Massie.

--Isaac Chotiner 

Posted: Thursday, June 12, 2008 12:26 PM with 9 comment(s)

Comments

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ackyri said:

This novel strategy of denying the existence of a place would be pretty funny if it weren't being employed to such monstrous ends.

June 12, 2008 12:49 PM

Crock1701 said:

Alex Massie writes about Zimbabwe?  I went over to his blog, read the first 5 pages, and its only mention of Zimbabwe was in reference to Hillary Clinton!  Indeed, a good deal of it seems to be to kick the crap out of Gordon Brown, who's actually been one of the stronger, serious international voices on Zimbabwe.  Over to you, Alex Massie indeed.

June 12, 2008 1:03 PM

drdannyu said:

I agree with ackyri.  This would be hysterically funny, if it weren't unspeakably tragic.

June 12, 2008 1:06 PM

Crock1701 said:

Though 15 pages, guy talks more about Fantasy Cricket teams than Zimbabwe.  Why the link?

June 12, 2008 1:11 PM

jkolic said:

This horrifying incident sounds more like it was lifted out of one of brilliant political satires written by the Nigerian exile Wole Soyinka. Or a technique borrowed straight out of 1984. I shudder to think what it would be like to live in that unfortunate country.

June 12, 2008 2:02 PM

liberal reformer said:

Robert Gabriel Mugabe rules by terror and he is poised to steal the June 27 run-off election. The have been many attacks on members and facilities of the opposition, Movement for Democratic Change. I have been fearful for the life of  the opposition's standard- bearer, Morgan Tsvangirai, since he returned to Zimbabwe late last month. I predict tremendous civil discord if Mugabe thieves this election as he has done others in the past.

June 12, 2008 2:49 PM

cspencef said:

Apparently Tsingvarai was detained twice on Thursday while campaigning, and that wasn't the first time this has happened.  

June 12, 2008 4:44 PM

aeromonas said:

My wife and I are trying to organize humanitarian visas (to Australia) for some Zimbabwean friends.  A couple weeks ago our phone rang and it was our friend calling from Harare for advice on where to file the visa application.  The call was brief--I hate to think how much it cost them--and stayed focussed on the practical matter of where to file the documents, but I did get to ask how things were there.  The answer: "Things are bad, my friend.  Very bad."

June 13, 2008 7:34 AM

scrubbyoak said:

jkolic,

the Nigerian writer, Wole Soyinka, is no longer in exile.

June 14, 2008 10:34 AM