Showing posts with label Zim-British relations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zim-British relations. Show all posts
If Mugabe is 'the most British of all British people,' what does that say about Zimbabweanhood?
Sep 11, 2012
by Chido Makunike
All the effort expended into crafting a new constitution is
at a certain level about trying to decide what values are important to us a
nation in rapid transition in all sorts of ways.
For instance, which laws from the colonial era are still
relevant in the new Zimbabwe
we are trying to build, and which need to be discarded? Which social practices
need to be protected, and which are considered so abhorrent to the society that
they need to be expressly sanctioned in the constitution? How do we best
balance majority sentiments, values and practices against the protection of the
rights of citizens who may have minority, dissenting values?
Labels: mindset, people, Robert Mugabe, society, Zim-British relations
Alec Russel and the Financial Times: turning tables on Rowan Williams’ tea with Robert Mugabe
Oct 21, 2011
President Robert Mugabe’s ability to stir instinctive, deep-seated anger in British hearts and minds is legendary and astonishing. He must be one of the relatively few ‘brutal despots’ who stirs far more deep-seated negative emotion in a foreign country than even in his own. An article about British Church of England archbishop Rowan Williams’ recent visit with Mugabe, featured in the (UK) Financial Times, is an interesting read on this theme, which is frequently examined on this space.
READ MORE - Alec Russel and the Financial Times: turning tables on Rowan Williams’ tea with Robert Mugabe
If a picture is worth a thousand words, what do those of Rowan Williams and Robert Mugabe together say?
Oct 20, 2011
Church of England boss Rowan Williams was recently in Zimbabwe to
encourage the faithful at a time of a difficult split within the local
church. A highlight was also his meeting with President Mugabe, to ask
him to use his ‘good offices’ to prevent what is seen as state support
or sympathy for one of the feuding church factions. How did it go?
READ MORE - If a picture is worth a thousand words, what do those of Rowan Williams and Robert Mugabe together say?
Labels: politics, religion, Robert Mugabe, Zim-British relations
Richard Branson, Jonathan Moyo, Gideon Gono and the hare brained scheme to bribe Robert Mugabe out of power
Oct 15, 2011
by Chido Makunike
US diplomatic cables released to the public
by Wikileaks show that well-known British businessman Richard Branson was one
of many who pre-occupied themselves with how to ease long term Zimbabwean
president Robert Mugabe out of power. It adds to the increasing evidence of the
unusual, astonishing interest in influencing Zimbabwean affairs by the British
media, government and private individuals like Branson. What Branson’s clumsy
efforts do is simply give more credence to Mugabe’s contention that
neo-colonialism and preserving kith and kin interests are the main reasons for
the levels of attempted British intervention in Zimbabwe, rather than any
concern for ’human rights and democracy.’ Mugabe may be a despot, but on the
issue of Zimbabwe, this serves as more confirmation of just how soiled are British
hands.
Anglican Church in Zimbabwe: the challenges of transforming a colonial church to post-colonial relevance
Oct 14, 2011
The deep discord in Zimbabwe's Anglican Church continues in full public view. Whichever way the saga develops, it has touched on and affected many issues beyond the stated reasons for the split within the church.
READ MORE - Anglican Church in Zimbabwe: the challenges of transforming a colonial church to post-colonial relevance
Labels: mindset, religion, society, Zim-British relations
The curious case of Mugabe’s misplaced, unrequited fondness for Britain’s Conservative Party
President Robert Mugabe has long been stuck on the idea that Britain’s Conservative party is somehow intrinsically better to deal with than the Labour Party. He has expressed this sentiment on a number of occasions over several years. However, the Conservatives at the head of Britain's current coalition government do not seem to hold Mugabe in the high regard he has for them.
READ MORE - The curious case of Mugabe’s misplaced, unrequited fondness for Britain’s Conservative Party
Why Zim-British relations need to mature beyond Labour/Tories, or Mugabe/Tsvangirai
Sep 15, 2011
Zimbabwe and Britain are making tentative, awkward moves to mend their long moribund official relations. This is good. History has thrust close relations of one kind or another on the two countries for the foreseeable future. So they might as well be good rather than close but bad, as in the last few years. But to simply try to revive the old-style 'good' relations would be a mistake. They were a product of their time. These new times need a different type of close relation that requires fundamentally new thinking from both sides. Are they up to it?
READ MORE - Why Zim-British relations need to mature beyond Labour/Tories, or Mugabe/Tsvangirai
Labels: diplomacy, media, Zim-British relations
What did the new British ambassador to Zimbabwe tell Mugabe to make him giggle like an infatuated schoolboy?
Sep 10, 2011
After years of bad blood and counter accusations of ill intentions, relations between the governments of Zimbabwe and Britain remain poor. There is a new British ambassador in Harare. Does the delighted, ear to ear school-boyish grin of President Robert Mugabe on meeting her for the first time mean things are about to get better between the two governments?
READ MORE - What did the new British ambassador to Zimbabwe tell Mugabe to make him giggle like an infatuated schoolboy?
Will riots make Britain more humble about judging other societies in trouble?
Aug 11, 2011
The shocking riots in Britain have been a knock to the country's global prestige. They will almost certainly also result in a reduction in British 'soft power' and influence, at least in the short term. Will this also lead to a quieter, less judgmental foreign policy towards countries like Zimbabwe?
READ MORE - Will riots make Britain more humble about judging other societies in trouble?
Labels: media, mindset, Zim-British relations
The awkwardness of 'enemies' who feed and educate you
Jul 18, 2011
There have been heated recent calls for 'security sector reform' in Zimbabwe, meaning trying to institute a military that is non-political and non-partisan. The key beneficiary of such a partisan military, the incumbent ruler, has dismissed the calls as being ''from an enemy who wishes to weaken us. We are not in the habit of taking advice from our enemies." But that same 'enemy' is feeding a big chunk of your population because you can't.
READ MORE - The awkwardness of 'enemies' who feed and educate you
Britain's policy on Zimbabwe has failed, needs a rethink
May 31, 2011
by Chido Makunike
Britain seems to have reluctantly accepted, along with many Zimbabweans, that its old nemesis Robert Mugabe will probably now only depart as ruler of Zimbabwe due to incapacitation or death. For many years until recently both the British political and media establishments fervently hoped that Mugabe would be deposed electorally or through some forced means, ushering into power an opposition party friendlier to Britain than the fiery Mugabe.
READ MORE - Britain's policy on Zimbabwe has failed, needs a rethink
Britain seems to have reluctantly accepted, along with many Zimbabweans, that its old nemesis Robert Mugabe will probably now only depart as ruler of Zimbabwe due to incapacitation or death. For many years until recently both the British political and media establishments fervently hoped that Mugabe would be deposed electorally or through some forced means, ushering into power an opposition party friendlier to Britain than the fiery Mugabe.
Labels: diplomacy, mindset, Robert Mugabe, Zim-British relations
It is wise, justified to choose foreign investors carefully
Dec 7, 2010
by Chido Makunike
The recent walkout by British ambassador Mark Canning from a presentation by Indigenisation Minister, Saviour Kasukuwere made for some titillating headlines.
Canning understandably got bent out of shape by Kasukuwere’s impolitic statement that: “Any investment that will be coming from Britain will be looked at very negatively . . . with British investment, I would use the Malaysian parlance, ‘buy British last.’ You ask me why, they come here to invest and put you under sanctions again.”
Canning is reported to have characterised indigenisation in the form spearheaded by Kasukuwere as “crude populism” and said that the minister’s remarks would “send shivers down the spines of investors.”
On a certain level there is nothing surprising about this exchange between the two men. It is merely another manifestation of the overally poor, deeply dysfunctional official relations between Britain and Zimbabwe.
READ MORE - It is wise, justified to choose foreign investors carefully
The recent walkout by British ambassador Mark Canning from a presentation by Indigenisation Minister, Saviour Kasukuwere made for some titillating headlines.
Canning understandably got bent out of shape by Kasukuwere’s impolitic statement that: “Any investment that will be coming from Britain will be looked at very negatively . . . with British investment, I would use the Malaysian parlance, ‘buy British last.’ You ask me why, they come here to invest and put you under sanctions again.”
Canning is reported to have characterised indigenisation in the form spearheaded by Kasukuwere as “crude populism” and said that the minister’s remarks would “send shivers down the spines of investors.”
On a certain level there is nothing surprising about this exchange between the two men. It is merely another manifestation of the overally poor, deeply dysfunctional official relations between Britain and Zimbabwe.
Labels: business, investment, Zim-British relations
Wikileaks, Canada vs the US and Britain vs Zimbabwe
Dec 2, 2010
The British media's public seems to eagerly lap up bad news about Zimbabwe as eagerly as some Americans think the Canadian public believes its media's negatives about them.
From a New York Times article about how Wikileaks' 'Cablegate' documents characterise the concerns of US diplomats in Canada about how their hosts' perceive and depict the US:
In a confidential diplomatic cable sent back to the State Department, the American Embassy warned of increasing mistrust of the United States by its northern neighbor, with which it shares some $500 billion in annual trade, the world’s longest unsecured border and a joint military mission in Afghanistan.
“The degree of comfort with which Canadian broadcast entities, including those financed by Canadian tax dollars, twist current events to feed longstanding negative images of the U.S. — and the extent to which the Canadian public seems willing to indulge in the feast — is noteworthy as an indication of the kind of insidious negative popular stereotyping we are increasingly up against in Canada,” the cable said.
Replace every mention of 'America/United States' with 'Zimbabwe' and of 'Canada/northern neighbor' with 'Britain' and everything would be just as true of the latter two countries as of the former two!
READ MORE - Wikileaks, Canada vs the US and Britain vs Zimbabwe
From a New York Times article about how Wikileaks' 'Cablegate' documents characterise the concerns of US diplomats in Canada about how their hosts' perceive and depict the US:
In a confidential diplomatic cable sent back to the State Department, the American Embassy warned of increasing mistrust of the United States by its northern neighbor, with which it shares some $500 billion in annual trade, the world’s longest unsecured border and a joint military mission in Afghanistan.
“The degree of comfort with which Canadian broadcast entities, including those financed by Canadian tax dollars, twist current events to feed longstanding negative images of the U.S. — and the extent to which the Canadian public seems willing to indulge in the feast — is noteworthy as an indication of the kind of insidious negative popular stereotyping we are increasingly up against in Canada,” the cable said.
Replace every mention of 'America/United States' with 'Zimbabwe' and of 'Canada/northern neighbor' with 'Britain' and everything would be just as true of the latter two countries as of the former two!
Labels: media, Zim-British relations
Zimbabwe: You can't be 'sovereign' when you depend on food handouts from your 'enemies'
One of Robert Mugabe's most consistent refrains is how Zimbabwe 'will never be a colony again.' This is usually said in the context of how the country, or at least his government, is besieged by hostile western forces trying to dictate Zimbabwe's progression, for instance by 'reversing the course of the revolution' by overturning the land reforms that controversially led to expropriations from white landholders.
Along with this is the frequent allusion to 'sovereignty,' as in 'the west and others may not like us and the course we have charted, but they should butt out of our affairs, we are a sovereign nation.'
Some have argued that these nationalistic blandishments by Mugabe have less to do with concern for the country than they do with his latching on to any gambit to justify his hold on power after 30 years in which his polarity is arguably a fraction of what it once was.
But no one can argue against the yearning of especially small recent colonies to run their own affairs free of the interference of other countries, particularly their former colonial masters. Zimbabwe's pre and post-independence peculiarities explain why this is a particularly prickly issue for it, especially with regards to relations with Britain.
Yet Zimbabwe is as shamefully donor-dependent as any other African country, and arguably with much less excuse for it than most others given its potential and its many assets that have not been managed effectively for its own benefits.
Along with this is the frequent allusion to 'sovereignty,' as in 'the west and others may not like us and the course we have charted, but they should butt out of our affairs, we are a sovereign nation.'
Some have argued that these nationalistic blandishments by Mugabe have less to do with concern for the country than they do with his latching on to any gambit to justify his hold on power after 30 years in which his polarity is arguably a fraction of what it once was.
But no one can argue against the yearning of especially small recent colonies to run their own affairs free of the interference of other countries, particularly their former colonial masters. Zimbabwe's pre and post-independence peculiarities explain why this is a particularly prickly issue for it, especially with regards to relations with Britain.
Yet Zimbabwe is as shamefully donor-dependent as any other African country, and arguably with much less excuse for it than most others given its potential and its many assets that have not been managed effectively for its own benefits.
Labels: diplomacy, mindset, Zim-British relations
Zimbabwe's diasporan shame
Oct 16, 2010
Disappointed Zimbabwean singing contest hopeful Gamu Nhengu is probably not enjoying her sudden fame at the moment. In just a few weeks she has gone from almost grasping international singing stardom to being ridiculed for her family's UK visa troubles. The 18-old has particularly been pilloried for (allegedly) claiming that she is terrified that if her mother and two siblings are deported to Zimbabwe, she faces a 'firing squad' from the Mugabe government, although for exactly what reason it was never said.
READ MORE - Zimbabwe's diasporan shame
Labels: diaspora, people, Zim-British relations
The sordid UK hoopla around aspiring Zimbabwean singer Gamu Nhengu
Oct 11, 2010
Gamu Nhengu has in recent weeks become famous in the UK and amongst internet-connected Zimbabweans all over the world. The young Zimbabwean took part in a UK musical competition show, The X Factor, and apparently almost everyone agrees she did extremely well. She and was well liked by both the studio audience as well as those watching at home on television.
However, to the surprise of most who are passionate about the show and saw her performance, and the consternation of many, she was not chosen by the celebrity judges to go on to the final rounds of the competition.
So what, a reader may ask? We all face disappointment, it's part of life. Besides, it's only a music show, so life will go on, she will have other chances, she's young and very talented, it's not the end of the world.
Except that it's not quite that simple! The firestorm of outrage over her being rejected for the next round in favor of two young white Britons became a huge talking point in the UK media, spilling over onto the many Zimbabwe-focused internet sites.
Race is inevitably at the center of much of the discusssion. The celebrity judge who broke the news of failing to go through is reported to have received death threats and been accused of racism in some quarters.
The passions over issues to do with immigration into the UK also took center stage. Gamu's mum Nokutula Ngazana, a nurse in Scotland, is threatened with deportation over allegations that she claimed tax benefits she was not entitled to. If deported, Gamu and her two younger siblings as her dependent would have to go too. There has been speculation, unproven, that the shows organizers may have had prior knowledge of the Nhengu's immigration troubles. Suspicions that she was passed over in favor of contestants who flubbed their performances for that reason have outraged her many supporters and gained her even more sympathy.
The affair has created such a huge fracas that we will probably never know the facts other than the most obvious, apparent ones. Everybody including the show's organizers are trying to escape blame for what threatens to be a public relations disaster for them.
Gamu's singing talent does not seem to be in doubt. Even the celebrity judge who delivered the bad news to her onstage was full of praise for it. This further confounded many of Gamu's fans and supporters at the turn of events, especially when two of the contestants who were chosen over her stumbled in their performances.
Many of the flood of UK media reports have also gone out of their way to mention what a nice person Gamu is, adding to the flood of sympathy for her. She has a brilliant smile, and has been pictured with tears rolling out of her wide eyes down to her full cheeks. It further cements the image of an adorable, talented woman-child who has been done wrong.
But then things become very complicated, then ridiculous and even absurd. And as of this writing, on October 10, the saga surrounding Gamu is far from over, and may become even more absurd.
Will Gamu, her mum and two siblings get deported? It has been reported that they are not entitled to appeal the decision, but an appeal has been submitted by lawyers acting for the family anyway. It also remains to be seen what effect the pressure from tens of thousands of Gamu's supporters (of her talent and of the family's right to stay on in the UK) will have on the British government. But in a way they have been put in a box over the situation, and it is likely to be politically untenable to deport them, regardless of what the law actually says for situations such as this.
Why? Because politics, The Zimbabwe Crisis, has come into play in a major if ridiculous way. Gamu simply can't be deported....because the singer is understood to be terrified of returning to Zimbabwe, where it is said her public profile in the UK may make her a target of Robert Mugabe!
"I've been in the public eye now and people there know I've fled Mugabe's regime," she told the News of the World. "They will punish us if we go back. They're going to know where we are. There's a firing squad waiting for us there and they're putting me in front of it."
Mugabe may be guilty of many sins, but I don't think even his most ardent political opponents in Zimbabwe would say that he would feel in any way bothered by the political or economic asylum-seeking of a young aspiring singer! Millions be said to have 'fled Mugabe's regime,' if you loosely broaden that to include the perhaps 99% who fled not so much persecution but an economic meltdown that at its worst involved incalculable rates of inflation.
hether this is what she actually said or whether the UK 'News of the World' paper made it up for her to sex up its story will never be known, but doesn't really matter now anyway. From being merely an issue of fairness or the lack of it on a music show, or the the more serious but not earth-shaking one of the family's legal status in the UK it has suddenly morphed into a human rights issue. Another front in the fight against the-man-the-UK-most-loves-to-hate, Robert Mugabe!
Now all on his own steam, Mugabe has accumulated a lot to answer for in his 30 years as ruthless ruler of Zimbabwe. And yes, millions of Zimbabweans have in recent years emigrated, the UK hosting perhaps the second highest number of them after South Africa. Mugabe's government is repressive, but the vast majority of Zimbabwean migrants are economic rather than political refugees.
The 'firing squad' quote attributed to Gamu is so ridiculous, so absurd that in trying to 'help' her family stay in the UK, this and other publications have gone so over the top that they may have harmed that family more than helped.
Gamu moved to the UK five years ago at 13 to join her mother studying and then working there. The mother has not claimed that she fled Zimbabwe on political grounds. Reports seem to suggest that even in Zimbabwe she led a middle class life, though as affected as every other Zimbabwean by the roller coaster economic and political turmoil of that time. But because of the complicated relationship between Britain and Zimbabwe, particularly in the last ten years that the Mugabe government targeted once white-owned farms for takeover, the two countries' governments have been involved in a bitter propaganda war in which virtually everything is fair game to use as a weapon against the other.
In Zimbabwe the government media robustly plays its part against (some) things British. In the the UK most of the media may be private, but hatred of all things remotely to do with Mugabe is visceral and the media needs nobody's bidding to lash out against him at any opportunity.
Poor adorable young woman Gamu just wanted a fair shot at the chance of a singing career, fame and fortune that the X Factor seemed to tantalisingly dangle before her. And like many of the thousands of Zimbabweans in the UK, she and her family would like to stay there.
The vast majority of Zimbabweans there by hook or crook may not have a political bone in their body. But because of the particular British loathing for Mugabe and the propaganda war between his government and not just several successive UK governments but the British media establishment as well, seeking political asylum on the basis of claimed persecution by Mugabe's government has been a way for many Zimbabweans to stay on in the UK. Because they are from Mugabe-land, the political and immigration authorities have been inclined to be more lenient in considering asylum requests from Zimbabweans claiming to be 'fleeing Mugabe's regime' than they would be those from many other countries in much worse political and economic straits, but which are not ruled by somebody as polarizing and hated-by-the-British as Mugabe!
In their disappointment and sadness at Gamu's X Factor misfortune, and in their panic at the prospect of being deported from their now beloved UK, the hapless Nhengu family has been caught up in the great war of the British (public, political and media establishments, etc.) against the reviled Mugabe.
Another example of the absurd field day much of the UK media, especially that section of it usually rabidly anti-immigration, is having ostensibly in support of Gamu, but really at her expense:
Robert Mugabe plans a hero's welcome for Gamu Nhengu
Sunday October 10,2010
By Bryan Graham and Paula Murray
ROBERT MUGABE yesterday waded into the row surrounding axed X Factor star Gamu Nhengu by plotting to use her looming deportation in anti-British propaganda.
The Sunday Express has learned, however, that Mugabe’s regime plans to use the decision to send Gamu back to Zimbabwe to boost his own popularity.
The brutal dictator vowed to capitalise on the furore with sources saying senior officials in Zimbabwe were “rubbing their hands with glee.”
Mugabe, 86, plans to give the singer a hero’s welcome, turning her into a poster girl for a hate campaign against “heartless” Britain. Richard Chibvongodze, a senior official in the department of internal affairs, said Gamu’s return could be a major coup for the despised leader, whose dictatorship has left thousands dead and millions in poverty.
It's hard to keep up with the twists and turns of this increasingly sad and depressing soap opera. Gamu is one day reported to be worried that because of her powerful singing and new found fame/notoriety she might be shot by the venal Mugabe if she returns to Zimbabwe for having 'fled' in the first place. The next day the media says no, the diabolically clever Mugabe will not shoot her after all, he will welcome her with open arms as a propaganda counter-attack against the British who cruelly wouldn't let her win their singing competition!
There is no 'department of internal affairs' in Zimbabwe's government structures, and I would like to know if anyone can prove the existence of a 'Richard Chibvongodze' in that non-existent department!'
The Daily Express then goes on to quote their 'Richard Chibvongodze' informant as saying “The politburo are rubbing their hands in glee. This will demonstrate to Zimbabweans the British are heartless and will never do anything to assist citizens of this country.
Confusing but presumably reassuring Gamu and those who buy the firing squad canard, the Daily Express writes their 'Richard Chibvongodze' said, “Nokutula Ngazana and her family were not asylum seekers. They left this country perfectly legally, so won’t be in trouble when they return.”
Phew, no Mugabe firing squad will await Gamu at Harare airport after all then, what a relief! But it would still be better for the family to be allowed to stay in the UK (cynical me reading between the lines) in order to deprive Mugabe any chance of using Gamu to lob propaganda grenades against Britain! Must not be allowed to happen, bend the immigration rules in this case if necessary for that not to happen!
In claiming fear of persecution, a ridiculous claim for a non-political person of 18 who 'fled Mugabe's regime' at the tender age of 13 Gamu is doing nothing that thousands of Zimbabweans haven't done in the UK. The authorities surely by now, if they didn't at the beginning of 'The Zimbabwe Crisis,' that the overwhelming majority of these claims are spurious. But it suited the British establishment (political and media) to depict Zimbabwe as being in worse crisis than far more troubled but friendlier-to-Britain countries, or at least those who hadn't deprived white farmers of mostly British stock of their farms. So it is an open secret that seeking asylum in the UK for Zimbabweans has been a massive scam, but one done with the full, winking knowledge and cooperation of the British authorities because of their deep antipathy for Mugabe.
Suppose Gamu, her mother and siblings get to stay in the UK as they seem likely to do. Gamu will get over her X Factor disappointment and do other things, in music or other fields. But she will have paid an extremely high price for staying in the UK in this dubious, high-profile way. It is a way dubiously used by thousands of Zimbabweans to stay in that country, by they do not have the distinct disadvantage of having their tales of what they fear will happen to them if Mugabe gets his claws on them embellished by the UK tabloids, then splashed all over the world.
In one week she has gone from being supported by the Zimbabwean diaspora for both her talent and for what even her British fans conside to be shabby treatment by the X Factor show, to being ridiculed for in turn ridiculing her country. That is a very tall order because most Zimbabewan diasporans can probably safely be assumed to be anti-Mugabe. But they make a clear distinction between Mugabe and the country of Zimbabwe, whereas when it suits them, as in this case, the UK media will often conflate the two entities into one. So the attempt to ridicule Mugabe in Gamu's case has included making outlandishly ridiculous claims about the situation in Zimbabwe.
There is nothing new about this for the UK media, but even if Gamu and family are allowed to stay in the UK, they presumably do not want to cut ties with Zimbabwe. But because of the circus they have been unwittingly dragged into, the Gau that last week won the hearts, support and sympathy of Zimbabweans all over the world for her talent and grace will this week have lost a lot of that goodwill because of the falsehoods about the situation in their country attributed to her.
Back in Zimbabwe she will not be in any more danger from firing squads or any other arm of the repressive government there than before those absurd claims were made, whether really by her or the interviewing British tabloid. But she is also likely to face resentment from many Zimbabweans, even those who may not care for their ruler Mugabe, but who do take exception to her being used to tarnish and ridicule the country by a Mugabe-hostile British media.
Zimbabwe has so many genuine problems, so many real examples of on-going political persecution that it seems silly for the UK media, which lovingly chronicles Zimbabwe's many real problems at every opportunity, to be so apparently needy to take a dig at Mugabe to use an 18-year old aspiring singer to do so. It smacks of a real desperation about a Mugabe who has vexed them, and many (most?) Zimbabweans by staying on for 30 years of strong-arm rule and declining standards of living.
Meanwhile the Mugabe of their wrath is for once genuinely innocent of this latest crime he is accused of being about to commit, executing Britain's one beloved singing illegal immigrant, Gamu! If anything, by their usually shrill but unusually shoddy mixing of advocating for Gamu by demonising a completely uninvolved Mugabe, the British media have instead given Mugabe the appearance of super-human powers. The propaganda coup one tabloid warned Mugabe was preparing for on Gamu's deportation has already been won by him, without him lifting a figure or saying a word. Rather than cementing the image of Mugabe as a devil presiding over hell, the over-the-top UK media has simply succeeded in ensuring that next time they write about him, more of their discerning readers, abroad if not at home, will question what is fiction and what is truth in their reports. Mugabe appears to have 'won' by so enraging the UK media that their quite prepared to attribute deeds and words to him that are so outlandish that even some of his many opponents cringe in embarrassment on behalf of that UK media.
When the UK media tires of Gamu's usefulness as a new way for them to try to illustrate the evils of Mugabe, how will Gamu and family fare amongst her fellow Zimbabweans in the UK and at home? After she has been used and forgotten by a British establishment eager for any opportunity to paint a picture of a not just troubled but a hell-on-earth-under-Mugabe of a country, will the possible hostility and loss of face from her community at the smears on the whole Zimbabwe nation be worth it in exchange for a UK visa?
READ MORE - The sordid UK hoopla around aspiring Zimbabwean singer Gamu Nhengu
However, to the surprise of most who are passionate about the show and saw her performance, and the consternation of many, she was not chosen by the celebrity judges to go on to the final rounds of the competition.
So what, a reader may ask? We all face disappointment, it's part of life. Besides, it's only a music show, so life will go on, she will have other chances, she's young and very talented, it's not the end of the world.
Except that it's not quite that simple! The firestorm of outrage over her being rejected for the next round in favor of two young white Britons became a huge talking point in the UK media, spilling over onto the many Zimbabwe-focused internet sites.
Race is inevitably at the center of much of the discusssion. The celebrity judge who broke the news of failing to go through is reported to have received death threats and been accused of racism in some quarters.
The passions over issues to do with immigration into the UK also took center stage. Gamu's mum Nokutula Ngazana, a nurse in Scotland, is threatened with deportation over allegations that she claimed tax benefits she was not entitled to. If deported, Gamu and her two younger siblings as her dependent would have to go too. There has been speculation, unproven, that the shows organizers may have had prior knowledge of the Nhengu's immigration troubles. Suspicions that she was passed over in favor of contestants who flubbed their performances for that reason have outraged her many supporters and gained her even more sympathy.
The affair has created such a huge fracas that we will probably never know the facts other than the most obvious, apparent ones. Everybody including the show's organizers are trying to escape blame for what threatens to be a public relations disaster for them.
Gamu's singing talent does not seem to be in doubt. Even the celebrity judge who delivered the bad news to her onstage was full of praise for it. This further confounded many of Gamu's fans and supporters at the turn of events, especially when two of the contestants who were chosen over her stumbled in their performances.
Many of the flood of UK media reports have also gone out of their way to mention what a nice person Gamu is, adding to the flood of sympathy for her. She has a brilliant smile, and has been pictured with tears rolling out of her wide eyes down to her full cheeks. It further cements the image of an adorable, talented woman-child who has been done wrong.
But then things become very complicated, then ridiculous and even absurd. And as of this writing, on October 10, the saga surrounding Gamu is far from over, and may become even more absurd.
Will Gamu, her mum and two siblings get deported? It has been reported that they are not entitled to appeal the decision, but an appeal has been submitted by lawyers acting for the family anyway. It also remains to be seen what effect the pressure from tens of thousands of Gamu's supporters (of her talent and of the family's right to stay on in the UK) will have on the British government. But in a way they have been put in a box over the situation, and it is likely to be politically untenable to deport them, regardless of what the law actually says for situations such as this.
Why? Because politics, The Zimbabwe Crisis, has come into play in a major if ridiculous way. Gamu simply can't be deported....because the singer is understood to be terrified of returning to Zimbabwe, where it is said her public profile in the UK may make her a target of Robert Mugabe!
"I've been in the public eye now and people there know I've fled Mugabe's regime," she told the News of the World. "They will punish us if we go back. They're going to know where we are. There's a firing squad waiting for us there and they're putting me in front of it."
Mugabe may be guilty of many sins, but I don't think even his most ardent political opponents in Zimbabwe would say that he would feel in any way bothered by the political or economic asylum-seeking of a young aspiring singer! Millions be said to have 'fled Mugabe's regime,' if you loosely broaden that to include the perhaps 99% who fled not so much persecution but an economic meltdown that at its worst involved incalculable rates of inflation.
hether this is what she actually said or whether the UK 'News of the World' paper made it up for her to sex up its story will never be known, but doesn't really matter now anyway. From being merely an issue of fairness or the lack of it on a music show, or the the more serious but not earth-shaking one of the family's legal status in the UK it has suddenly morphed into a human rights issue. Another front in the fight against the-man-the-UK-most-loves-to-hate, Robert Mugabe!
Now all on his own steam, Mugabe has accumulated a lot to answer for in his 30 years as ruthless ruler of Zimbabwe. And yes, millions of Zimbabweans have in recent years emigrated, the UK hosting perhaps the second highest number of them after South Africa. Mugabe's government is repressive, but the vast majority of Zimbabwean migrants are economic rather than political refugees.
The 'firing squad' quote attributed to Gamu is so ridiculous, so absurd that in trying to 'help' her family stay in the UK, this and other publications have gone so over the top that they may have harmed that family more than helped.
Gamu moved to the UK five years ago at 13 to join her mother studying and then working there. The mother has not claimed that she fled Zimbabwe on political grounds. Reports seem to suggest that even in Zimbabwe she led a middle class life, though as affected as every other Zimbabwean by the roller coaster economic and political turmoil of that time. But because of the complicated relationship between Britain and Zimbabwe, particularly in the last ten years that the Mugabe government targeted once white-owned farms for takeover, the two countries' governments have been involved in a bitter propaganda war in which virtually everything is fair game to use as a weapon against the other.
In Zimbabwe the government media robustly plays its part against (some) things British. In the the UK most of the media may be private, but hatred of all things remotely to do with Mugabe is visceral and the media needs nobody's bidding to lash out against him at any opportunity.
Poor adorable young woman Gamu just wanted a fair shot at the chance of a singing career, fame and fortune that the X Factor seemed to tantalisingly dangle before her. And like many of the thousands of Zimbabweans in the UK, she and her family would like to stay there.
The vast majority of Zimbabweans there by hook or crook may not have a political bone in their body. But because of the particular British loathing for Mugabe and the propaganda war between his government and not just several successive UK governments but the British media establishment as well, seeking political asylum on the basis of claimed persecution by Mugabe's government has been a way for many Zimbabweans to stay on in the UK. Because they are from Mugabe-land, the political and immigration authorities have been inclined to be more lenient in considering asylum requests from Zimbabweans claiming to be 'fleeing Mugabe's regime' than they would be those from many other countries in much worse political and economic straits, but which are not ruled by somebody as polarizing and hated-by-the-British as Mugabe!
In their disappointment and sadness at Gamu's X Factor misfortune, and in their panic at the prospect of being deported from their now beloved UK, the hapless Nhengu family has been caught up in the great war of the British (public, political and media establishments, etc.) against the reviled Mugabe.
Another example of the absurd field day much of the UK media, especially that section of it usually rabidly anti-immigration, is having ostensibly in support of Gamu, but really at her expense:
Robert Mugabe plans a hero's welcome for Gamu Nhengu
Sunday October 10,2010
By Bryan Graham and Paula Murray
ROBERT MUGABE yesterday waded into the row surrounding axed X Factor star Gamu Nhengu by plotting to use her looming deportation in anti-British propaganda.
The Sunday Express has learned, however, that Mugabe’s regime plans to use the decision to send Gamu back to Zimbabwe to boost his own popularity.
The brutal dictator vowed to capitalise on the furore with sources saying senior officials in Zimbabwe were “rubbing their hands with glee.”
Mugabe, 86, plans to give the singer a hero’s welcome, turning her into a poster girl for a hate campaign against “heartless” Britain. Richard Chibvongodze, a senior official in the department of internal affairs, said Gamu’s return could be a major coup for the despised leader, whose dictatorship has left thousands dead and millions in poverty.
It's hard to keep up with the twists and turns of this increasingly sad and depressing soap opera. Gamu is one day reported to be worried that because of her powerful singing and new found fame/notoriety she might be shot by the venal Mugabe if she returns to Zimbabwe for having 'fled' in the first place. The next day the media says no, the diabolically clever Mugabe will not shoot her after all, he will welcome her with open arms as a propaganda counter-attack against the British who cruelly wouldn't let her win their singing competition!
There is no 'department of internal affairs' in Zimbabwe's government structures, and I would like to know if anyone can prove the existence of a 'Richard Chibvongodze' in that non-existent department!'
The Daily Express then goes on to quote their 'Richard Chibvongodze' informant as saying “The politburo are rubbing their hands in glee. This will demonstrate to Zimbabweans the British are heartless and will never do anything to assist citizens of this country.
Confusing but presumably reassuring Gamu and those who buy the firing squad canard, the Daily Express writes their 'Richard Chibvongodze' said, “Nokutula Ngazana and her family were not asylum seekers. They left this country perfectly legally, so won’t be in trouble when they return.”
Phew, no Mugabe firing squad will await Gamu at Harare airport after all then, what a relief! But it would still be better for the family to be allowed to stay in the UK (cynical me reading between the lines) in order to deprive Mugabe any chance of using Gamu to lob propaganda grenades against Britain! Must not be allowed to happen, bend the immigration rules in this case if necessary for that not to happen!
In claiming fear of persecution, a ridiculous claim for a non-political person of 18 who 'fled Mugabe's regime' at the tender age of 13 Gamu is doing nothing that thousands of Zimbabweans haven't done in the UK. The authorities surely by now, if they didn't at the beginning of 'The Zimbabwe Crisis,' that the overwhelming majority of these claims are spurious. But it suited the British establishment (political and media) to depict Zimbabwe as being in worse crisis than far more troubled but friendlier-to-Britain countries, or at least those who hadn't deprived white farmers of mostly British stock of their farms. So it is an open secret that seeking asylum in the UK for Zimbabweans has been a massive scam, but one done with the full, winking knowledge and cooperation of the British authorities because of their deep antipathy for Mugabe.
Suppose Gamu, her mother and siblings get to stay in the UK as they seem likely to do. Gamu will get over her X Factor disappointment and do other things, in music or other fields. But she will have paid an extremely high price for staying in the UK in this dubious, high-profile way. It is a way dubiously used by thousands of Zimbabweans to stay in that country, by they do not have the distinct disadvantage of having their tales of what they fear will happen to them if Mugabe gets his claws on them embellished by the UK tabloids, then splashed all over the world.
In one week she has gone from being supported by the Zimbabwean diaspora for both her talent and for what even her British fans conside to be shabby treatment by the X Factor show, to being ridiculed for in turn ridiculing her country. That is a very tall order because most Zimbabewan diasporans can probably safely be assumed to be anti-Mugabe. But they make a clear distinction between Mugabe and the country of Zimbabwe, whereas when it suits them, as in this case, the UK media will often conflate the two entities into one. So the attempt to ridicule Mugabe in Gamu's case has included making outlandishly ridiculous claims about the situation in Zimbabwe.
There is nothing new about this for the UK media, but even if Gamu and family are allowed to stay in the UK, they presumably do not want to cut ties with Zimbabwe. But because of the circus they have been unwittingly dragged into, the Gau that last week won the hearts, support and sympathy of Zimbabweans all over the world for her talent and grace will this week have lost a lot of that goodwill because of the falsehoods about the situation in their country attributed to her.
Back in Zimbabwe she will not be in any more danger from firing squads or any other arm of the repressive government there than before those absurd claims were made, whether really by her or the interviewing British tabloid. But she is also likely to face resentment from many Zimbabweans, even those who may not care for their ruler Mugabe, but who do take exception to her being used to tarnish and ridicule the country by a Mugabe-hostile British media.
Zimbabwe has so many genuine problems, so many real examples of on-going political persecution that it seems silly for the UK media, which lovingly chronicles Zimbabwe's many real problems at every opportunity, to be so apparently needy to take a dig at Mugabe to use an 18-year old aspiring singer to do so. It smacks of a real desperation about a Mugabe who has vexed them, and many (most?) Zimbabweans by staying on for 30 years of strong-arm rule and declining standards of living.
Meanwhile the Mugabe of their wrath is for once genuinely innocent of this latest crime he is accused of being about to commit, executing Britain's one beloved singing illegal immigrant, Gamu! If anything, by their usually shrill but unusually shoddy mixing of advocating for Gamu by demonising a completely uninvolved Mugabe, the British media have instead given Mugabe the appearance of super-human powers. The propaganda coup one tabloid warned Mugabe was preparing for on Gamu's deportation has already been won by him, without him lifting a figure or saying a word. Rather than cementing the image of Mugabe as a devil presiding over hell, the over-the-top UK media has simply succeeded in ensuring that next time they write about him, more of their discerning readers, abroad if not at home, will question what is fiction and what is truth in their reports. Mugabe appears to have 'won' by so enraging the UK media that their quite prepared to attribute deeds and words to him that are so outlandish that even some of his many opponents cringe in embarrassment on behalf of that UK media.
When the UK media tires of Gamu's usefulness as a new way for them to try to illustrate the evils of Mugabe, how will Gamu and family fare amongst her fellow Zimbabweans in the UK and at home? After she has been used and forgotten by a British establishment eager for any opportunity to paint a picture of a not just troubled but a hell-on-earth-under-Mugabe of a country, will the possible hostility and loss of face from her community at the smears on the whole Zimbabwe nation be worth it in exchange for a UK visa?
Labels: arts, diaspora, mindset, people, Zim-British relations
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