[IMC-Editorial] Op-Ed: A Cry From Zimbabwe to President Bush

The Ayn Rand Institute media at aynrand.org
Wed Jul 9 06:01:40 PDT 2003


Dear Editor, 

Please consider this Op-Ed submission from the Ayn Rand Institute.


A CRY FROM ZIMBABWE 

America should embrace its role as beacon for freedom 

By Steven Tennett

This week President Bush comes to Africa. Though he is rightly not visiting President 
Mugabe in Zimbabwe, I wish he could hear from ordinary Zimbabweans about the terrible 
violations of our rights. I wish he could hear how Zimbabwe was recently paralyzed by a 
week-long mass stayaway that saw the closure throughout the country of some 98 percent 
of businesses--in spite of violence and intimidation by Mugabe's ruling Zanu PF party, 
which attempted to force businesses to reopen under threat of losing their trading 
licenses. 

On the last day of the stayaway, I was at Unity Square (the capital Harare's main 
meeting place) to take part in the biggest march ever organized by the opposition party. 
But around the fountain of the square were arrayed--not peaceful demonstrators--but a 
gang of ruling party thugs wearing white T-shirts with the message "No to Mass Action." 
These were Mugabe's hired goons, disparagingly dubbed "Green Bombers" by civilians; 
terrorists who beat, torture and murder civilians when instructed to do so by their pay 
masters. The march was predictably a non-event, with the army and police also blocking 
all major entrances to the city in an act of countrywide mass repression that cost the 
government an estimated two billion Zimbabwe tax dollars. This is just the latest 
example of the massive violation of rights in this dying country. I have witnessed 
thousands of others. 

This week, sadly, the computer technician in my transport company had to take leave from 
work to attend the funeral of his brother-in-law--murdered by Zanu PF thugs. Even with 
his face smashed and his teeth broken, this innocent twenty-six-year-old man might have 
lived, if only Harare Central Hospital had the required expertise, drugs, medicines and 
equipment to help him. But the ruling party's corruption and socialist policies had 
already destroyed the country's health delivery system, and all this critically injured 
man received was a drip.

His is not a lone case. Since the 1980s thousands of individuals have been displaced 
from their homes, beaten, tortured, raped or murdered. Recently, even Morgan Tsvangirai, 
head of the country's largest opposition party, was languishing in jail on charges of 
treason against the Zanu PF party, who are obliterating their opposition with twists of 
the law to validate beatings and arrests. 

A commercial farmer in Zimbabwe could once make a fortune exporting coffee. But now the 
case of Roy Bennet, a coffee farmer from Melsetter/Chimanimani, is representative. He 
lost his farm to another group of Mugabe's thugs called "war veterans," who evicted him 
under threat of death and took his farm over, using the ruling party's "fast-track 
resettlement program." As I write, Mr. Bennet's other leased farm in Ruwa is under 
invasion by a group of 200 war veterans. To date, more than 3,000 commercial farmers 
have been evicted from their farms, and at least seven have actually been murdered. Only 
453 commercial farmers still operate fully in Zimbabwe--out of a total of 4,137 in 2000.

As a result, the country's maize production has fallen from 810,000 tons in 2000 to an 
estimated 80,000 tons today, while soybean production has fallen from 162,000 tons to 
30,000 tons. Close to 8 million Zimbabweans are now facing starvation.

On behalf of the Zimbabweans who desire to live as human beings, free from the shackles 
of Mugabe's tyranny, I have a favor to ask of you, America.

No, it is not a request for a check or some other handout. Nor is it a request to send 
over your 4th Infantry division to liberate us. Our suffering does not give us a right 
to your wealth or to the lives of your brave soldiers.

No, the favor I have to ask is very different--and far simpler. America, stop 
apologizing for your greatness.

Stand up and proudly champion the principles that have enabled you to earn your wealth 
and power: capitalism and the individual's inalienable rights to life, liberty, property 
and the pursuit of happiness. Condemn every form of tyranny and tell the world that the 
political system created by your founders is the only noble system the world has ever 
seen. Tell every individual across the globe that no matter if he is black, white or 
Arab, the *only* path to freedom and prosperity is through the ideas contained in your 
Constitution and Bill of Rights. To modify a saying from one of your great founders, 
George Washington: Proclaim a standard to which the wise and the just can repair.

To do so costs you nothing--and will achieve much.

You will give hope and inspiration to any individual in Zimbabwe, Iran, Hong Kong or 
elsewhere who is actually fighting for his liberty. You will earn the respect of freedom-
loving people the world over--the only "world opinion" it could ever make sense to win. 
And by your moral certainty you will strike fear in the hearts of your enemies--and any 
tyrant who dares to violate the rights of the individual.

America, when you refuse to speak out against evil--and worse, when you apologize for 
your virtues--you discourage those who love liberty and give hope to the Mugabes of the 
world. But when you proudly and guiltlessly stand up for the good, you help move the 
world toward your ideals.

America, your moral voice is at once your least costly and your most powerful weapon. A 
lonely individual from Zimbabwe asks of you only this: Won't you please use that voice?

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steven Tennett, a computer manager in Harare, Zimbabwe, is a writer for the Ayn Rand 
Institute (www.aynrand.org/medialink) in Irvine, Calif. The Institute promotes the 
philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead. Write to Mr. 
Tennett at reaction at aynrand.org 

If you plan to use this Op-Ed, please send an email to
media at aynrand.org with your publication's name and the expected date
of publication.

If you plan to post this Op-Ed on the Internet, please include this notice:
Copyright © 2003 Ayn Rand® Institute. This material is copyrighted by the Ayn Rand 
Institute (ARI) and reproduced here with permission. If you want to reproduce this op-ed 
you must obtain permission from ARI at media at aynrand.org

Thank you,


David Holcberg
Media Department, Ayn Rand Institute 
2121 Alton Parkway Suite 250
Irvine, CA 92606
Phone: (949) 222-6550 ext. 226
E-mail: davidh at aynrand.org

If you wish to have your email REMOVED from this list, please hit
reply and type REMOVE in the subject line. Thank you.





More information about the imc-editorial mailing list