In our latest showing of theatre performances from around the world, Robert Mugabe will be performing “I didn’t get what I wanted, so I held a fraudulent election and changed the constitution,” followed by his exquisite and complex personal rendition of “How to be a leftist dictator.” The latter will be reproduced cinematically as a late night feature on CNN.
Just kidding, but it just keeps getting worse and worse over in Zimbabwe. If imposing a famine through land seizures weren’t enough, the government is throwing a hissy fit because white farmers have held up the process in court. But a constitutional amendment can change that! Disregard the fact that the ruling party is in power through massive fraud, of course. Also, they are introducing an amendment that would allow the government to restrict the travel of anyone they please in order to secure “the national interest.”
President Robert Mugabe’s government is proposing to change the constitution to legalize confiscation of farmland and restrictions on the travel of government opponents.
Justice Minster Patrick Chinamasa described the constitutional amendments, which went to parliament Thursday, as “epoch making” and “historic.” Among the amendments are provisions that would prevent farmers whose land has been seized by the government from contesting the action in court.
Over the past five years, more than 6,000 white-owned farms have been seized by the government under President Robert Mugabe’s land reform program. Most white farmers whose land, equipment and homesteads were seized went to the courts to seek redress for the loss of their property.
Mr. Chinamasa told parliament the courts had been able to process less than a fifth of the farms seized, and that white farmers’ objections to losing their properties had been “vexatious and frivolous.”
Mr. Chinamasa told parliament that Britain, as the former colonial power, has the “sole responsibility” for paying compensation for the land.
The justice minister and most of his colleagues in the ruling ZANU-PF party in parliament have been given white-owned farms, most of which are now lying fallow, according to recent government crop statistics.
Another controversial amendment would allow the government to refuse to issue passports to citizens or to revoke their travel documents, in what he described as “the national interest.” Civil rights groups have strongly objected on the grounds the proposal is designed to muzzle free speech of opponents. Many Zimbabwean lawyers say the travel prohibition makes a mockery of Zimbabwe’s claim to be a democracy.
You may remember other constitutional amendments on the way as well. At the end of May, the government announced the complete abolishment of the private ownership of land. They also said they would do away with the Electoral Supervisory Commission and establish a Senate packed with government cronies.
Stay tuned next time. We’ll have Karl Marx on the program.
UPDATE: More here.