Zimbabwe Ten Years On:

Results and Prospects

by Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros

After a decade of political polarization and international standoff, the
debate on Zimbabwe has finally been opened up to a wider reading public,
thanks to Mahmood Mamdani's "Lessons of Zimbabwe," appearing in the London
Review of Books (04/12/2008).  Renowned scholars, within and without Africa,
have broken their silence and have taken public positions.  The debate now
extends beyond a small group of specialists in Southern Africa and the UK
and also goes deeper into the issues than what is readily available in the
daily media.  While we may wonder why it took nearly a decade for this to
happen, there is good reason for the sudden change: during November-December
2008, Western governments and associated think-tanks began to test publicly
the idea of intervening militarily in a small peripheral country and
ex-colony, this time under the pretext of the "right to protect" Zimbabweans
from a crazed tyrant.  For many of us, this is dangerous talk; for others,
it is either not serious enough, or serious and overdue.  It is no surprise
then that the knives would come out in the ensuing debate, and that this
would intensify with the prospect of forming an "inclusive government" and
resolving critical issues.

http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2009/my100209.html

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