Government should ask Mugabe what he’s doing with our money

Comment from The Star (SA)

Jabulani Sikhakhane

Let's assume you have a neighbour who has lost just about everything. He is
so poor his hearth has, as the Zulus would say, become the sleeping place
for the family cat. You know your neighbour's problems can be blamed on the
fact that he sees the world through the bottom of the vodka bottle. He feeds
ev

After independence in 1980, Mugabe embarked on an ambitious programme of

socio-economic development, which he financed by borrowing way beyond what

Zimbabwe could sustain. Mugabe’s initial exuberance was fuelled by a number

of unusual factors, including a commodity boom, the promise of more aid than

eventually arrived, expectations of a peace dividend, as well as initial

high rates of economic growth. When Mugabe’s policies hit the skids, sending

the economy into a tailspin, Zimbabwe’s professional class voted with its

feet, seeking greener pastures in South Africa, Europe and the US. Those who

stayed behind did so because they had the financial means to withstand the

effects of hyperinflation. Lacking the skills passport needed to enter the

global job marketplace, the poor were either stuck in Zimbabwe or driven by

hunger to risk life and limb by jumping the fence to work in South Africa.

Throughout all this, Mugabe was in denial.

Now he wants the rest of the world to give Zimbabwe up to $10 billion to

inject some life into the economy. You can bet Mugabe expects all of this

money to be given to Zimbabwe without any conditions. South Africa, along

with other Southern Africa leaders, has agreed to back Zimbabwe’s rescue

plan. Last year, it gave Zimbabwe R300 million and plans to chip in another

R225m over the next three years. I have no doubt Mugabe’s administration

cannot account fully for how the R300m was used. Nor can the South African

government certify it was not siphoned off by Mugabe and his cronies. This

is a dereliction of duty by our government. Our constitution enjoins the

national treasury, for example, "to ensure transparency, accountability and

sound financial controls in the management of public finances". Treasury has

lived up to this mandate in terms of the management of the country’s

finances. It has, among other things, introduced transparency and

predictability to the budget, largely through the three-year budgeting

cycle, the introduction of the mid-term budget statement, and the detailed

documentation that comes with the announcements.

This constitutional requirement should also apply to monies spent outside

our borders. That means Pretoria should insist Harare account fully for what

it does with our money. After all, it’s our tax rands that are being used to

dig Zimbabwe out of the hole Mugabe deliberately sank his country in. It is

a responsibility our government owes its citizens. It is their money, money

they worked hard for, that is being given to Zimbabwe. Although most

citizens will be happy to help their fellow Africans, they have the right to

expect that their hard-earned money will be used for the benefit of the

poor. It is time South Africa demanded accountability by the Zimbabwean

government for how it uses financial aid. Our tax Rands should not be used

to subsidise Grace Mugabe’s shopping expeditions, or to satiate Morgan

Tsvangirai’s expensive whisky tastes. That may sound harsh, but that’s what

a good neighbour would do.

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