But they cannot get into power unless they can attract enough followers. And, sadly, these also exist in every nation.
Although they can be clearly seen in even the most advanced nations like the UK and USA, they thrive most where poverty and low education standards are the norm. And even more where there is some real or fancied internal division that a potential dictator can exploit to unite their supporters. In Africa’s case, these are primarily tribal or ethnic, but they can also be religious.
African nations are among the worst sufferers of all three in the world – poverty, low education standards and internal division. They are therefore at most risk to repressive, self-seeking governments that have little interest in getting their subjects out of poverty, and it explains why these are still the norm so long after colonialism ended. It is nothing to do with Black Africans being unable to govern effectively – as many Westerners think – because if any of their nations also suffered from poverty, low education standards and internal division, their governments would almost certainly corrupt and repressive as well. It goes with the territory.
So dictators and their supporters are simply a fact of life. It was what a nation does about them that matters.
On this basis, Zimbabwe’s problem is not Mugabe and ZANU-PF, it is that it has never had the right leaders to remove them. Had the right opposition leaders been on the scene years ago, Mugabe and ZANU-PF would have disappeared into history years ago.
If the right leader or leaders were to appear tomorrow, Mugabe and ZANU-PF would be removed from office literally within a few months. There would be no need to drag out the suffering of Zimbabwe’s citizens until the 2018 elections, especially as, if the vote goes against Mugabe and ZANU-PF, they are very likely to simply ignore it.
Who will these ‘right’ leaders be?
Above everything else, a leader has to be charismatic because no one follows a leader who isn’t. And the more charismatic they are, the more people will follow them. That is why activists and campaigners rarely become leaders – they have a message they really believe in, are passionate about, work very hard for and will even die for, but they lack the charisma to create a movement around them.
It is why academics even more rarely become leaders. They may be very good at analysing situations and telling other people what to do, but hardly any can do it themselves because they, too, lack the charisma to generate a movement.
It is also why few genuinely good people – by that I mean ones who genuinely care about their fellow citizens – become leaders. There is no shortage of good people who want the right thing for their nation. Church and mosque congregations are full of them, as are charitable organisations. But, again, few are charismatic enough to create a movement.
It is a rule of human nature that the more charismatic someone is, the more people will follow them. And it really doesn’t matter what their message is. That is why genuinely good people can fall under the spell of an evil dictator – it is the magnetism of character that entraps them, not the message. Hitler was a perfect example. Not every Nazi was evil – far from it.
Probably like almost everyone else, I originally thought that the followers of Africa’s repressive dictators – there are plenty of them – must also be evil. Many, yes, they know exactly what they are doing, and they are in it for what they can get out of it. But others support the regime only out of fear.
Of the remainder, when you get to know them, many are in fact good people who have become blind to the faults of the regime they belong to. When ZANU-PF is finally defeated, many of its members will look back in disbelief at what they did or what they supported, just as probably the vast majority of Nazis did.
So when we are talking about the ‘right’ leaders for a nation, it is not enough that they are charismatic. They also have to be people who will put the good of all citizens above their own agenda, their self-gratification or self-interest. This is where a question mark hangs over Zimbabwe’s current opposition political leaders.
It is very possible that the best opposition leaders for ordinary Zimbabweans, and for Zimbabwe itself, may currently not be in one of the political parties. They can equally come from the trade unions, or the business community, or from any of the campaign or civic organisations or (in Zimbabwe’s case) one of the Christian Churches which have been sadly lacking in leadership.
But wherever they are, Zimbabwe needs for them to step forward.
In fact, African politics has attracted remarkably few leaders who will work for the good of their citizens. This is why, when one government has been forced or voted out of power, it has almost without exception been replaced by another corrupt, repressive, self-seeking regime. And sometimes the new has been even worse than the old.
This is also why, although all African citizens could have been taken out of poverty and into Western-style affluence years ago, they have never had governments capable of, or interested in, doing that.
It is no good overthrowing a repressive regime, only for it to be merely replaced by another. This is why Arab Spring failed.
It is also why the opposition to Apartheid failed. People hail this as a victory for Black power. It wasn’t. It almost failed because of internal divisions (shades of MDC?), and only succeeded with the help of foreign intervention. And it has completely failed to take Black South Africans out of poverty and into the proper share of South African wealth that should have been the result. South Africa is still a very small White minority controlling a very large Black minority.
I hope I’m very wrong, but when Mugabe and ZANU-PF are defeated, my fear is of a repeat of a small, wealthy elite continuing to control the great majority of the population, instead of a government dedicated to taking all its citizens out of poverty and into Western-quality affluence as quickly as possible.
Post published in: Featured
If we had good leaders we would have never had the Zanu PF dictatorship in the first place. The fact that is has lasted all these 37 years goes to show we also lack quality opposition leaders.
Very interesting David but if one was to assume that of the three factors – poverty, low education standards and internal divisions – low education standard is the main factor; are you saying Zimbabweans with all our high literacy rate and leaders with seven University degrees and a wife so smart she got a PhD in three months, etc.; we have still not attained the same level as the Greeks 2 500 years ago. The Greeks had the more difficult task of devising democracy, we only need to copy it and yet cannot do even that!
Thank you for your comment, Nomusa, and my apologies for the late reply. I’ve only just seen your reply.
The education standards I refer to are not those of the leaders, but of the voting population. Pan Africa, this is very low compared to that of the working democracies.
Also, Greek democracy was wrongly-named because most of the population did not have the vote. Their system had more in common with the excellent “local” partial democracies that existed in many parts of Africa, were destroyed by colonialism, and do not receive the credit they deserve.
One reason for Mugabe and ZANU-PF’s long reign is certainly as described by you. There are others, but the really vital one is that Zimbabweans simply put up with the situation instead of creating the mass movement of citizens that could have removed them at any time.
I agree. Each time there is anything close to a mass movement, opportunist politicians move in and hijack the movement as happened with MDC. The party was supposed to spearhead the demands for democratic change and yet when the party leaders got the chance to effect the changes, during the GNU, not even one reform was implemented.
Thank you, Nomusa, and you
pinpoint why I said I fear a new government won’t change anything.
Unfortunately, African campaigners
miss the essential point: Africa’s history is that ousted corrupt, repressive governments are merely replaced by another corrupt, repressive government.
The AU’s Agenda 2063 shows how to break this cycle. The people who should be promoting this to the masses are Africa’s campaigners. But they are completely ignoring it.
It is no good blaming governments or political oppositions. For Africans to escape poverty and enjoy
Western-quality lifestyles, they must do what Westerners did to escape their poverty and repression: band together and force their governments to work for the good of the people, instead of for themselves. It is the job of campaigners to educate them in that.