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From:
"Ceesay, Soffie" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 21 Nov 2007 09:25:55 -0600
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For those who might not/do not access postings to the G-post.
 
Soffie

________________________________

From: [log in to unmask]
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Dave Manneh
Sent: Wednesday, November 21, 2007 9:26 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [>-<] Zimbabwe's last white ruler: The man who defied the world



Zimbabwe's last white ruler: The man who defied the world 


Ian Smith, who died yesterday, established a style of obdurate rule in
Rhodesia which made him a role model for his greatest rival and
successor, Robert Mugabe. By Raymond Whitaker 


Published: 21 November 2007 


If anyone wants to understand how difficult it is to bring any
international pressure on Robert Mugabe, one has only to look at his
predecessor, Ian Smith, who has died at the age of 88. 

Smith, like Mugabe, blamed Britain for everything that was wrong in his
country. Smith, like Mugabe, defied near-unanimous international demands
to change course. For two men from such different backgrounds, who
loathed each other so cordially, it is astonishing how similar they
were. 

But unlike Mugabe, Smith was eventually forced to capitulate when South
Africa pulled the plug on him. John Vorster, the South African
president, had no quarrel with Smith's views on race, but decided that
with his own country facing pressure because of apartheid, he did not
have enough in reserve, politically or economically, to prop up the
white minority north of his border as well. South Africa's current
President, Thabo Mbeki, feels no such compulsion to act against his
neighbour, and while that remains the case, Mugabe can do as he likes. 

It must have been difficult for Ian Smith to understand how the world
had changed when that bitter time came. When he was born in 1919 to
Scottish immigrants in what was then Rhodesia, the map was coloured pink
from the Cape to Cairo, in accordance with the vision of Cecil John
Rhodes, the man for whom the colony was named. There was a certain
snobbery in the mother country about Rhodesia - the saying went that it
was a colony for other ranks, while Kenya was for the officer classes -
but Smith, who took a commerce degree at Rhodes University in South
Africa before returning to Rhodesia to farm, did not hesitate to enlist
in the Royal Air Force when the Second World War broke out. 

Unquestionably he had a good war. A fighter pilot, he suffered hideous
scars when he was shot down in the Western Desert, and had to undergo
plastic surgery which left the right-hand side of his face immobile,
giving him the slightly sinister, unsmiling appearance so relished by
cartoonists. After he was shot down a second time over Italy, he spent
five months fighting with the Italian partisans against the Germans. 

That record served him in good stead when he entered politics back in
Rhodesia, where a quarter of a million whites took it for granted that
they were entitled to remain in power over five million blacks in
perpetuity. They did not believe that Harold Macmillan's 1960 "wind of
change" speech in Cape Town, which signalled Britain's withdrawal from
its African colonies, could possibly mean majority rule in their
territory - surely their ties of "kith and kin" to Britain were too
strong. But when it became evident that independence would mean just
that, they looked for a leader who would go it alone, and "good old
Smithy" became Prime Minister in 1964. 

One of his first acts was to imprison Mugabe for 10 years, calling him a
" terrorist" intent on turning the country into a one-party
dictatorship. In November 1965 he issued his Unilateral Declaration of
Independence, bringing down international isolation and United Nations
sanctions. 

If white "Rhodies" seemed not to understand what was happening in the
world, there was equal incomprehension in some quarters in Britain. The
arch-fixer Harold Wilson and the obdurate Smith were utterly different
personalities; after their negotiations aboard HMS Tiger and HMS
Fearless, each felt the other was the most duplicitous man he had ever
met. The Liberal Party leader of the time, Jeremy Thorpe, incurred
ridicule in southern Africa by calling for Rhodesia to be bombed. 

Smith rejected a succession of British proposals designed to lead
eventually to majority rule, and drew up his own constitution, which
envisaged a gradual increase in black representation until it halted at
50 per cent, with the whites retaining the other half permanently. 

The Rhodesian economy even expanded for a time, with the help of South
Africa, foreign immigration and "sanctions-busting" companies, many of
them British. But in the early 1970s the black majority rose up in armed
rebellion - Chimurenga, or struggle, in the Shona language - and in five
years more than 40,000 people had died. The insurrection gained strength
after neighbouring Mozambique became independent from Portugal in 1975,
and the economy began to falter, along with white resolve. 

Even Smith's only son, Alec, lost faith in his father's cause, deserting
from the Rhodesian army and settling in Europe, from where he supported
majority rule in his homeland. 

But even after South Africa had told Smith he had to come to a
settlement, and he had paved the way for a "unity" government led by
Bishop Abel Muzorewa, he could not bring himself to accept that the
whites could no longer remain in control. The result was that the bush
war intensified; four-fifths of white Rhodesian deaths were in the final
three years of the conflict, from 1977 to 1979. 

Finally the Lancaster House agreement ended UDI, free elections were
held in 1980 and Robert Mugabe triumphed, dashing Smith's hopes that a
coalition could be formed against him. 

Smith deserves some credit for persuading whites to accept the election
result, nipping in the bud a plan by some white elements to stage a coup
against Mugabe. There was a grudging respect between the two men, which
endured even after Smith called his successor "mentally deranged" in
2000 and Mugabe threatened to have him prosecuted for genocide. 

The threat was not carried out; Smith, unlike many other whites,
remained in Zimbabwe after his retirement. When his farm was invaded,
police evicted the squatters. He stayed on even after claiming that
Mugabe had stripped him of his Zimbabwean citizenship in 2002, but ill
health finally forced him to live with his widowed stepdaughter, Jean
Tholet, in Cape Town, where he died yesterday. 

The titles of Smith's two books, The Great Betrayal, and Bitter Harvest,
sum up his attitude to the events over which he presided. "Prior to our
declaration of independence, the British government had always told us
that we were the model of the Commonwealth in Africa," he wrote in the
former, published in 1997. "The day after we declared our independence
we were suddenly the greatest evil on earth." 

He was also fond of recalling of his father, a Scottish butcher who had
arrived in Rhodesia in 1898: "He was one of the fairest men I have ever
met, and that is the way he brought me up. He always told me that we're
entitled to our half of the country, and the blacks are entitled to
theirs."

The problem was that Ian Smith's notions of fairness and integrity
seemed strictly limited to those who looked and thought like him. During
his years in power Rhodesia, a land where the harshness of apartheid as
practised in South Africa did seem to be mitigated by some sense of fair
play, became an armed camp where dissidents were jailed, exiled or
assassinated and the press was censored. 

In the end his stubbornness prevented a settlement which might have
saved thousands of lives and, possibly, created a different political
outcome to the one Zimbabwe suffers now. 

In struggling so long to ensure that the whites in Zimbabwe clung on to
everything, Smith finally ensured that they lost everything, and
bequeathed his country an example of obduracy in the face of the world
that Robert Mugabe seems happy to emulate. In that sense he is a worthy
successor to Zimbabwe's last white ruler. 


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