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Mnangagwa will not bow down to Trump simply to have sanctions removed

Mnangagwa impressed at the World Economic Forum at Davos in 2018 after promising to open up Zimbabwe’s economy, although he cancelled his trip this year when protests broke out in Zimbabwe.

During his first year in office, he has focused on tackling corruption, improving the business environment and reclaiming Zimbabwe’s lost billions. With an amnesty for stolen funds taken out of the country, he says he saw more than $825 million returned in just three months in 2018. “I believe that some is still out and we will continue to probe,” he said.

Mnangagwa said there are still people coming forward quietly, wanting to declare assets abroad. He explained that the finance ministry was working out how to bring back the assets but they weren’t necessarily publicising every case.

“It has been difficult to fight corruption because it has entrenched itself,” Mnangagwa said. “We don’t even know who we are talking to, are they the corrupt person or not, but we are fighting it.”

While the economic challenges are the gravest issue facing the country, Mnangagwa’s vision for the country is more holistic. “We want to build a Zimbabwe we want, a Zimbabwe we can be proud of,” he said. “We should not condemn ourselves to poverty, condemn ourselves to isolation.”

Mnangagwa spoke of the great need to give “hope” and “inspiration” to the younger generation.

But the dream of a new Zimbabwe was challenged in January when mass protests over a surge in the price of fuel drew violence from security forces and a military response.

Mnangagwa said peaceful protest is allowed in Zimbabwe, but violence and destruction, such as the burning of police cars and damage to civil property is not. When that occurs, “the only people we can call in is the army to stop the destruction and bring law and order,” he said.

The Zimbabwean president said there had been “no crackdown on free speech,” in January and the response from the military had come from a lack of “machinery in terms of security to deal with demonstrations” after “two decades of isolation and sanctions”.

“If there is a political and economic jurisdiction in our region where free speech reigns freely and supreme, it is in Zimbabwe,” Mnangagwa said.

He drew parallels with the so-called Yellow Vest protests sweeping France, a major challenge as President Emmanuel Macron nears the halfway point of his five-year term.

“[The French police] use water cannons, and they use batons, but we don’t have those things,” he said. “We need to acquire them so that we can deal with civil disturbances.”

When asked if he has the full backing of his people and the ZANU-PF – which reportedly suffers from internal division – Mnangagwa simply pointed to his election victory in July 2018, when won 50.8 per cent of the vote in a crowded field of 23 candidates.

Maintaining support among the majority of Zimbabweans – amid criticism from a vocal opposition, the Movement for Democratic Change – will likely require swift economic improvements.

And with investment from the US and Europe hard to come by, Mnangagwa says he is happy to look elsewhere.

He said that economic relations were excellent with countries that had supported and armed Zimbabwe in its struggle for independence from Britain in 1980, namely Russia and China. Ties are strong too, he said, with Brazil and India.

On the legacy of Mugabe, who for many embodied the corruption that was rife under his rule, Mnangagwa insisted his government was prosecuting people from the top echelons of society to the very bottom. But on whether that would include his predecessor, Mnangagwa said he would be treated like anybody else.

“We will not take charges against Robert Mugabe because he is Robert Mugabe… [but] If he has committed any crime he will not be spared.”

“The rule of law must apply to everybody in Zimbabwe.”- The National

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This post was last modified on March 18, 2019 3:59 pm

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Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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