How to show a dictator the door: NYT

By GRAHAM BOWLEY
Published: April 27, 2008
ZIMBABWE’S political crisis lurched on last week as President Robert Mugabe, the strongman who has ruled the California-size country in southern Africa for the past 28 years, refused to release the results of the March 29 elections. In old-fashioned autocratic style, the government’s police began to round up opposition supporters.
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Times Topics:
Zimbabwe | Congo | Uganda

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Idi Amin.

The world is losing patience, but Mr. Mugabe is only the latest example of dictators in Africa and elsewhere — some more bloodthirsty than others — who have overstayed their welcome, and whom the West have tried to winkle out of power.
What lessons can be learned from past attempts to oust seemingly immovable oppressors? Do the lessons apply in the case of Zimbabwe? What are the options for dealing with Mr. Mugabe?
PAY OFF AND EXILE
This strategy has worked, sort of, before.
In 1997, President Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire, now Congo, the very model of an African dictator dirty with corruption as his country collapsed around him, was promised safe passage by his former ally, the United States, and flew to Morocco. (He died of prostate cancer in exile soon after.)
In July 2003, leaders of the African Union bribed Charles Taylor — a murderous warlord with folllowers who would hack off the hands or feet of civilians — to leave Liberia for an early retirement in Nigeria. In similar fashion, the United States got Ferdinand Marcos to quit the Philippines by allowing him refuge in a Hawaiian villa.
Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico, who as ambassador to the United Nations under President Bill Clinton helped ease Mr. Mobuto from Zaire, said he believed the same strategy could be used with Mr. Mugabe.
“Maybe if he is offered safe passage we will rid ourselves of this despot,” he said.
Yet Congo and Liberia are hardly good examples. Congo has tipped further into chaos since Mr. Mobuto left. And, despite promises, Nigeria returned Mr. Taylor to Liberia, which handed him over to an international tribunal to face charges of war crimes in Sierra Leone. That sequence of events may make autocrats like Mr. Mugabe think twice before they head for the airport.
SANCTIONS AND ISOLATION
A popular response to noxious regimes (think Castro or early Saddam). But they only work if the sanctions hurt.
“The greater the ties to the West, the greater the degree to which the elite is educated in the West and has career prospects in the West, then the greater the likelihood the coalition behind a regime will crack,” said Steven Levitsky, professor of government at Harvard University, who has studied conditions under which autocracies crumble. (Another condition is a weak internal security apparatus with little stomach for a long fight against its people — hardly a description of Mr. Mugabe’s battle-hardened forces, which came of age in a guerrilla liberation war.)
Unfortunately, it’s not clear what extra pain sanctions could exact on Zimbabwe, where 8 out of 10 people are unemployed and the annual inflation rate is more than 100,000 percent.
MILITARY INTERVENTION

In 1979, armies from Tanzania invaded Uganda and chased out Mr. Amin, a tyrant said to have sanctioned the murder of close to 300,000.
Yet regime change is perilous, as the United States discovered following its toppling of Saddam Hussein in Iraq.
In Uganda, the man who replaced Idi Amin — Milton Obote — was arguably worse. Mr. Obote may have murdered more Ugandans even than his predecessor.
“Intervention is always very difficult in Africa,” said Michael Holman, former Africa editor of The Financial Times. “If you don’t have a well-drilled army and decent civil service to fill the gap that threw up the problem in the first place then you are going to have a disaster on your hands.”
POPULAR UPRISING
In 1998, President Suharto of Indonesia was forced to end his brutal and corrupt tenure after an economic meltdown, nationwide rioting and the withdrawal of government and military support. (He went into internal exile in a modest house in Jakarta, the capital, until his death earlier this year.)
One hope among Zimbabwe watchers is that the moderates in Mr. Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party turn against him, dissent breaks out in the military, or ordinary Zimbabweans finally take to the street.
Earlier this year, in the election crisis in Kenya, opposition supporters streamed from Nairobi’s slums to challenge President Mwai Kibaki’s declaration of victory in a flawed vote, until he was finally persuaded to share power with the opposition leader Raila Odinga.
But that may be too much to expect from embattled Zimbabweans. “In Zimbabwe, extreme poverty has bred utter lethargy,” said Michela Wrong, author of “In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz,” about Congo, and who is writing a book about the Kenyan crisis.
Indeed, a nationwide strike called by Zimbabwe’s chief opposition party earlier this month fizzled quickly as people went about their normal routines, and the party’s leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, isn’t even in the country, suggesting he may not be prepared to fight or be imprisoned again.
TALK TO HIM
Wary of intervening in a continent where some Africans still perceive Mr. Mugabe as a liberation hero in the struggle against colonialism, the United States and the West have largely left the job of negotiating with him to South Africa, Zimbabwe’s big neighbor and regional power.
Some critics think South Africa has not been sufficiently muscular with Mr. Mugabe but President Thabo Mbeki says that his “quiet diplomacy” has won results: the elections went ahead in the first place, and the government agreed to post the outcome of each count on the outside of local ballot stations, though the government has withheld the overall results.
Mark Ashurst, director of the Africa Research Institute in London, said that South Africa also subtly promoted an alternative candidate, Simba Makoni, a breakaway member of Mr. Mugabe’s party, but that this effort failed after Mr. Makoni won too few votes.
Gugulethu Moyo, a Zimbabwean lawyer who works for the International Bar Association in London, said it was time for the outside world to go beyond hand-wringing and critical statements. Instead, she said, the United Nations should be sent to scrutinize the actions of the security forces and monitor any future elections.
One idea is for Kofi Annan, the former secretary general of the United Nations, to be dispatched to broker an agreement just as he negotiated the Kenyan deal.
Maybe he could persuade Mr. Mugabe to stay for now but to agree to step down in two years and hold new elections — a sort of “government of national unity” trial balloon that was floated by Zimbabwe’s state-run newspaper, The Herald, this week.
But will Mr. Mugabe take Mr. Annan’s call? Some think not.
Heidi Holland, author of “Dinner With Mugabe: The Untold Story of a Freedom Fighter Who Became a Tyrant,” argues that the only power he will speak to now is Britain, Zimbabwe’s former colonial master under whose rule he spent half his life.
Ms. Holland, who first met Mr. Mugabe in 1975 and interviewed him again last year, said he was a remote, emotionally immature, dogged, bookish man who is obsessed with Britain as a kind of parental figure. She said he felt humiliated because, in his view, Britain reneged on financial commitments he believed were made at the time of independence in 1980.
For her, the way out of this mess may be more psychological.
“Revenge is a key word for Mugabe,” she says. “He says, I don’t have a quarrel with the United States, or the United Nations. He wants Britain to come to him and say: ‘O.K. We will now talk.’ All he wants is recognition.”

Re: How to show a dictator the door: NYT

Actually, Pakistan has showed the best way to kick the dictators out of power. Pakistan has done that twice in style. I am leaving names as there is no reason to believe that people could not get names just by mentioning their dictatorial characters.

Once it was a civilian who wanted to rule Pakistan for life and wanted to start a monarchy in Pakistan with him as King. He was Pakistan first Civilian martial law dictator who with some of his crook minded fellows used their command in oratory full of false promises to mesmerised Pakistani population and dictatorial behaviour with brutality to subjugate each and every Pakistani institutes.

He was ‘Misaal (example)’ of self promotion, where one can call baap to even gadha, as this legendary dictator took a military ruler as his mentor and started calling him daddy. This dictator who even though was civilian but tangoed with armed forces to divide the country for his selfish personal political gains and while in power started a military operation in Balochistan killing thousands, that lasted over 4 years, almost throughout his rule. He survives in the heart of many Pakistanis who are fooled by his deceptive promises, as even though this dictator was rich exploiters of poor, but due to his oratory skill has created an impression amongst many that he is poor friendly. When time came, he got hanged.

Second dictator was as bad as the first. Mentor he used to rise in life was first dictator as he also started his period by tangoing with military ruler and making that military ruler as his ruhani baap (spiritual father), just because this military ruler has religious inclination. Once got into power taking advantage of military backing, this dictator started thinking that he really became God and thought of declaring himself ‘Ameer-ul-momaneen’.

Though this dictator is mentally incapable with low IQ and has incompetents all around him as advisers and associates, he kept surviving because he always had supports of people with low IQs. Anyhow, when his time came, this dictator got a boot. This fool thought that he got boot not because of his dictatorial behaviour, but because he has no hair on his tind, so he grew some hair on his tind thinking that he would get power of Sulaiman (RA) due to hair. Fortunately for him, he is left to do some more foolish things in Pakistan and with some hair on his tind he thinks that he would succeed in becoming dictator again. Let see what waits for him in future.

Anyhow, good thing about Pakistan is that Pakistan do not like to tolerate dictators and when dictators come (I mean real dictators with dictatorial behaviours who till now always came from Pakistani chappals) then very strong over a million boots guard Pakistan and go into action of kicking the dictator from power. Good things about these boots are that they come from people, are educated, are patriotic, and when in direct power (as indirectly they are always in power), they always rule in unison with intention to do good for general masses, as their power base are boots who are not loyal to any individuals but country.

If any boot, however prominent and at whatever post, starts thinking selfishly, other boots make sure in keeping that boot stay upright. No boot amongst Pakistani boots has enough power to suppress combined strength and patriotic feelings of other boots hence we have no dictator amongst boots as this is not possible in Pakistani system that a boot could become dictator. Reason is that, Pakistani boots come from all walks of life, from various sections of society, and thus cannot do anything stupid just to promote personal interests or start showing dictatorial behaviour.

Re: How to show a dictator the door: NYT

someone conveniently forgot military ruler thrown out but only remembers "civilian" dictators-wanna-be.

Re: How to show a dictator the door: NYT

Some contradicitons, may be you should decide first what he really thought of himself.

:rotfl: The boots of Zia are forgotten in some minds.