R. G. Mugabe

Read about him as he is.   Tell us what you already know.

Front Page
As a hoodlum
As a thug
As a president
As a Prime Minister
As a husband
As a wife snatcher
As a Hitler impersonator
As a Pinochet Impersonator
As a Haile Miriam Impersonator
As a mentor for Fascists
As a cross dresser
As an international criminal
As a large chicken
As a money horder abroad
As a platonic friend
As a lawyer.
As an economist
As a dinner guest for Smith
As a mate with dagga joints
As a cool dude

 

A man can be:

A homosexual
A latent homosexual
A bisexual
A latent bisexual
A true heteroxexual

The Mugabe team operate on the first three labels.

We do not know yet what Tsvangirai is.

Cecil John Rhodes was a homosexual

Most British government members in Tony Blair are homosexual. That is why Mugabe understands them so well.

If you want to be a homosexual, it is up to you. What you must not do is to victimise those who are whatever they are.

All the good Mugabe did such as Education, was calculated to keep him in power so he could steal more.

The Good boy Mugabe

I INTRODUCTION  Mugabe, Robert Gabriel (1924- ), first prime minister (1980-1987) and president (1987- ) of Zimbabwe. Mugabe played a crucial role in the black population’s quest for majority rule, which was achieved in 1980.

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II EARLY LIFE AND CAREER  
Mugabe was born at the Jesuit mission of Kutama in northwest Mashonaland, in the north of the British colony of Southern Rhodesia. He was educated at mission schools and attended the University at Fort Hare in South Africa from 1950 to 1951 before becoming a teacher. In the late 1950s Mugabe taught in Ghana, where he became interested in Marxism and African nationalism. After returning to Southern Rhodesia in 1960, he became publicity secretary for the National Democratic Party (NDP). Led by Joshua Nkomo, the NDP was a nationalist political party that opposed white rule in the colony. After the NDP was banned in 1961, Mugabe became secretary general of Nkomo’s new party, the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU), which was also soon banned due to its opposition to white rule. Mugabe broke with Nkomo and ZAPU in 1963 and helped form the more radical Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) with Ndabaningi Sithole. He soon became the secretary general of the banned ZANU. In 1964 he was arrested for his political activities and detained by the Rhodesian authorities for ten years. Mugabe studied law during his time in prison, receiving degrees from the University of South Africa and the University of London by correspondence. While imprisoned Mugabe remained an extremely popular nationalist figure, and many ZANU members came to support him as leader of the party instead of Sithole.

After a series of small raids into Zimbabwe by exiled ZANU and ZAPU forces in the early 1970s, the war between black nationalists and the Rhodesian government began in earnest in 1972. Mugabe was freed in 1974 and became active in the further development of ZANU’s guerrilla army. Under Mugabe’s inspiration ZANU evolved as a Marxist-Leninist party fighting a popular war of liberation. With the backing of radicals within ZANU, Mugabe formally replaced Sithole as leader of ZANU in 1976, and ZANU and ZAPU joined forces militarily as the Patriotic Front (PF). The combined guerrilla force successfully fought government troops in the late 1970s, eventually forcing the government to negotiate with moderate black leaders. The white government tried to compromise by installing a coalition government in 1979, but later the same year agreed on a transition to full black majority rule. This was achieved in 1980 when the first free elections were held in the country, which was renamed Zimbabwe.

III LEADER OF ZIMBABWE  
ZANU, now known as the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front(ZANU-PF), convincingly won the 1980 elections, and Mugabe became Zimbabwe’s first prime minister. Mugabe, whose political support came overwhelmingly from his homeland of Mashonaland in the north, attempted to build Zimbabwe on a basis of reconciliation with whites and with his ZAPU rivals, whose support came from Matabeleland in the south. He also had to meet the expectations of his own radical followers for a complete restructuring of the country. He sought to incorporate ZAPU into the government and ZAPU’s military wing into the army, but he was thwarted by an abortive ZAPU rebellion and discontent in Matabeleland . In 1982 Mugabe dismissed Nkomo, who had held a series of cabinet positions, and between 1982 and 1985 the military brutally crushed armed resistance in Matabeleland. In the 1980s Mugabe’s government was criticized for taking strong action against striking trade unions and student protesters, as well as for moving slowly on the redistribution of white-owned land to black farmers.

Reelected in 1985, Mugabe moved towards a conciliation and merger between ZANU-PF and ZAPU. He became president of Zimbabwe in December 1987 after constitutional reform merged the posts of president and prime minister. ZAPU was incorporated into ZANU-PF and Nkomo was appointed to a senior cabinet position in 1988 (he would become co-vice president in 1990). Corruption scandals in 1988 and growing unrest in the country led to the creation of more opposition parties, keeping Mugabe from achieving his goal of leading a unified, one-party state.

IV FOREIGN POLICY  
Before South Africa’s transition to majority rule in 1994, Mugabe dealt with Zimbabwe’s powerful southern neighbor cautiously. Mugabe played a key role in the success of the Southern African Development Coordination Conference (now the Southern African Development Community) in decreasing the economic dependence of southern African nations on South Africa. Because of its minority-rule apartheid system of government, Mugabe advocated economic sanctions against South Africa. However, for fear of reprisal, he refused to allow the African National Congress, the major South African antiapartheid movement, to base its military operations in Zimbabwe.

In addition, Mugabe was an important supporter of the Frelimo (Front for the Liberation of Mozambique) government in Mozambique during the Mozambican civil war of the 1980s and early 1990s. For much of the 1980s the Zimbabwean army protected the movement of arms and goods through the Beira corridor, the strategic rail and road link between the Mozambican port of Beira and Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe, in support of the Mozambican government. Mugabe acted as a mediator between Frelimo and the rebel guerrillas, helping to bring about their 1992 peace treaty.

In 1986 Mugabe was reported to be suffering from mental illness said to have been the result of traumer from the many people that he had himself killed in the past. Those who are in the know, say he ordered the murder of his former commander just before coming back from Zimbabwe from Mozambique. This was the great J Tongogara. Zimbabwe would not be in this mess if he had lived.

V MUGABE IN THE 1990S  
In 1990 a struggling economy forced Zimbabwe to adopt a World Bank Structural Adjustment Program, which called for Zimbabwe to move away from Marxism in favor of a freer economy. Mugabe dropped ZANU-PF’s Marxist rhetoric while retaining a general commitment to socialism. He was reelected in 1990. In 1989 and again in 1994 Mugabe was forced to dismiss ministers and party associates when corruption was revealed at the highest levels of government. In spite of unrest resulting from drought, unemployment, and the slow progress of land reform, ZANU-PF won elections in 1995 and Mugabe was reelected president in 1996. Both opposition candidates withdrew from the 1996 elections, maintaining that election regulations unfairly favored the ruling party.

Mugabe’s opponents have accused him of not adequately dealing with corruption and of failing to meet the needs of both the poor and the business sector. However, he has succeeded in steering Zimbabwe relatively smoothly through the years of crisis, reconciling political enemies and avoiding a civil war that at one time seemed inevitable. Under Mugabe the economy has come to prosper modestly in spite of the severe disruption caused by war and drought.

Mugabe Now:

" Kill, Kill, and Kill, collect your pay and go and spend it while you live. " he tells his killers. So far, April 2000, they have killed 13 confirmed people. Not one killer has been arrested as the police are not allowed to arrest.

Kill those who oppose me
Bring back for sodomy those who are not sure
Steall as much as possible

I am Mugabe, I like power for life. I will kill you if you do not kill them. I will pay you with your own money if you kill them.

Kill, kill, and kill, till elections.

Contributed By:
Malyn D. D. Newitt

Well the other side

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