A turning world
In a piece on South Africa and Zimbabwe, Philip Gourevitch highlights Thabo Mbeki's 'sinister solidarity with his fellow onetime liberation fighter' - Robert Mugabe. He also notes that...
...in deliberate contrast to Mbeki's obliging absence, the American Ambassador to Zimbabwe, James McGee, has been making his presence felt, leading his colleagues in the diplomatic community into the rural areas to investigate and report on the extent of the torture. On a recent excursion, he collected testimonies, notebooks, and photographs that document how Mugabe's goons flay their victims and break their bones.
You couldn't ask for a clearer symbol of the double-edged character of nationalism. At one time a powerful force in the fight for liberation from colonial rule and in the long struggle against apartheid, African nationalism has, in the hands of Mbeki and other African leaders rallying round Mugabe, been transmuted into an apologia and defence of the most blatant criminality and oppression. The US ambassador, representing a country widely derided in liberal circles for its role in international affairs, bears witness to the crimes of the Mugabe regime; the man standing at the head of a nation that won the world's admiration for getting rid of an odious racist system disgraces that legacy.