CMI BRIEF June 2010 Volume 9 No.3 Zimbabwe’s Multilayered Crisis All photos: zimbabweinpictures.com Once a vibrant and dynamic society, Zimbabwe has since the turn of the millennium gone through a complex multilayered and pervasive series of catastrophes. Political instability, lawlessness, misgovernment and a relentless economic meltdown has transformed this leading southern African nation into an international pariah. While measures have been taken to improve the situation, there continues to be a constellation of factors that challenge the ability to come to terms with the current political confrontation between the regime and the opposition. GENESIS OF THE CRISIS The long-term origins of the crisis lie in the 90 years of colonial rule and the stark racial inequalities that prevailed under the white minority rule that continued after the 1965 declaration of independence. An armed struggle to liberate Africans from the clutches of this oppression culminated in the end of white minority rule in 1980. However, armed liberation also laid the foundations for an anti-democratic ruling party intolerant of dissenting view points. The formation of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in 1999, which challenged the hitherto unrivalled political dominance of the Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), created a sense of panic within the ruling party. They responded with ruthless violence designed to destroy this opposition threat to the regime’s longstanding postliberation incumbency. The deteriorating economic conditions that prevailed from the early 1990s onward contributed to the rise in popularity of the MDC. Arguably, the decline began with the World Bank/IMF-inspired Economic Structural Adjustment Programme (ESAP) in the early 1990s, which led to rapid de-industrialisation, growing unemployment and severe erosion of living standards. In October 1997,

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