Zimbabwe Human Rights Bulletin

Zimbabwe Human Rights Bulletin
Title Zimbabwe Human Rights Bulletin PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 690
Release 2003
Genre Human rights
ISBN

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Human Rights Bulletin

Human Rights Bulletin
Title Human Rights Bulletin PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages
Release 1994
Genre Civil rights
ISBN

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Zimrights Bulletin

Zimrights Bulletin
Title Zimrights Bulletin PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 48
Release 1994
Genre Civil rights
ISBN

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Human Rights Bulletin

Human Rights Bulletin
Title Human Rights Bulletin PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 10
Release 2006
Genre Civil rights
ISBN

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Bulletin of Human Rights

Bulletin of Human Rights
Title Bulletin of Human Rights PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 324
Release 1978
Genre Civil rights
ISBN

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Zimbabwe Business Law Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Laws

Zimbabwe Business Law Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Laws
Title Zimbabwe Business Law Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Laws PDF eBook
Author IBP USA
Publisher Lulu.com
Pages 266
Release 2013-08
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1438771452

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Zimbabwe Business Law Handbook - Strategic Informtion and Basic Laws

A Predictable Tragedy

A Predictable Tragedy
Title A Predictable Tragedy PDF eBook
Author Daniel Compagnon
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages 343
Release 2011-06-06
Genre History
ISBN 0812200047

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When the southern African country of Rhodesia was reborn as Zimbabwe in 1980, democracy advocates celebrated the defeat of a white supremacist regime and the end of colonial rule. Zimbabwean crowds cheered their new prime minister, freedom fighter Robert Mugabe, with little idea of the misery he would bring them. Under his leadership for the next 30 years, Zimbabwe slid from self-sufficiency into poverty and astronomical inflation. The government once praised for its magnanimity and ethnic tolerance was denounced by leaders like South African Nobel Prize-winner Desmond Tutu. Millions of refugees fled the country. How did the heroic Mugabe become a hated autocrat, and why were so many outside of Zimbabwe blind to his bloody misdeeds for so long? In A Predictable Tragedy: Robert Mugabe and the Collapse of Zimbabwe Daniel Compagnon reveals that while the conditions and perceptions of Zimbabwe had changed, its leader had not. From the beginning of his political career, Mugabe was a cold tactician with no regard for human rights. Through eyewitness accounts and unflinching analysis, Compagnon describes how Mugabe and the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) built a one-party state under an ideological cloak of antiimperialism. To maintain absolute authority, Mugabe undermined one-time ally Joshua Nkomo, terrorized dissenters, stoked the fires of tribalism, covered up the massacre of thousands in Matabeleland, and siphoned off public money to his minions—all well before the late 1990s, when his attempts at radical land redistribution finally drew negative international attention. A Predictable Tragedy vividly captures the neopatrimonial and authoritarian nature of Mugabe's rule that shattered Zimbabwe's early promises of democracy and offers lessons critical to understanding Africa's predicament and its prospects for the future.