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Zimbabwe -- The day a black Mercedes came calling
Suburban Newspapers (NZ) via Stuff (NZ) via shaggy eel | April 4, 2002 | Pat Booth

Posted on 04/05/2002 1:34:50 AM PST by Clive

Where are the fine New Zealand liberals who carried the banners so bravely those years ago and literally went to the barricades for Mandela, asks Suburban Newspapers consulting editor Pat Booth following the death of white Zimbabwean farmer Terry Ford.

Just a little terrier with the improbable name of Squeak focused the world's compassion on events in Zimbabwe when he was pictured determinedly guarding the body of his murdered master in the latest farm invasion and death.

Squeak, his loyalty and his bravery, is the unlikely, newest image from that dangerous and twisted land.

A special website file on the death of Terry Ford tracks the build-up to his murder directly to the Mugabe family.

There is no matching symbolic picture like Squeak's.

Yet, the description of earlier events on that Gowrie farm is, in many ways, far more significant and sinister.

Behind that photo and all it represented is a word picture which dramatises the real facts behind the death of Terry Ford on his Gowrie farm - an image made graphic for me from the files of South Africa's Star newspaper in a report from 16 months ago.

His death warrant was, to all intents and purposes, signed in November, 2000.

That was the day a big, black Mercedes limo drove down his farm drive. The woman who got out was powerful and emphatic. Terry Ford must leave, she said.

Just as she had earlier personally forced another white farmer, an expert who produced specialised seeds crops, off half his land so that self-styled guerrilla war veterans could plant their maize there.

Her black Merc was a familiar and threatening sight as she criss-crossed the area with her ultimatums. Just as she was also familiar.

The black woman who came calling on Terry Ford that day was Sabina Mugabe, the president's eldest sister.

Terry Ford literally stood his ground. He refused to leave, even though part of the farm was occupied. He held out for all those months, unable to plant or farm the land, but determined to remain there until he died.

He did just that - a few days after Sabina's all-powerful brother held on to office.

And Squeak guarded a blood-stained body after a hit squad called.

The list of victims grows daily - names which will never gain a place in world media, but still victims:

Ian Kay was forced off his farm and accused of interfering with land invaders. (In simple language, he resisted.)

Michael Collahan and William Burdett barricaded themselves in their houses overnight as the mob circled outside.

The Cartwright family was told to leave their farm so a senior army officer could live there.

Three unnamed supporters of the political opposition were beaten to death by soldiers as part of a nationwide blitz to punish those brave enough to have voted against Mugabe.

Zimbabwe is a country of terror and oppression. You catch it in the voices of our family when you finally get through on the phone to check their safety. It is unspoken. too, in their refusal to make any comment which listening censors would interpret as criticism of the regime.

But, in these electronic times, no barrier is total. In front of me is a copy of an affidavit from a hospital doctor, defining injuries to a patient victim he treated in the last two weeks. That document lists the results of a severe beating and attempted strangling with a thin cord.

A country, too, of growing want and starvation.

Market gardeners have been turned back when they took their produce 150 kilometres to sell in Harare. Their crime? Simply that their political links were suspect.

Meanwhile, the Mugabe government spends millions the enfeebled economy cannot afford - to import food.

All this while the world agonises over the photo of a loyal terrier. A world which seems deeply moved without a matching sense of justifiable anger over the body which lay beside him.

Again, I ask: Where are the fine New Zealand liberals who carried the banners so bravely those years ago and literally went to the barricades for Mandela, for the oppressed and beaten blacks and coloureds of apartheid South Africa?

Why are they silent? Is there some form of unrecognised racism?

Is it somehow different because Terry Ford was white, and the Mugabe family who played such a sinister role in the build-up to his death and Squeak's very public mourning, are black?


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: africawatch; zimbabwe
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To: maica
You are 100% correct. The horror of Hitler and Stalin occurred because the world did not look at what they were doing until it was to late. It then required tens of millions of lives to correct the horror.

Pictures of blood and mahym and death and gore simply for shock effect is offensive. Pictures of blood, mahym and death for the effect of showing the terror of evil men to the world is appropriate.

21 posted on 04/05/2002 5:32:03 AM PST by cpdiii
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To: cpdiii
Thanks, for explaining very clearly what I was trying to illustrate.
22 posted on 04/05/2002 5:50:56 AM PST by maica
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To: SunnyUsa
The picture was a reflection of the reality of life in a Marxist controlled country. It is a reflection of truth, it is reality today. It is what the liberals don't want your children to see.

PAMWE CHETE
In Memory of the Best

23 posted on 04/05/2002 6:06:14 AM PST by TEXASPROUD
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To: Clive
Of course conservatives still defer to the Left when it comes to morality, don't ask about the lumpen soccer-momese they are truly deficient in logic, but I suspect that soon a conservative or two will start to realize that liberal morality plays are nothing but a mask for evil.
24 posted on 04/05/2002 6:26:23 AM PST by junta
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To: Clive
Sabina Mugabe, the president's eldest sister.

Well, Mugabe is 78. That makes his sister older.

So much for the sociological theory that criminals eventually outgrow their criminality.

25 posted on 04/05/2002 4:28:51 PM PST by happygrl
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To: new zealander;kiwigal
,,, we don't hear anything from Trevor Richards these days, do we?
26 posted on 04/07/2002 3:07:00 PM PDT by shaggy eel
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