Robert Mugabe was lambasted (no, really) by Foreign Secretary David Miliband yesterday. Miliband was on an official visit to South Africa. The reporting of the visit was interesting, focusing as it did, on a headline 2,000 Zimbabweans sheltering in a church in central Johannesburg. It was as if this was the entire migration problem in South Africa, the 2 million, or more, Zimbabweans scattered across northern South Africa in the past five years appear to have been overlooked. However, the recent riots confirm they are still there. (In this report, foreigners mainly means Zimbabweans.)
Click the image, or here, for the animated political cartoon
Matt Buck’s animated drawings
Monday, July 07, 2008
Robert Mugabe and the David Miliband kid
Monday, June 23, 2008
Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Hack cartoons sketchbook - Robert Mugabe
Who is our latest despot exactly? Some basic research reveals in the course of his 84 years,he has been; the child of a single parent, a scholar, a teacher, an activist, a political prisoner, a terrorist (or a freedom fighter) let's compromise and call him a warrior at all events, a widower, a peacemaker (at times) and finally, a successful politician and president of his country. His story is in very large part, the story of his country; he has been its one and only elected president. Modern Zimbabwe, or Southern Rhodesia as it used to be called, was stapled together as a nation from two largely unrelated halves, or ethnic groups, (Ndebele and Shona) by Britain way back at the end of the 19th century. It has endured wars, revolts and uprisings an a period of white dominated minority rule (and an insurgency) under the government of Ian Smith. Mugabe has lived all of this - and it has helped make him, good and bad. It is certainly a tragedy that Mugabe seems to have become a despot but the stories you see now won't make sense unless you look backwards too and search for the context which gives he and his actions, meaning. And let's face it, show me a Democrat who hasn't fiddled an election. Starving a country is a much more serious charge - link to Channel 4 News.
Matt Buck’s animated drawings
