The Statement below was released by Rep. Christopher H. Smith,
R-N.J. It was published in the Congressional Record on the future of US-Zimbabwe Relations on June 12, 2015, and addressed to the U.S. Congress Speaker
*President Mugabe
(pix: ewn.co.za)
(pix: ewn.co.za)
Mr. Speaker,
Zimbabwe is a country the
size of the state of Montana ,
with a population of nearly 14 million people. However, its mineral wealth
gives it an outsized importance. The southern African nation is the world’s
third largest source of platinum group metals and has significant reserves of
nickel, gold, chromium and dozens of other metals and minerals. Significant
diamond reserves were discovered in 2006. Currently, about 40 percent of the
country’s foreign exchange is earned from the export of these metals and
minerals.
It was the abundance of
such mineral resources, and their exploitation, which has driven the
relationship between the West and Zimbabwe . Since its colonization by
Cecil Rhodes’ British South Africa Company in 1889 on behalf of Great Britain , the area once known as Southern Rhodesia has experienced a tumultuous history.
The white minority
gained self-governance in 1922, and a 1930 Land Apportionment Act restricted
black access to land, making many Africans laborers and not land owners. In
1964, the white minority government unsuccessfully sought independence from Great Britain ,
and then unilaterally declared independence a year later under white rule. This
move sparked international outrage and economic sanctions, and that regime was
never widely recognized by the international community, though the support of
white-ruled South Africa
enabled the government to limp along.